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SWTX Radiologic Technology Students Earn Inaugural Ralph Gonzalez Scholarships

SWTX Radiologic Technology Students Earn Inaugural Ralph Gonzalez Scholarships

From left, Judy Gonzales, Southwest Texas College applied sciences division chair; Janna Whyrick, radiology director at Uvalde Memorial Hospital; Bonnie S. Clinebell Esquivel, SWTX coordinator of radiologic technology; Jesica Sandoval, radiologic technology student; Ralph Gonzalez, Uvalde Memorial Hospital radiation safety officer; Cheyenne Walling, radiologic technology student; Denise Vanderlick, SWTX radiologic technology clinical coordinator; and Armando Mondragon, SWTX dean of applied sciences.
From left, Judy Gonzales, Southwest Texas College applied sciences division chair; Janna Whyrick, radiology director at Uvalde Memorial Hospital; Bonnie S. Clinebell Esquivel, SWTX coordinator of radiologic technology; Jesica Sandoval, radiologic technology student; Ralph Gonzalez, Uvalde Memorial Hospital radiation safety officer; Cheyenne Walling, radiologic technology student; Denise Vanderlick, SWTX radiologic technology clinical coordinator; and Armando Mondragon, SWTX dean of applied sciences.
Uvalde, TX, April 22, 2026 - Southwest Texas College radiologic technology students Jessica Sandoval of Uvalde and Cheyenne Walling of Del Rio have been named the first recipients of the Ralph Gonzalez Scholarship, a new award created by Radiology Associates of Uvalde to honor longtime imaging leader Ralph “Freddie” Gonzalez.
 
The scholarship provides 2,000‑dollar awards to current students in the SWTX Radiologic Technology Program who show strong academic performance and professional promise. Gonzalez, a retired radiology director at Uvalde Memorial Hospital who now serves as the hospital’s radiation safety officer, helped build regional pathways for radiologic technologists and has served on the program’s clinical advisory board since its launch in 2007.
 
During a recent meeting in the college’s radiologic technology lab, Gonzalez thanked college and hospital leaders for their support of the program and encouraged students to see themselves as professionals from the moment they enter the clinic. He urged them to act as ambassadors for the program, saying that every patient encounter is an opportunity to exceed expectations and inspire future imaging professionals.
 
Program faculty and hospital representatives also praised the scholarship applicants, noting that many graduates now work in advanced imaging areas across Uvalde Memorial Hospital’s expanded department, which grew from a small diagnostic X‑ray unit to a multimodality service under Gonzalez’s leadership.
 
Southwest Texas College’s radiologic technology program has graduated more than 120 radiographers and continues to partner with Uvalde Memorial Hospital to meet regional workforce needs in medical imaging.