Three researchers at New Mexico State University recently received a grant from the Paso del Norte Health Foundation to promote lifelong physical activity among teens.
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New Mexico State University’s Aggies Without Limits have been doing community service projects both abroad and locally since 2007, often facing challenges such as having no running water, lodging, or even electricity. But the can-do attitude of these hearty volunteers always prevails—even when it comes to hauling 700-pound steel beams by hand for a pedestrian bridge being erected on the Otero County Fairgrounds in Alamogordo, New Mexico.
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New Mexico State University’s Office of Experiential Learning will host the sixth annual Health Professions Fair from 2 to 5 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 5. This event is co-sponsored by the College of Health and Social Services and will be held virtually via Handshake.
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New Mexico State University English professor Connie Voisine, former NMSU visiting professor Sheila Black who now works for the Association of Writers and Writing Programs in Washington, D.C. and Jennifer Bartlett, disability activist, are poets, academics and friends. In 2017, they co-founded an organization for poets and writers who identify as having disabilities called Zoeglossia. By May 2019 the organization held its first conference in San Antonio, which provided intensive mentoring, classes, roundtable discussions and readings for 11 writers and poets from several U.S. states and the United Kingdom.
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New Mexico State University was recognized on the seventh annual U.S. News & World Report Best Global Universities 2021 rankings. NMSU is among 1,500 institutions in 86 countries listed, and this year NMSU tied for 750th.
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A New Mexico State University researcher is part of a group of turfgrass experts from several land-grant universities across the United States that coauthored two newly published papers on the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on the turfgrass industry.
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A new study by a group of researchers from New Mexico and Indiana found that Americans’ diets are becoming unhealthier as a result of stresses related to the coronavirus pandemic.
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New Mexico State University will partner with the Hispanic Scholarship Fund and The Bridge of Southern New Mexico to host the HSF virtual College Camp Nov. 7. The free, bilingual college preparation workshops will be held on Zoom to help middle and high school students and their families learn more about how to prepare for college.
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The New Mexico Produced Water Research Consortium, a joint effort between the New Mexico Environment Department and New Mexico State University, announced today it will partner with Occidental, the Permian Basin’s largest acreage holder and one of its largest oil producers, in a cooperative agreement to help facilitate safe and reliable field testing and evaluation of pilot and large-scale innovative produced water treatment technologies.
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Amanda LaTasha Armstrong, a doctoral candidate at New Mexico State University, has been selected as a fellow of the National Science Foundation Community for Advancing Discovery Research in Education (CADRE) Fellowship program, which provides professional growth opportunities for early career researchers whose work centers on diversity, equity and inclusion in STEM education.
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A public health expert whose research has appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, Yahoo News and several other major media outlets is the newest faculty member in the College of Health and Social Services at New Mexico State University.
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New Mexico State University’s Office of Experiential Learning and JCPenney will host the third annual Suit-Up event from 5 to 8 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 25, at the Mesilla Valley Mall, 700 Telshor Blvd., Ste 2000.
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Krishna Kota, associate professor of thermal sciences and energy in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at New Mexico State University, has received a nearly $250,000 Defense University Research Instrumentation Program (DURIP) grant from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research to purchase equipment for conducting research on the cooling of directed-energy weapon systems.
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Two New Mexico State University gender and sexuality studies professors and creators of the Feminist Border Arts Film Festival were invited to recap five years’ worth of their work in a two-hour retrospective program of short films and video art in collaboration with 516 ARTS, a non-collecting, contemporary art museum located in Albuquerque.
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New Mexico State University's Black Programs will host a two-mile walk Thursday, Oct. 22, as part of a national initiative for African-American women and girls that promotes healthy living, families and communities through walking.
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ABIQUIU – This year’s grape crop has been harvested, but the work is not over. Now is the time to reassess and prepare the vineyard for winter.
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EnergySprint, the successful business accelerator hosted by Arrowhead Center at New Mexico State University, recently primed participants to contribute to New Mexico’s emerging clean energy economy. The six-week venture builder allowed New Mexico innovators to focus on what made their technologies unique and what they could do to improve – by getting in front of real customers and hearing immediate feedback.
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New Mexico State University is inviting all campus community members to walk a mile this month in support of the third annual Chancellor Walk.
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The number of teacher vacancies in New Mexico has decreased 11 percent compared to last year, while the number of admitted students and program graduates in higher education teacher programs have increased, according to the 2020 New Mexico Educator Vacancy Report compiled by the Southwest Outreach Academic Research Evaluation & Policy Center at New Mexico State University.
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New Mexico State University has been recognized on the Top 100 Colleges and Universities for Hispanics list published in the October issue of The Hispanic Outlook on Education Magazine.
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New Mexico State University’s Cooperative Extension Service will present a series of upcoming virtual cooking classes designed to teach adults with diabetes how to cook healthy meals.
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The pesticide safety education program at New Mexico State University is now offering workshops two ways online.
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The New Mexico State University Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry recently added a new assistant professor to their faculty, bringing experience, expertise and more $2.2 million in various grants from the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.
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As online education becomes the new normal, many low-income families are struggling to find resources to allow their children to fully participate in classes. Nearly one-quarter of New Mexico’s students lack equipment and internet access at home.
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New Mexico State University’s Department of Public Health Sciences will present its sixth annual Public Health Heroes Awards throughout October, honoring several Doña Ana County leaders and organizations for their public health commitments, collaborations and contributions.
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Small unmanned aircraft system virtual workshops were held by staff from New Mexico State University’s Physical Science Laboratory in collaboration with the USDA Agricultural Research Service Scientific Computing Program Sept. 30 and Oct. 7. Scientists want to expand research opportunities, and sUAS are a way of collecting more and new data. The PSL team was asked by the USDA ARS to help guide new potential sUAS users on the best practice approaches to safely and effectively using this technology for research.
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Despite the cancellation of all international travel through the end of 2020, New Mexico State University’s Education Abroad continues to offer students options to explore the world.
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New Mexico State University and New Mexico-based Lescombes Winery announced the creation and launch of Pistol Pete’s Crimson Legacy, one of less than 10 collegiate-licensed wines in the country. The Cabernet Sauvignon will be available at all Lescombes locations beginning today, with additional, statewide distribution over the coming weeks.
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The U.S. Small Business Administration has awarded a sixth year of funding to the New Mexico Federal and State Technology Partnership Program (NM FAST), housed at New Mexico State University’s Arrowhead Center, to provide programming for small businesses in the state.
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Lt. Col. Mark McClellan is taking over the reins of the Army ROTC Bataan Battalion at New Mexico State University. Before coming to NMSU in July, McClellan commanded the 1st Battalion, 77th Armored Regiment at Fort Bliss.
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