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Colorado Mesa University

Colorado Mesa University (CMU or Mesa) is a public university in Grand Junction, Colorado. The university's other locations include the Bishop Campus, which houses Colorado Mesa University Tech in northwestern Grand Junction, and a regional campus in Montrose, approximately 60 miles south of Grand Junction. CMU grants associate degrees, bachelor's degrees, and master's degrees.

Colorado Mesa University
Former names
Grand Junction Junior College (1925–1937)
Mesa College (1937–1988)
Mesa State College (1988–2011)[1]
MottoSuccess Starts With Heart
TypePublic university
Established1925; 99 years ago (1925)
Academic affiliations
Space-grant
Endowment$42.19 million (2022)[2]
PresidentJohn Marshall
Students9,110[3]
Undergraduates8,945[3]
Postgraduates165[3]
Location, ,
United States

39°04′50″N 108°33′16″W / 39.08061°N 108.55456°W / 39.08061; -108.55456
CampusUrban, 104 acres (42 ha)
NewspaperThe Criterion
Colors    Maroon, white & gold
NicknameMavericks
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division IIRocky Mountain
Websitewww.coloradomesa.edu
A university sign at North 12th Street and North Avenue

Previously Mesa State College, the college attained university status in August 2011 and changed its name to Colorado Mesa University.

Board of trustees edit

The Board of Trustees has 13 trustees (11 voting and two non-voting). The voting members are appointed by Colorado's governor and confirmed by the Colorado State Senate and serve staggered terms. The Colorado Mesa University Student Trustee is elected by the student-body and is considered one of the most influential positions in the university and college system. The Senatus Academicus names a member from its ranks to serve as the eleventh member.[4]

Academics edit

Colorado Mesa University offers programs leading to awards in five levels: technical certificates, associate degrees, baccalaureate degrees, master's degrees and professional doctoral degrees. The university is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission.

As of 2023, half the student body were first-generation college students.[5]

Residence life edit

 

Colorado Mesa University offers options for students to live on campus. Over 2,000 students live on campus in 11 residential buildings, consisting of traditional rooms, suites and pods, and apartments.

Residence halls and apartments are governed by the Residence Hall Association (RHA). The Residence Hall Council (RHC) is an extension of RHA and acts as the governing body for each residence hall. The RHC of each building is composed of an elected executive board and an RHA representative.

Notable facilities edit

Houston Hall edit

Houston Hall has the reputation of being the first building on campus. Built in 1940, it is named for the college's first president, Dr. Clifford G. Houston. Before its construction, the college had occupied an abandoned school building (the old Lowell School) in the city's downtown area. During the 2011 expansion and renovation project, delicate care was taken to match the new wing's ornamental brick facade with that of the original building.

 
Dominguez Hall

Dominguez Hall edit

Dominguez Hall was built in 2011 and is home to the Davis School of Business and the Center for Teacher Education. This building has several classrooms, including four large semi-circle lecture rooms, computer labs, small study rooms, study open spaces (indoors and outdoors), faculty offices, a coffee shop, and a boardroom.

Lowell Heiny Hall edit

Originally built in 1967 to house the college library, previously located in Houston Hall, Lowell Heiny Hall now houses University Authorities offices, Registrar's Office, President's Office, HR, Marketing, and faculty offices.

 
University Center

The University Center edit

The University Center was built in 2010 to replace the aging W.W. Campbell College Center. It houses the main campus dining facilities, including Dining Hall, Bookcliff Cafe, Starbucks Coffee, and a small convenience store. The center also houses the Associated Student Government, The Criterion campus newspaper, KMSA 91.3FM, Bookstore, Ballroom, student lounges, MAV Card Office, and the Student Life office, which contains some club offices.

The Maverick Center edit

Formerly known as Saunders Field House, The Maverick Center houses all athletic facilities in one building, except for football and baseball. Facilities include Brownson Arena, El Pomar Natatorium, Hamilton Recreation Center, and Monfort Family Human Performance Lab. Adjacent to The Maverick Center are Walker Field soccer and lacrosse stadium, Elliot Tennis Complex, Bergman Softball Field, and the Maverick Pavilion.

Moss Performing Arts Center edit

The Moss Performing Arts Center, named for local Colorado Mesa University supporters John and Angie Moss, provides music, dance and theatre students with the facilities needed to let their creativity shine. The center, which recently underwent a $5.1 million renovation and expansion, is home to the 600-seat William S. Robinson Theatre, a 300-seat recital hall, the Walter Walker Reception Area, the Mesa Experimental Theatre, a design studio, numerous music practice rooms, smart technology classrooms, faculty offices and a dance studio.

Moss is the home to the Theatre and Music Departments which offer a variety of entertainment for the campus and local community throughout the year.

 
Tomlinson Library

Tomlinson Library edit

By 1984 the library's collection had outgrown Lowell Heiny Library and plans were made to build the collection a new home. The new library was dedicated in 1986. Recognized as an architectural gem in American School and University magazine[citation needed], the library was named for outgoing college president John U. Tomlinson in 1988 to honor his commitment to improved library services at the college. Tomlinson Library contains over 190,000 volumes, including a large government documents collection, and a geology library. It also houses the Ethridge Pottery Collection of prehistoric southwestern ceramics.

Forensic Investigation Research Station edit

Known by the acronym "FIRS", this facility consisting of a laboratory building and a fenced-in body farm is located just outside Grand Junction.[6] As of January 2018, the decomposition of 11 bodies was under investigation with a focus on identification of microbial clocks, collections of microorganisms that appear and change in a predictable manner during the course of human body decomposition.[6]

Athletics edit

CMU's athletic teams are known as the Mavericks; their mascot is symbolized by a rearing bull's head with flaring nostrils. Official colors are maroon, white, and gold. Student body fans are known as The Herd.

The Colorado Mesa Mavericks have 28 varsity teams[7] that compete in NCAA Division II athletics, as part of the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference. CMU fields teams in men's football, men's baseball, men's and women's basketball, women's volleyball, men's and women's cross country, men's and women's indoor and outdoor track and field, men's and women's golf, men's and women's soccer, men's and women's lacrosse, women's softball, men's and women's swimming, men's and women's tennis, and men's and women's wrestling.

Sustainability edit

Geothermal Energy Program edit

CMU is one of the first adaptors to utilizing Geothermal energy throughout their campus. The project known as "CMU Geo-Grid" is currently underway.[8] The system heats and cools for 1.2 million square feet of academic and auxiliary buildings, reduced CMU's carbon footprint reduced by 17,742 metric tons of CO2 per year, and provides CMU cost predictability allowing CMU to offer the second lowest tuition rate in Colorado.[8] Currently, CMU Geo-Grid is connected 16 of the campus' buildings.[8] The university is planning to geothermal system to 9 addition buildings.[8] The latest expansion is expected to happen from Colorado General Assembly bill SB23-250, passed by Barbara Kirkmeyer, Kyle Mullica, Marc Catlin, and Shannon Bird, which secured $6 million for further implementation CMU's geothermal exchange system.[9] The bill was signed into law by Governor Jared Polis on April 28, 2023.[10]

In 2021, Western Governors Association launched the Heat Beneath our Feet initiative at CMU's Campus.[8] The initiative purpose is to "examine opportunities for and barriers to the increased deployment of geothermal energy technologies for both electricity generation and heating and cooling systems in western states, which contain the vast majority of high-yield geothermal energy capacity in the U.S."[11]

Compost Program & Facility edit

CMU's Compost Facility is student-run organization providing education, training, and selling compost to the public.[12] The program takes university generated food-waste and converts it nutrient-rich soil additive, thus, reducing the universities overall waste product.[13] The compost facility is run by CMU's Sustainability Council founded the Dr. John Heideman in 2013.[14]

Student media edit

  • KMSA 91.3 FM
  • The Criterion, student newspaper
  • CMU-TV, student-run television station
  • Horizon, student-run magazine

Notable alumni edit

References edit

  1. ^ "A Century of College". coloradomesa.edu. Colorado Mesa University. Retrieved 22 November 2022.
  2. ^ As of June 30, 2022. Foundation Annual Report 2022 (PDF) (Report). CMU Foundation. June 30, 2022. Retrieved February 6, 2023.
  3. ^ a b c "College Navigator - Colorado Mesa University".
  4. ^ http://new.mesastate.edu/trustees/index.html.mesastate.edu[permanent dead link]. 2010. Board of Trustees. Retrieved 2010.09.14
  5. ^ . 2023-03-08. Archived from the original on 2023-03-08. Retrieved 2023-04-19.
  6. ^ a b Beans, Carolyn (2 January 2018). "Can microbes keep time for forensic investigators?". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 115 (1): 3–6. Bibcode:2018PNAS..115....3B. doi:10.1073/pnas.1718156114. PMC 5776831. PMID 29295964.
  7. ^ "About Colorado Mesa University". Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Geo-Grid System | Colorado Mesa University". www.coloradomesa.edu. Retrieved 2024-01-13.
  9. ^ "Funding bill for Colorado Mesa and Western universities advances, Gov. Polis expected to sign". www.kjct8.com. 2023-04-18. Retrieved 2024-01-13.
  10. ^ Catlin, Marc; Bird, Shannon; Kirkmeyer, Barbara; Mullica, Kyle, Transfer From Severance Tax Operations Cash Fund, retrieved 2024-01-13
  11. ^ "The Heat Beneath Our Feet | WGA". westgov.org. Retrieved 2024-01-13.
  12. ^ "Compost Facility | Colorado Mesa University". www.coloradomesa.edu. Retrieved 2024-01-13.
  13. ^ "Sustainability Council | Colorado Mesa University". www.coloradomesa.edu. Retrieved 2024-01-13.
  14. ^ "From kitchen to garden". www.coloradomesa.edu. Retrieved 2024-01-13.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Colorado Mesa University Athletics website

colorado, mesa, university, other, colleges, with, similar, names, mesa, college, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challe. For other colleges with similar names see Mesa College disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Colorado Mesa University news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message Colorado Mesa University CMU or Mesa is a public university in Grand Junction Colorado The university s other locations include the Bishop Campus which houses Colorado Mesa University Tech in northwestern Grand Junction and a regional campus in Montrose approximately 60 miles south of Grand Junction CMU grants associate degrees bachelor s degrees and master s degrees Colorado Mesa UniversityFormer namesGrand Junction Junior College 1925 1937 Mesa College 1937 1988 Mesa State College 1988 2011 1 MottoSuccess Starts With HeartTypePublic universityEstablished1925 99 years ago 1925 Academic affiliationsSpace grantEndowment 42 19 million 2022 2 PresidentJohn MarshallStudents9 110 3 Undergraduates8 945 3 Postgraduates165 3 LocationGrand Junction Colorado United States39 04 50 N 108 33 16 W 39 08061 N 108 55456 W 39 08061 108 55456CampusUrban 104 acres 42 ha NewspaperThe CriterionColors Maroon white amp goldNicknameMavericksSporting affiliationsNCAA Division II Rocky MountainWebsitewww wbr coloradomesa wbr edu A university sign at North 12th Street and North Avenue Previously Mesa State College the college attained university status in August 2011 and changed its name to Colorado Mesa University Contents 1 Board of trustees 2 Academics 3 Residence life 4 Notable facilities 4 1 Houston Hall 4 2 Dominguez Hall 4 3 Lowell Heiny Hall 4 4 The University Center 4 5 The Maverick Center 4 6 Moss Performing Arts Center 4 7 Tomlinson Library 4 8 Forensic Investigation Research Station 5 Athletics 6 Sustainability 6 1 Geothermal Energy Program 6 2 Compost Program amp Facility 7 Student media 8 Notable alumni 9 References 10 External linksBoard of trustees editThe Board of Trustees has 13 trustees 11 voting and two non voting The voting members are appointed by Colorado s governor and confirmed by the Colorado State Senate and serve staggered terms The Colorado Mesa University Student Trustee is elected by the student body and is considered one of the most influential positions in the university and college system The Senatus Academicus names a member from its ranks to serve as the eleventh member 4 Academics editColorado Mesa University offers programs leading to awards in five levels technical certificates associate degrees baccalaureate degrees master s degrees and professional doctoral degrees The university is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission As of 2023 half the student body were first generation college students 5 Residence life edit nbsp Colorado Mesa University offers options for students to live on campus Over 2 000 students live on campus in 11 residential buildings consisting of traditional rooms suites and pods and apartments Residence halls and apartments are governed by the Residence Hall Association RHA The Residence Hall Council RHC is an extension of RHA and acts as the governing body for each residence hall The RHC of each building is composed of an elected executive board and an RHA representative Notable facilities editHouston Hall edit Houston Hall has the reputation of being the first building on campus Built in 1940 it is named for the college s first president Dr Clifford G Houston Before its construction the college had occupied an abandoned school building the old Lowell School in the city s downtown area During the 2011 expansion and renovation project delicate care was taken to match the new wing s ornamental brick facade with that of the original building nbsp Dominguez Hall Dominguez Hall edit Dominguez Hall was built in 2011 and is home to the Davis School of Business and the Center for Teacher Education This building has several classrooms including four large semi circle lecture rooms computer labs small study rooms study open spaces indoors and outdoors faculty offices a coffee shop and a boardroom Lowell Heiny Hall edit Originally built in 1967 to house the college library previously located in Houston Hall Lowell Heiny Hall now houses University Authorities offices Registrar s Office President s Office HR Marketing and faculty offices nbsp University Center The University Center edit The University Center was built in 2010 to replace the aging W W Campbell College Center It houses the main campus dining facilities including Dining Hall Bookcliff Cafe Starbucks Coffee and a small convenience store The center also houses the Associated Student Government The Criterion campus newspaper KMSA 91 3FM Bookstore Ballroom student lounges MAV Card Office and the Student Life office which contains some club offices The Maverick Center edit Formerly known as Saunders Field House The Maverick Center houses all athletic facilities in one building except for football and baseball Facilities include Brownson Arena El Pomar Natatorium Hamilton Recreation Center and Monfort Family Human Performance Lab Adjacent to The Maverick Center are Walker Field soccer and lacrosse stadium Elliot Tennis Complex Bergman Softball Field and the Maverick Pavilion Moss Performing Arts Center edit The Moss Performing Arts Center named for local Colorado Mesa University supporters John and Angie Moss provides music dance and theatre students with the facilities needed to let their creativity shine The center which recently underwent a 5 1 million renovation and expansion is home to the 600 seat William S Robinson Theatre a 300 seat recital hall the Walter Walker Reception Area the Mesa Experimental Theatre a design studio numerous music practice rooms smart technology classrooms faculty offices and a dance studio Moss is the home to the Theatre and Music Departments which offer a variety of entertainment for the campus and local community throughout the year nbsp Tomlinson Library Tomlinson Library edit By 1984 the library s collection had outgrown Lowell Heiny Library and plans were made to build the collection a new home The new library was dedicated in 1986 Recognized as an architectural gem in American School and University magazine citation needed the library was named for outgoing college president John U Tomlinson in 1988 to honor his commitment to improved library services at the college Tomlinson Library contains over 190 000 volumes including a large government documents collection and a geology library It also houses the Ethridge Pottery Collection of prehistoric southwestern ceramics Forensic Investigation Research Station edit Main article Body farm Colorado Mesa University Known by the acronym FIRS this facility consisting of a laboratory building and a fenced in body farm is located just outside Grand Junction 6 As of January 2018 the decomposition of 11 bodies was under investigation with a focus on identification of microbial clocks collections of microorganisms that appear and change in a predictable manner during the course of human body decomposition 6 Athletics editMain article Colorado Mesa Mavericks CMU s athletic teams are known as the Mavericks their mascot is symbolized by a rearing bull s head with flaring nostrils Official colors are maroon white and gold Student body fans are known as The Herd The Colorado Mesa Mavericks have 28 varsity teams 7 that compete in NCAA Division II athletics as part of the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference CMU fields teams in men s football men s baseball men s and women s basketball women s volleyball men s and women s cross country men s and women s indoor and outdoor track and field men s and women s golf men s and women s soccer men s and women s lacrosse women s softball men s and women s swimming men s and women s tennis and men s and women s wrestling Sustainability editGeothermal Energy Program edit CMU is one of the first adaptors to utilizing Geothermal energy throughout their campus The project known as CMU Geo Grid is currently underway 8 The system heats and cools for 1 2 million square feet of academic and auxiliary buildings reduced CMU s carbon footprint reduced by 17 742 metric tons of CO2 per year and provides CMU cost predictability allowing CMU to offer the second lowest tuition rate in Colorado 8 Currently CMU Geo Grid is connected 16 of the campus buildings 8 The university is planning to geothermal system to 9 addition buildings 8 The latest expansion is expected to happen from Colorado General Assembly bill SB23 250 passed by Barbara Kirkmeyer Kyle Mullica Marc Catlin and Shannon Bird which secured 6 million for further implementation CMU s geothermal exchange system 9 The bill was signed into law by Governor Jared Polis on April 28 2023 10 In 2021 Western Governors Association launched the Heat Beneath our Feet initiative at CMU s Campus 8 The initiative purpose is to examine opportunities for and barriers to the increased deployment of geothermal energy technologies for both electricity generation and heating and cooling systems in western states which contain the vast majority of high yield geothermal energy capacity in the U S 11 Compost Program amp Facility edit CMU s Compost Facility is student run organization providing education training and selling compost to the public 12 The program takes university generated food waste and converts it nutrient rich soil additive thus reducing the universities overall waste product 13 The compost facility is run by CMU s Sustainability Council founded the Dr John Heideman in 2013 14 Student media editKMSA 91 3 FM The Criterion student newspaper CMU TV student run television station Horizon student run magazineNotable alumni editBligh Madris professional baseball player Tony Martin professional football player John Pagano professional football coach Josh Penry former minority leader of the Colorado State Senate Sergio Romo professional baseball player Matt Soper member of the Colorado House of Representatives Ben Steele professional football player and coachReferences edit A Century of College coloradomesa edu Colorado Mesa University Retrieved 22 November 2022 As of June 30 2022 Foundation Annual Report 2022 PDF Report CMU Foundation June 30 2022 Retrieved February 6 2023 a b c College Navigator Colorado Mesa University http new mesastate edu trustees index html mesastate edu permanent dead link 2010 Board of Trustees Retrieved 2010 09 14 CMU supporting first generation students 2023 03 08 Archived from the original on 2023 03 08 Retrieved 2023 04 19 a b Beans Carolyn 2 January 2018 Can microbes keep time for forensic investigators Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 115 1 3 6 Bibcode 2018PNAS 115 3B doi 10 1073 pnas 1718156114 PMC 5776831 PMID 29295964 About Colorado Mesa University Retrieved 2 November 2021 a b c d e Geo Grid System Colorado Mesa University www coloradomesa edu Retrieved 2024 01 13 Funding bill for Colorado Mesa and Western universities advances Gov Polis expected to sign www kjct8 com 2023 04 18 Retrieved 2024 01 13 Catlin Marc Bird Shannon Kirkmeyer Barbara Mullica Kyle Transfer From Severance Tax Operations Cash Fund retrieved 2024 01 13 The Heat Beneath Our Feet WGA westgov org Retrieved 2024 01 13 Compost Facility Colorado Mesa University www coloradomesa edu Retrieved 2024 01 13 Sustainability Council Colorado Mesa University www coloradomesa edu Retrieved 2024 01 13 From kitchen to garden www coloradomesa edu Retrieved 2024 01 13 External links edit nbsp Colorado portal Official website Colorado Mesa University Athletics website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Colorado Mesa University amp oldid 1222478587, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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