New Mexico State University Chancellor Dan Arvizu announced a series of broad organizational changes today for NMSU Alamogordo, NMSU Carlsbad and NMSU Grants. While the mission of each campus will remain the same, the three community colleges will undergo administrative restructuring and other adjustments to transition into a more integrated system of branch campuses. The moves will allow NMSU to better serve each of these communities, with added programming from the NMSU main campus, but at a lower cost to taxpayers. At this time, the changes will not affect NMSU’s Doña Ana Community College.
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The Village of Los Ranchos was incorporated in 1958, inspired by a desire to preserve a rural lifestyle, with open fields, unencumbered views and active cultivation of the land.
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Retired Army Brig. Gen. Eric L. Sanchez believes teamwork and trust are two important components to leading an organization. Sanchez plans to apply that philosophy as the new director of New Mexico State University’s Physical Science Laboratory.
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What if students were able to turn on their brains to make sure they remember when learning something new? That future may be built on current research of a New Mexico State University psychology professor.
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When new technology meets ancient and revered culinary traditions, even classic handmade foods can be improved upon and made more efficiently.
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Rest easy: The large wasp dubbed a “murder hornet” by the media is not murderous to humans. Nor is it found in New Mexico, according to New Mexico State University Cooperative Extension Service specialists.
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New Mexico State University will introduce a new course this fall focused entirely on digital literacy for students interested in learning the fundamentals of using electronic devices for personal and academic needs.
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New Mexico State University professors Michael Hout, psychology associate professor, and Tiziana Giorgi, mathematical sciences professor, will be spending the next year, with the option of a second year in Alexandria, Virginia, working as program directors for the National Science Foundation.
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New Mexico State University’s Pride of New Mexico Marching Band, known as “The World’s Most Dangerous Marching Band,” may now be the world’s safest, after a student created two different types of masks that allow members to continue playing the music they love while still reducing the spread of COVID-19.
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New Mexico State University, in collaboration with the New Mexico Department of Health, is providing free COVID-19 testing for incoming out-of-state resident students who are currently undergoing the 14-day quarantine required by the state of New Mexico.
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