Notes from the Sept. 2000 Regents Meeting
by George Zamora
SOCORRO, N.M. September 19, 2000 -- Total enrollment at New
Mexico Tech has increased 2.8 percent this fall semester, raising
the overall headcount at the state-funded research university
to 1,597 students.
New Mexico Tech President Daniel H. López in a report
to the school's board of regents noted that the Socorro university's
latest headcount had especially fared well in comparison to a
general decline in enrollment at a number of other four-year universities.
"The figures I've seen for enrollment at universities
throughout the state suggest that it's been a very competitive
year in terms of student recruitment," López said.
"This is true on the national level as well, according to
a recent issue of The Chronicle of Higher Education,"
he added.
During its September 18 board meeting, New Mexico Tech regents
also were informed that the freshman retention rate at the university
had improved slightly, with 72 percent of the last year's entering
freshman class returning to Tech this fall.
In other actions taken during its monthly meeting, the Tech
Board of Regents approved a resolution to change the official
name of one of the university's research divisions from the "New
Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources" to the "New
Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources."
Bureau director Peter A. Scholle told regents that "Bureau
of Mines" is actually a misnomer, since only 10 percent of
the work the organization currently performs is related to mines.
"In essence, we're the state geological survey," Scholle
pointed out.
An official request from Tech regents and university administrators
will now be forwarded to the state legislature, asking that the
name change be enacted through legislation which would modify
the state statutes that originally established the Bureau in 1927.
The New Mexico Tech Board of Regents also granted tenure to three
current Tech staff members during its meeting: Van Romero, Tech's
vice president for research and economic development, was accorded
tenure as a professor of physics; Peter Gerity, Tech's vice president
for academic affairs, was granted tenure as a professor of general
engineering; and Nelia Dunbar, analytical geochemist with the
New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources, was also awarded
tenure in her current position.
Tech regents also approved the purchase of 41 new vehicles for
the university at a total cost of $793,000.
In other official actions, a longtime New Mexico Tech faculty
member who recently announced his retirement--Stephen Schery,
professor of physics and research physicist--was conferred emeritus
status by the university's governing board.
In addition, the regents were given a detailed report on a recent
pre-campaign survey conducted by Cargill Associates on the feasibility
of the university possibly conducting a capital fundraising campaign
sometime in the near future.
An update on the specific goal of improving student quality of
life, as outlined in New Mexico Tech's Strategic Plan, was later
provided by Herbert Fernandez, Tech's vice president for institutional
development.
The regents also voted to approve a request for proposal which
allows Follet, Inc. to continue as the operator of the campus
bookstore. Follet was the only company which submitted a bid
for bookstore management services.
In a separate portion of the meeting, the Tech regents met as
members of the New Mexico Tech Employee Benefit Trust and were
informed that because of ongoing escalation of expenses incurred
as a self-insurer, Tech employees enrolled in the insurance plan
provided by the Benefit Trust will soon have to decide whether
to reduce benefits provided and/or increase monthly insurance
premiums by as much as ten percent.
-NMT-
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