• "There is a serious quality issue no one is talking about, " University of New Mexico's Jan Fawcett frets.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Bruce Potts, professor at The University of New Mexico, sports a full tribal tattoo on his face.

    FORBES: Tattoos No Longer A Kiss Of Death In The Workplace

  • Others, like Chad Robinson, a graduate student at the University of New Mexico, find parallels to our own times.

    NPR: Revisiting the Birth of the Bomb

  • But Wesley Niewoehner of the University of New Mexico has unearthed evidence that harks back to an earlier idea.

    ECONOMIST: Gaining the upper hand

  • But his ideas were revived recently by Geoffrey Miller, an evolutionary biologist who works at the University of New Mexico.

    ECONOMIST: Human evolution

  • Across town from Godshall, Douglas Smith, a former University of New Mexico chemical engineer, is trying to keep things cold.

    FORBES: On The Cover/Top Stories

  • "Hispanics tend to be overrepresented in the military, " said Gabriel Sanchez, who teaches political science at the University of New Mexico.

    NPR: Obama Puts Major Focus On New Mexico

  • However, Randy Thornhill of the University of New Mexico has gone further in his analysis of who mates with whom, and why.

    ECONOMIST: Birds do it, bees do it | The

  • She moved to the USA, teaching geology at the University of New Mexico, and working as an energy policy consultant for Los Alamos National Laboratory.

    UNESCO: Who's who

  • Brinker, a professor of chemical engineering at the University of New Mexico, is turning out some of the most intricate nanomaterials the field has seen.

    FORBES: The Science of Small

  • To conduct their study, the two researchers asked 123 students from the University of New Mexico, where they both work, to fill in a questionnaire.

    ECONOMIST: Evolution and politics

  • Chris Garcia, a political scientist at the University of New Mexico, argues that Latino votes will depend most heavily on health care, education and welfare services.

    ECONOMIST: Special-interest groups

  • In 2003, Katie Hnida became the first woman to kick for an NCAA Division I-A football team, scoring in one game for the University of New Mexico.

    WSJ: Female kicker set for NFL regional combine tryout

  • For example, Professor Michelle Arthur, from the University of New Mexico, set out to examine stock market reactions to the announcement of Fortune 500 firms adopting such work-family initiatives.

    FORBES: In Praise of HR: The Soft Stuff Can Actually Lead to Some Hard Competitive Advantage

  • Alcohol abuse, insomnia and anxiety put people at risk, says University of New Mexico psychiatrist Jan Fawcett, who is pushing to get suicide risk assessment into the next DSM edition.

    FORBES: Medicine's Suicide Problem, Part 2

  • Just such a system was formally proposed in 1992 by Stephanie Forrest, of the University of New Mexico, and Alan Perelson of the Los Alamos National Laboratory, also in New Mexico.

    ECONOMIST: A thousand ills require a thousand cures

  • Find one- to two-foot-long red ristras at Wagner Farm in nearby Corrales, or try the red sauce on huevos rancheros at Frontier Restaurant across from the University of New Mexico.

    BBC: The backbone of New Mexican cuisine

  • Undone by stress and grief, Chris stopped working some of the personal training jobs he held to supplement his income teaching in the exercise science program at the University of New Mexico.

    CNN: Family of 5 weathers economy with 7 housemates

  • There will be "watch parties" at Iowa State University, in a state the president visits Wednesday, the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, where Mr. Obama was Tuesday morning, and campuses throughout the country.

    WSJ: Obama Travels To Fire Up Young Voters

  • The forum's members were unable to examine all the potential effects of Chernobyl's radiation, says Fred Mettler, a professor of nuclear medicine at the University of New Mexico who led the team investigating health effects for the Chernobyl Forum.

    ECONOMIST: Nuclear power: Little to fear but fear itself | The

  • "I had been a board member of the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival for several years, " reported Cheryl Willman, director of the Cancer Center at the University of New Mexico, who co-created the event with the festival's artistic director, composer Marc Neikrug.

    WSJ: Music, the Brain, Medicine and Wellness | With Music on Their Mind | By Stuart Isacoff

  • In what appears to be an early proof-of-concept for DNA computing, scientists at Columbia University and the University of New Mexico have created a basic computer, called the MAYA-II, which has a molecular array of YES and AND logic gates made up of 100 DNA circuits.

    ENGADGET: Meet MAYA-II, the new DNA computer that can play Tic-Tac-Toe

  • To be sure, some mental health innovation can also be found in parts of the U.S. Project ECHO, partly funded by the Department of Health and Human Services, is using telephone and Internet technology to link specialists at the University of New Mexico with primary care doctors, community health workers, and health educators in rural parts of the state.

    CNN: America has to tackle its suicide problem

  • In a 2013 study, Kent Kiehl of the University of New Mexico, looking at a population of 96 male offenders in the state's prison system, found that in the four years after their release, those with low activity in the anterior cingulate cortex a brain area involved in regulating behavior were twice as likely to commit another offense as those who had high activity in this region.

    WSJ: Neurocriminology: Inside the Criminal Mind

  • From January to May, some 491 people were killed in drug-related hits, compared to 958 during the same months of 2011, according to Molly Molloy, a librarian at New Mexico State University who keeps track of Juarez homicides.

    WSJ: Mexico Drug Violence Shows Decline

  • Luckily there is no record of anyone dying from eating peppers, according to Paul Bosland, head of New Mexico State University's Chile Pepper Institute, in Las Cruces, New Mexico.

    WSJ: Arms Race to Grow World's Hottest Pepper Goes Nuclear

  • Prior to my present position, I was Director of the New Mexico State University Carlsbad Environmental Monitoring and Research Center, the independent and academic monitoring facility for the Department of Energy WIPP, a little-known deep geologic nuclear repository for bomb waste.

    FORBES: James Conca - The Geopolitics Of Energy - Archive

  • Prior to my present position, I was Director of the New Mexico State University Carlsbad Environmental Monitoring and Research Center, the independent and academic monitoring facility for the Department of Energy's WIPP site, a little-known deep geologic nuclear repository for bomb waste.

    FORBES: James Conca - The Geopolitics Of Energy - Archive

  • The latest batch of partners also includes the Universities of Georgia, Kentucky, Nebraska, New Mexico and West Virginia University.

    WSJ: Higher ed systems in 10 states turn to Coursera

  • After growing up in Socorro, New Mexico, Bhappu got degrees in metallurgical engineering at the University of Arizona, and a PhD in mineral economics from the Colorado School of Mines.

    FORBES: The Money Man Behind America's Rare Earth Minerals

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