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LAS CRUCES – New Mexico State University is spending $6.3 million in federal pandemic relief money on almost two dozen projects to “further the university’s strategic goals, including student success and social mobility,” and will use close to another $6 million on other student-oriented goals and technology.
The university announced June 30 it will fund 23 projects using federal money obtained through the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund. The projects, the university said, are meant to “address limitations caused by the COVID-19 pandemic” as well as “enhance faculty and staff readiness” to improve student performance and aligning with NMSU’s goals.
“We selected a wide range of projects that support our mission and the intent behind HEERF in diverse ways,” said NMSU President John Floros in a news release. “They run the gamut from COVID-19 wastewater testing and
Blue Origin launch opens door for talent near and far, NMSU aerospace engineers say
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Tree die-offs might be worst since 2002 - Sedona Red Rock News
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Sydney Lienemann, bottom right, founder of UpCycle Power, celebrates her win at the Arrowhead Innovation Fund’s 2021 Pitch Competition. (Courtesy photo)
SANTA FE, N.M. Old electric vehicle batteries could soon provide backup storage power for renewable generation systems through a local startup, UpCycle Power, which plans to repurpose used car batteries for clean-energy markets.
The company won a $5,000 first-place prize last March at Arrowhead Innovation Fund’s 2021 pitch competition at New Mexico State University after UpCycle founder Sydney Lienemann received in-depth mentoring and assistance from NMSU to turn her innovative idea into a marketable product.
The Foster Innovation Exchange Prototyping Lab at New Mexico State University has supported the development of a complex prototype for Evus, a startup creating a technology intended to mitigate scaling and fouling formation in all water filtration plant and heat transfer systems. (Courtesy photo)