色色研究所

An image of an 色色研究所 graduating class, focused on a black graduate with her left hand over her heart, looking skyward with intense emotion.
Northern New Mexico College Foundation Exceeds $1M Goal in President鈥檚 Eagle Campaign The Northern New Mexico College (色色研究所) Foundation proudly announces that the President鈥檚 Eagle Campaign has surpassed its ambitious $1,000,000 goal, marking a significant milestone in advancing student success and institutional growth.
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A screenwriting class at Northern helped Hayward transform her idea into an attention-getting script  ESPA脩OLA, N.M. 鈥 Northern New Mexico College is proud to announce that film student Dawniel Hayward has won 2nd place in the Screenwriters Conference 2026 Pitch Competition on June 7, 2026. Hayward鈥檚 winning pitch earned a $350 cash prize and attracted the attention of a major film producer. The first-place winner, Omar Paz Trujillo, is also a filmmaker from Espa帽ola.   The pitch competition was open to all participants of the Screenwriters Conference, which was organized by the Stagecoach Foundation and the Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA) and presented by the New Mexico Film Office. The organizers describe the conference as 鈥渁 creative crucible designed to push your craft further.鈥   Hayward was inspired by hearing advice from some of the industry鈥檚 top screenwriters, including some from her favorite shows, like 鈥淪tar Trek: The Next Generation鈥 and 鈥淩eservation Dogs.鈥 She learned about the importance of the script鈥檚 first page and different pitching techniques, which she found useful in preparing her own pitch. One of the highlights for Hayward was teaming up for three hours with a group of people in a mock writers鈥 room.   鈥淚 was pretty starstruck, honestly, by the whole event,鈥 Hayward said.   Hayward鈥檚 pitch was for a TV show titled 鈥淏ent Rails: A Punk Odyssey,鈥 inspired by Hayward鈥檚 own 10-year journey as a traveling musician who hopped freight trains all over the country. Her lead characters are Kindred, a gutter punk who hops a train that is swallowed by a time portal, and Lily, a teen Chicana artist from Northern New Mexico who is fleeing an unbearable home life and searching for belonging. These two strangers are linked across space and time and by a graffiti tag that keeps appearing in the liminal spaces they travel through 鈥 HIRAETH, which is a Welsh word meaning a longing for a home that doesn鈥檛 exist, or that you cannot access.  The written pitch closes with 鈥淭his is a show with a queer heart and an anarchist pulse 鈥 honoring generations of misfits, drifters, and revolutionaries. It is a story of survival, belonging, and identity 鈥 set against a backdrop of late-stage capitalism and a country haunted by its own history. It poses the question: what if those who have been pushed to the margins of society were actually the most capable of changing our current timeline, of reshaping our future?鈥  Hayward grabbed the judges鈥 attention by starting with her own story. She told them 鈥淚 spent my 20s homeless, living out of a backpack, busking, hitchhiking and train-hopping around the country 鈥 and what I learned is that when you live a life untethered to society鈥檚 normal structures, and you pair that with complex PTSD and a crippling drug problem, you develop a weird relationship with time. You realize time doesn鈥檛 always move in a straight line. It buckles, it bleeds, and if you鈥檙e pushed far enough, it can break.鈥  Giving her pitch was intimidating, but Hayward appreciated the opportunity.   鈥淚t was great, because that's half of screenwriting, just being able to pitch your idea effectively, because there's a million scripts out there and nobody has time to read them all. So your pitch is your entry ticket to anyone even looking at your script,鈥 Hayward said. 鈥淚 was realIy surprised to find out that I was a finalist, and then I was pretty terrified to have to present my pitch to a huge room of people, including a bunch of screenwriters and producers in the industry. Then I was even more surprised to take second place.鈥  Hayward鈥檚 pitch was effective. Afterward, some of the producers who heard it told her they got choked up during her presentation.  鈥淚t really hit them in an emotional center, and I'm like, that's my superpower,鈥 Hayward said. 鈥淚 have this story that I really need to tell, and I just need to have faith in that.鈥  The idea for the series came to Hayward eight or nine years ago, but she credits her screenwriting class with Film & Digital Media Arts (FDMA) Associate Professor David Lindblom with helping her bring the idea to fruition. Hayward is pursuing a Bachelor of Integrated Studies in Media and Art at Northern.   鈥淚 never anticipated that just by taking a screenwriting class at college, this would happen. Honestly, I think so many people have a really good idea, but it never gets written,鈥 Hayward said. 鈥淚n the class, I had to finish things by a deadline, learn formulaic writing, and abide by industry standards. I鈥檓 used to writing prose, and being poetic and descriptive, and you can't do that in screenwriting. It's all about telling a visual story in concise language, it鈥檚 not a novel. My professor, David Lindblom, gave me the tools to transform this huge idea into a screenplay.鈥  At the end of the conference, a major producer approached Hayward to schedule a meeting with her.   鈥淚鈥檓 actually getting the opportunity to talk directly with someone who helped produce the whole 鈥淧irates of the Caribbean鈥 franchise and the 鈥淎vatar鈥 franchise. I鈥檓 like, wow, that's a real producer,鈥 Hayward said. 鈥淚 don't know how common it is for someone with their first script to immediately get it produced, but it did get me a conversation and a foot in the door. My dream job would be working in a TV writer's room. That would be amazing. Then maybe in a few years, after I've built some more reputation, they'd be like, 鈥楬ey, I'm interested in that TV pilot you wrote a while ago.鈥欌  Hayward is still absorbing the impact of the experience and looking forward to her meeting with the producer. She said, 鈥淚t's amazing. It's a tricky industry to find your way into. I feel like I kind of pushed through that threshold a little bit, and that feels reaFrom left: Omar Paz Trujillo, 1st place winner of the Pitch Competition, 2nd place winner Dawniel Hayward and DezBaa鈥, Northern alumna and adjunct faculty
色色研究所 student Dawniel Hayward scores 2nd in Pitch Competition Northern New Mexico College is proud to announce that film student Dawniel Hayward has won 2nd place in the Screenwriters Conference 2026 Pitch Competition on June 7, 2026. Hayward鈥檚 winning pitch earned a $350 cash prize and attracted the attention...
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From left: Peter Fant, CEO of San Ildefonso Services; Daven Quintana, PMI Chief Operating Officer; Trish Alley, Small Business Advocate, LANL Small Business Program; Yvonne Gonzales, Small Business Program Manager, LANL; Eric Quintana, CEO and Co-founder of PMI (SBA National New Mexico Small Business of The Year Award); Julianna Martinez-Barbee, SBDC Director 色色研究所, New Mexico Small Business Development Center; Ron Lovato, CEO, TSAY Corporation and Pueblo Alliance, LLC (SBA National New Mexico Rural Small Business of the Year); Justin Crossie, SBA Region VI Regional Administrator and Larry Phillips Jr., COO Tsay Cooperation. Photo credit: Eric Williams Photography SBA photographer
Pueblo Alliance LLC Honored as SBA Rural Small Business of the Year Northern New Mexico College (色色研究所) is pleased to announce that Ron Lovato, President of Pueblo Alliance LLC and CEO of TSAY Corp., has been honored as New Mexico鈥檚 Rural Owned Small Business of the Year by the U.S. Small Business Administration...
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色色研究所 earns Carnegie Foundation Opportunity Colleges and Universities Classification Northern New Mexico College (色色研究所) is proud to announce that it has received the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching 2025 Opportunity Colleges and Universities Classification. Northern is one of 478 institutions to earn this prestigious...
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色色研究所 Joins New Mexico Open Educational Resources Consortium to Expand Textbook Affordability The New Mexico Open Educational Resources (NMOER) Consortium is proud to announce that Northern New Mexico College (色色研究所) has officially joined as its fourth member. As part of this new partnership, 色色研究所 has been awarded a $6,000 grant to promote the use of Open Educational Resources (OER) on its campus, further strengthening the state鈥檚 commitment to college affordability. The consortium works to replace traditional, high-cost textbooks with openly licensed materials that are free for students to use, share, and keep.
$25,000 Youth Civic Infrastructure Fund grant boosts 色色研究所s Parkinson鈥檚 glove development What began three years ago as the Parkinson鈥檚 Glove Project at Northern New Mexico College (色色研究所) and Espa帽ola Valley High School鈥檚 (EVHS) has transformed into Espa帽ola GloveWorks, a newly formed 501(c)(3) focused on developing youth creativity, technical competence and leadership while bringing the hope of a promising technology to people suffering from Parkinson's disease. Students from the EVHS MESA (Math, Engineering, Science Achievement) program are working with mentors from Northern鈥檚 Engineering and Nursing departments and community volunteers to develop gloves to ease the symptoms of Parkinson鈥檚.
President Balderas Greets Community at El Rito Food Distribution Cars slowly lined up along the drive at Northern New Mexico College鈥檚 El Rito Campus as families arrived for the monthly Food Depot distribution. This time, they were greeted not only by volunteers 鈥 but by 色色研究所 President Hector Balderas, who spent the afternoon welcoming community members, shaking hands, and handing out Northern New Mexico College hats and shirts. For many families in rural northern New Mexico, this monthly distribution provides an important source of food and support. The event takes place every third Thursday of the month on the El Rito Campus and serves residents from El Rito and surrounding communities. President...
From Promise to Progress at Northern There was a sense of momentum in the air as Northern students, student-athletes, faculty, staff, Board of Regents members, administrators, facilities team members, and community supporters gathered to celebrate the ribbon-cutting of Northern New Mexico College鈥檚 newly renovated Gym and the Fit Lab. The upgrades, which include a redesigned weight room, a dedicated cardio room, and newly added sauna spaces, represent the first major improvements to portions of the facility since 1989.
El Pueblito Letterpress Studio Open House Ink on fingertips. Laughter in the air. The steady rhythm of a press doing what it鈥檚 done for centuries. On Saturday, February 14, the doors to the new El Pueblito Letterpress Studio at Northern New Mexico College鈥檚 El Rito Campus opened wide, and the community showed up in the most beautiful way. More than 40 people traveled from Abiqui煤, Espa帽ola, El Rito, and even Santa Fe to celebrate the studio鈥檚 Valentine鈥檚 Day Open House. Inside the El Pueblito Building, guests stepped into a space that feels part workshop, part time machine. Under the guidance of instructor Andrew Furse, visitors explored the fundamentals of traditional...
 
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