The Underground is an independent media source for news and opinion in and around Wyoming. Founded in July 2009, The Underground features contributions from residents in Wyoming and discussion of national events beyond our four borders.

Letters to the editor are welcome and can be sent to meglanker@gmail.com. Please limit to 500 words. Letters may be edited for length or content - name and phone number are required for submission. No anonymous letters will be published. All opinions expressed here are those of the author and are not those of The Underground unless explicit endorsement is given. Publication does not equal endorsement.

News contributions should be limited to a maximum of 800 words and may also be edited. Press releases are also welcome. Please provide a name and phone number for verification.

The Underground encourages free speech and discussion on news and opinion, but please keep the discourse civil. The Underground reserves the right to remove any comments deemed abusive, threatening or spam.

Thought for the day

“The First Amendment was designed to protect offensive speech, because nobody ever tries to ban the other kind”

- Mike Godwin, American attorney & author, creator of Godwin's Law
Showing posts with label official statement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label official statement. Show all posts

UW professor found dead outside home

Photo: UW Associate Professor Margaret Zamudio, from Department of Sociology website, University of Wyoming

UW professor found dead outside home
Meg Lanker
Monday, December 28, 2009 1:21 PM MDT


A popular professor at the University of Wyoming has died.

Laramie resident Margaret "Margie" Zamudio, 45, was found dead outside her home Saturday after a concerned resident called police shortly after noon after seeing boots outside of a snowdrift. Authorities discovered Zamudio's body outside her home at approximately 12:30 p.m.

According to Commander Mitchell Cushman of the Laramie Police Department, authorities do not believe any foul play was involved and Zamudio's death appears to be accidental. "We believe she stepped outside at some point, slipped and became unconscious. Due to the weather conditions, she most likely froze to death," he said.

On Friday and Saturday, temperatures in Laramie dipped into the single digits with wind chills as low as -20°F. Cushman said extreme winter weather conditions of this type can quickly take a toll on an individual.

Cushman said the investigation is ongoing and toxicology results could take six to eight weeks.

University of Wyoming President Tom Buchanan released a statement Monday. "I know I speak for the University of Wyoming community when I say we’re all saddened by Margaret’s death; we will all miss her and her contributions to UW very much," he said.

Zamudio was an associate professor at UW and taught several classes, specializing in Chicano studies and social inequality. According to the UW Department of Sociology's website, she was beginning research "examining the political economy of pre-1960's gendered migration to the U.S. with an emphasis on Salvadoran women."

She received her doctorate from the University of California in 1996 and focused her research on issues of immigration and labor, on race, class, and gender, and on critical race studies in education.

Stay tuned...

Photo: Multi-exposure photos of mountains near Jackson Lake in Jackson, Wyo. Meg Lanker

The Underground has been rather quiet lately, but that doesn't mean there's nothing going on. Stay tuned for a piece on Saturday's Docs 4 patient care rally in Casper, Fort Hood, the University of Wyoming, and health care in general.

I am the editor of The Underground, but I am also a full time student. Now that school is beginning to wind down, expect brand new articles and opinions. Want to submit? Submissions are always welcome and are a key piece of this site. See the description above for instructions.

Thanks to the readers who have made this possible. As Thanksgiving approaches, I remember and am thankful for those who have encouraged me, kept reading, and will read in the future.

-Meg Lanker

The Underground mourns Sen. Ted Kennedy

On behalf of The Underground, I wish to issue a statement expressing my condolences to the Kennedy family and friends of Sen. Ted Kennedy. Sen. Kennedy was a great statesmen and a tireless champion for those who truly needed a warrior.

This is the time to put aside the divisiveness over health care reform and remember that Sen. Kennedy worked for on this issue for nearly 50 years in office, never seeing it come to fruition as he hoped.

This is the time to mourn the "lion of the senate" as he was called by his colleagues and to celebrate the reforms he did enact - many with bipartisan support.

And this is the time to pay tribute to Sen. Kennedy and truly reach across the aisle, both as legislators and Americans, to see his dreams of health care for all actually come into being.

-Meg Lanker, Editor

Contact Us

Interested in sponsoring an independent media source? Email Meg at meglanker@gmail.com