News
Chancellor J. Keith Motley presented two UMass Boston students with Krystle Campbell Scholarships at an event Saturday in Medford celebrating Campbell’s legacy and the Boston Marathon team that runs in her name.Eden Blakeley ‘18, of Dorchester, and Leona Smith ‘17, of Revere, each received $5,000 scholarships to pursue their management degrees.
"These are two shining examples of what the impact of Krystle’s life continues to be," Motley said.
Medford Mayor Stephanie Burke, Krystle’s father Bill Campbell, and members of this year’s Run for Krystle Marathon Team were on hand for the celebration, which was held steps away from the Krystle Campbell Peace Garden. Campbell, a victim of the 2013 marathon bombings, attended UMass Boston from 2005 to 2007 and received a degree posthumously.
“This scholarship has brought me one step closer to following my dreams,” Smith said.
Before the event, the marathon team ran through Medford, stopping for a moment outside the Campbell house in tribute. Team members were greeted with hugs by Bill Campbell as they arrived at the event.
“I’m really so proud,” Bill Campbell said. “I miss her so much.”
The marathon team runs the Boston Marathon every year to raise money for the scholarship fund established in Krystle’s memory. Since 2014, UMass Boston has awarded two Krystle Campbell Scholarships every year to female students pursuing business degrees. The scholarship was started by former UMass Trustee Richard Campbell and his wife Barbara. Campbell is not related to Krystle, but like her, grew up in Medford and attended UMass Boston.
"Eighty people competed for those scholarships this year," Richard Campbell said. "And the people who get the awards are incredibly fabulous people. We’re looking at the business leaders of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and the nation."
The 2017 Run for Krystle Marathon Team includes UMass Boston graduates, staff and faculty members, and friends of the university. Through the ...
Read More
Thursday, April 13, 2017
Two UMass Boston Students Earn $5K Krystle Campbell Scholarships
Phillips and Saucier Stymie Clark in Midweek NEWMAC Pair on Rooftop Field
WPI News Archive
Apr 12, 2017
WORCESTER --- Freshman Mackenzie Phillips (Gill, MA) tied her career high of 10 strikeouts in a complete-game shutout while the WPI offense scored 13 runs on 10 hits in game one and then teamed with junior Kelsey Saucier (Worcester, MA) for a combined shutout in game two of a NEWMAC Softball set Wednesday evening on Rooftop Field. The Engineers took the opener 13-0 in five and the nightcap 3-0.
Phillips, who established her personal strikeout standard exactly one week ago versus Fitchburg State, yielded two hits and a walk in the five-inning shutout. Sophomore Renee LeClaire (Merrimack, NH) was the only Engineer to deliver multiple hits as she went 2-for-4 with a double, a stolen base, 2 RBI and a run.
Junior Ama Biney (Worcester, MA) and senior Hope Shevchuk (Burlington, CT) each doubled and drove in two runs while Saucier doubled in a late pinch hitting appearance. Juniors Katie Chagami (Waipahu, HI) and RiAnna May (Westminster, CO) each plated a pair and classmate Julia Veitch (Carlisle, MA) scored twice. Freshman Cassie Graca (Somerset, MA) stole three bases and scored three runs.
Sophomore Jocie Orangio (Maynard, MA) accounted for both of the Cougars hits to go with a walk by junior Sami West (Gonic, NH). junior Brenna Foley (Charlton, MA) and freshman Maddie Letendre (Mansfield, MA) each spent time in the circle for the guests.
Graca poked a single through the right side to score Biney in the first. May then singled in a pair with a hit up the middle for the 3-0 lead after one. WPI continued to pull away with a five-run second. LeClaire began with a productive infield out. Chagami sent one up the middle to push two across and Shevchuk doubled in two more. LeClaire then doubled to allow Graca to cross the dish in the third.
Saucier, pinch hitting for Shevchuk, sent an RBI double to left ...
Read More
Twice as bright: Earth-sized planets with two suns could still be habitable
Princeton University Top Stories
Scientists know that two-star systems can support planets, but the question has remained whether an Earth-size terrestrial planet were orbiting two suns could it support life. A study in the journal Nature Communications has now found that an Earth-like planet orbiting two stars could be habitable if it were within a certain range from its two stars.
Read More
IU Jacobs School of Music alumnus Lawrence Brownlee appointed artistic advisor at Opera Philadelphia
IU
IU Jacobs School of Music alumnus Lawrence Brownlee appointed artistic advisor at Opera PhiladelphiaFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEApril 4, 2017BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Indiana University Jacobs School of Music alumnus Lawrence Brownlee has been appointed artistic advisor at Opera Philadelphia.
Brownlee starred in the company’s 2015 world premiere of “Charlie Parker’s Yardbird,” by Daniel Schnyder, along with Jacobs alumna Angela Brown.
Hailed by the Associated Press as one of “the world’s leading bel canto tenors,” Brownlee earned a Master of Music degree from the Jacobs School in 2001, studying primarily with Costanza Cuccaro.
Prior to graduating, he won Grand Prize in the 2001 Metropolitan Opera National Council auditions, preceding this year’s winner, Jacobs master’s student Richard Smagur.
Brownlee’s Grammy-nominated recording, “Virtuoso Rossini Arias,” prompted New Yorker critic Alex Ross to query “Is there a finer Rossini tenor than Lawrence Brownlee?” His latest recording, “Allegro io son,” was released in September.
One of the most in-demand singers around the world, Brownlee was recently nominated for Male Singer of the Year by the 2017 International Opera Awards. Winners will be announced May 7.
He has performed with nearly every leading international opera house and festival, as well as major orchestras including the Berlin Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Chicago Symphony, New York Philharmonic, Academia di Santa Cecila, Boston Symphony, Cleveland Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony and Bayerische Rundfunk Orchestra.
Alongside his singing career, Brownlee is an avid salsa dancer and an accomplished photographer, specializing in artist portraits of his on-stage colleagues. He has sung the National Anthem at numerous NFL games and will next perform it Oct. 23, for the New York Jets.
He is a champion for autism awareness through the organization Autism Speaks and is a lifetime member of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity Inc., a historically black fraternity committed to social action and empowerment.
Read More
New adaptation of ‘Fuente Ovejuna’ will premiere at Wirtz
Northwestern Now: Summaries
[embedded content]EVANSTON, Ill. - A military commander ruthlessly exploits a rural community until the townspeople, led by the mayor’s daughter, rise up against him in Lope de Vega’s nonstop historical drama “Fuente Ovejuna.”The 17th century Spanish text is getting a fresh adaptation by Northwestern University School of Communication students Kori Alston ’18 and Susan E. Bowen MFA ’17.Northwestern’s Virginia Wadsworth Wirtz Center for the Performing Arts presents “Fuente Ovejuna” April 21 to 30 in the Ethel M. Barber Theater, located at 10 Arts Circle Drive, Evanston. Lope de Vega’s historical plays drew on popular legend and explored aspects of Spain’s national character and social solidarity on which the country’s greatness rested.Co-adapter Susan E. Bowen, who also directs, said she was attracted to the play’s fast-moving pace and moral complexity of its story. “Love is what moves the community to stand together and defend the values it considers most sacred, but its response to an ongoing abuse of power culminates in violence.“At a time when citizens on both the right and the left are questioning the systems of power at work in our own democracy, the questions the characters in “Fuente Ovejuna” are forced to confront have never felt more timely: ‘Am I going to step out of line and speak up, or am I going to be complicit in the status quo?’"In the midst of a dynastic power struggle for the crown of Castile, military commander Fernán Gómez returns victorious from battle to the small rural town of Fuente Ovejuna, where his acts of violence soon extend beyond the battlefield. The villagers repeatedly endure the commander’s violation of their honor, until one day he goes too far – kidnapping the mayor’s daughter, Laurencia, and her fiancé on their wedding day. After making a daring escape, Laurencia galvanizes the town to extract ...
Read More
Prof. Susan Goldin-Meadow to discuss language and gesture in April 18 Ryerson Lecture
UChicago News
Prof. Susan Goldin-Meadow will deliver this year’s Nora and Edward Ryerson Lecture, in which she will explore the resilience of language and gesture in the way people communicate.The free public lecture will take place at 5 p.m. April 18 at the Max Palevsky Cinema of Ida Noyes Hall. It is the latest honor for the Beardsley Ruml Distinguished Service Professor, who focuses on the role that hands play in talking, thinking and communicating. Goldin-Meadow’s lecture will delve into her work on the development of sign language by deaf children and the role gestures play in the way hearing people talk.
“These are behaviors that are very much part of being human,” Goldin-Meadow said. “We all gesture when we talk, and those gestures often reveal thoughts that we don’t express through our mouths. And if we’re prevented from talking, our gestures morph to take on the forms and functions of language. Our hands are a unique window onto the mind.”
Goldin-Meadow’s lecture will include her current research on the gestural languages that deaf children in Nicaragua create without the benefit of linguistic input. She also will discuss her research on the gestures hearing people use when talking, and the role these gestures play in how we learn.
Goldin-Meadow, who joined the UChicago faculty in 1976, is author of The Resilience of Language: What Gesture Creation in Deaf Children Can Tell Us About How All Children Learn Language, and Hearing Gesture: How Our Hands Help Us Think. She is an elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and currently serves as president of the Association for Psychological Science.
At UChicago, Goldin-Meadow serves as co-director of the Center for Gesture, Sign and Language. She has chaired the Department of Comparative Human Behavior and received the Llewellyn John and Harriet Manchester Quantrell Award for Excellence in Undergraduate ...
Read More
Missing Law Student Located
BU Today
Found at a local hospital
Photo courtesy of Boston University
Massachusetts State Police found a missing BU School of Law student late Thursday morning at an area hospital, where she was a walk-in.
The Boston Globe reported that authorities had been searching for 26-year-old Tamika Danielle Jeune (SAR’12, LAW’19) since a passerby found her wallet and BU ID, computer, shoes, and other personal items on the banks of the Charles River. The effort to find Jeune included a State Police Marine Unit search of the river.
Jeune is from Dorchester, but had been living in an off-campus apartment on Beacon Street. No further information was available.
Read More
Mānoa: UH Press wins $90,000 grant for open-access publishing of out-of-print books
UH News
University of Hawaiʻi at MānoaContact:Posted: Apr 11, 2017The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation has awarded the University of Hawai‘i a $90,000 grant to digitize 100 out-of-print University of Hawai‘i Press books for open access.The project is part of the Humanities Open Book Program, a joint initiative between the Mellon Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH).“We’re grateful to the Mellon Foundation and the NEH for supporting our open-access initiatives,” said Trond Knutsen, UH Press digital publishing manager. “Now, with the advent of digital technology, these works can become available to a new generation of readers around the world.”UH Press selected the 100 titles—representing fields such as Asian studies, Pacific studies, linguistics, anthropology and history—based on their contemporary scholarly relevance, historical significance, and practical value for teaching and research purposes.“This initiative will be an enormous contribution to the advance of scholarship globally, but particularly for colleagues and students in places in Asia and the Pacific where libraries are inadequate and access to printed scholarly sources is difficult,” said Barbara Watson Andaya, chair of the UH Mānoa Asian Studies Program.Beginning in 2018, the digitized titles will be hosted on a custom open-access portal where readers will be able to download them in EPUB and PDF formats. A print-on-demand option will also be offered for select titles.“We hope this project will be only the beginning of a long-term effort to revitalize UH Press’s backlist,” said UH System President David Lassner. “This project will magnify the reach and influence of scholarly work done here at the University of Hawai‘i, and support educational and cultural initiatives in the Asia and Pacific regions.”The Press currently offers more than 800 titles online through library e-book vendors, and more than 350 scholarly monographs through Hawai‘i Scholarship Online, a partnership with Oxford University Press and University ...
Read More
Under 30: Lauren Gist
Georgia College FrontPage RSS Feed
Age: 25 //
Occupation: Account Executive, iHeart Media //
Major at GC: Marketing Minor: Management
Tell me a little bit about why you came to Georgia College.
It’s kind of funny, I had already picked another school and I thought I was going somewhere else. When I got my acceptance letter from Georgia College I hadn’t even been to visit yet, but after I got the letter, I came down and visited and fell in love with the campus. I loved the small town feel of it, how intimate it was—everything about the atmosphere was really appealing to me and not as overwhelming as some of the bigger schools. The smaller class sizes were a selling point. Being able to have those relationships with your professors where you’re not in class in an auditorium was great.
Do you have a favorite memory from your time at GC?
The year that my Kappa Delta pledge sister and good friend won Homecoming queen – that was pretty awesome.
The other is actually graduation, which a lot of people might tell you is their worst memory from that year because it was practically monsooning outside. It was the worst weather ever, but I was really happy because my family and my friends stuck it out. People were sitting through pouring down rain for that, so I was pretty proud. That’s something that is going to stay in my mind forever.
What was your journey like post-grad?
Right after college I did a 6-month internship at Northside Hospital in Atlanta and I was in their marketing department doing copywriting and things more on the creative side. I was itching to get out of Atlanta and try something new, change the scenery, get out on my own, so I starting applying to jobs in some places that aren’t too far away, but just ...
Read More
CCMST Weekly News, August 6, 2010
Center for Computational Molecular Science and Technology
1. Announcements2. Statistics3. Tip of the WeekANNOUNCEMENTS
Summer Lecture Series in Electronic Structure Theory
The Summer Theory program will continue through August with a series of advanced lectures.
Lectures will be on Thursdays in MSE 4202A from 2-3pm, starting from Thursday August 3.
The new theory/computational graduate students, and anyone else who is interested are cordially invited to attend.
The series will continue next week with the following schedule:
August 10: Coupled-Perturbed Hartree-Fock; Electric and Magnetic Properties (Malagoli).
The complete schedule of the lectures can be found at http://vergil.chemistry.gatech.edu/opp/sched.html.
STATISTICS
FGATE
Uptime: 22 day/home directory usage: 69% (1.8TB available)/backups directory usage: 84%
LSF usage for Week 30 (7/26-8/1) (times are in minutes) Group Jobs Total CPU Avg CPU Avg Wait Avg Trnr. Bredas 128 269088 14% 2102 22 2533
Hernandez 528 250374 13% 474 1 476
Sherrill 61 35123 2% 576 2 390
Other 15 49655 3% 3310 0 2832
Total 732 604240 31% 825 4 877
Note: percentages refer to the total CPU time available for the period
Most productive user of the Week: simone 171694
LSF usage for Month of July (times are in minutes) Group Jobs Total CPU Avg CPU Avg Wait Avg Trnr. Bredas 27724 1732599 20% 62 65 133
Hernandez 916 309239 4% 338 17 358
Sherrill 223 227928 3% 1022 479 1478
Other 40 10357 0% 259 0 211
Total 28903 2280125 27% 79 67 151
Note: percentages refer to the total CPU time available for the period
EGATE
Uptime: 250 days/theoryfs/common directory usage: 36% (427GB available)/theoryfs/ccmst directory usage: 82% (162 available)
LSF usage for Week 30 (7/26-8/1) (times are in minutes) Group Jobs Total CPU Avg CPU Avg Wait Avg Trnr. Hernandez 156 147763 10% 947 0 958
Sherrill 93 208343 14% 2240 4 2255
Other 227 556437 37% 2451 7 2458
Total 476 912543 60% 1917 4 1927
Note: percentages refer to the total CPU time available for the period
Most productive user of the Week: rnear 325294
LSF usage for Month of July (times are in minutes) Group Jobs Total CPU Avg CPU Avg Wait Avg Trnr. Hernandez 349 274701 4% 787 61 856
Sherrill 1361 866876 13% 637 304 954
Other 869 2676184 40% 3080 415 3516
Total 2579 3817758 57% 1480 309 1804
Note: percentages refer to the total CPU time available for the period
TIP OF THE WEEK
By Massimo
Vimdiff
This is a command that starts vim on two (or three) files. Each file gets its own window, and the differences between the files ...
Read More
Kimbrough Reflects on Six Months in Space
All GT News
Campus and Community Science and Technology
Kimbrough Reflects on Six Months in Space
Alumnus is back on Earth after mission aboard the International Space Station
By
Jason Maderer | April 13, 2017
• Atlanta, GA
[embedded content]
Georgia Tech graduate and astronaut Shane Kimbrough talks about his six-month stay on board the International Space Station. He launched into orbit on October 17, 2016 and returned to Earth on April 10, 2017.
On Wednesday, Shane Kimbrough admitted his body was sore from sitting and his feet ached from walking. It was better than Tuesday, when he felt a little wobbly getting around and didn’t have much of an appetite. Blame it all on Monday, when Kimbrough felt gravity for the first time in nearly six months.
Kimbrough is finally back on Earth. The Georgia Tech graduate landed in Kazakhstan early Monday morning to wrap up a 173-day mission in space. As commander of the International Space Station (ISS), he circled the globe 2,768 times and traveled 73.2 million miles.
On Wednesday, already back at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, he spoke to Georgia Tech about the mission that began on October 17.
“I feel pretty good today, much better than yesterday,” said Kimbrough, who earned his master’s degree in operations research in 1998 from the H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering. “My balance is a little off because my inner ear doesn’t know where it is. But I’m much more stable than I was on Tuesday.”During his stay on board the station, Kimbrough conducted four spacewalks totaling more than 26 hours. He and the crew also welcomed five visiting spacecrafts — Kimbrough grabbed a few of them with the ISS’s robotic arm.After nearly six months, you would think he would get some days off work. But the next six weeks are important, as NASA conducts experiments on him to learn more about how ...
Read More
Thursday, April 13, 2017
OSU Today
Today in the News Media is a synopsis of some of the most prominent coverage of OSU people and programs. Inclusion of any item constitutes neither an endorsement nor a critique, but rather is intended only to make the OSU community aware of significant items in the media.
Samples suggest life in the Mariana Trench (Daily Mail)
Scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Oregon State University and the US Coast Guard sent a device that spent three weeks eavesdropping at the bottom of the trench. The researchers used a hydrophone that was placed in this trough.
Climate science explains why fishermen on “Deadliest Catch” struggled to find crabs (Forbes)
The honorable Jane Lubchenco is Distinguished University Professor and Adviser in Marine Studies at Oregon State University. She is the U.S. Science Envoy for the Ocean, U.S. Department of State. She is one of the most renowned environmental scientists in the world and the former NOAA Administrator.
Adolescents with frequent PE more informed about physical activity’s role in health (ScienMag)
Frequent, long-term instruction in physical education not only helps adolescents be more fit but also equips them with knowledge about how regular physical activity relates to good health, research at Oregon State University shows.
To see the unseen: ‘Microbiomes’ show explores common ground between arts, science (Gazette-Times)
The artists were enthralled by the scientific workshops, said Jerri Bartholomew, the head of OSU’s Department of Microbiology, an accomplished artist in her own right and a driving force behind “Microbiomes.” (The show includes a pair of Bartholomew’s glass works.)
OSU board resets tuition vote after protest (Democrat-Herald)
An Oregon State University Board of Trustees meeting that was disrupted by protesters has been rescheduled for next week as a conference call, the university announced on Wednesday. The telephonic meeting will be held from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. on ...
Read More
Spirit Squad Excels At Nationals
Iowa State University
AMES, Iowa - The Iowa State Spirit Squad competed at the NCA/NDA College Nationals in Daytona Beach, Fla., (April 6-8) and excelled in a number of events.
The Dance Team won the National title in Pom Division 1A for the second year in a row, defeating Penn State, East Carolina and SMU. It also placed third in the Team Dance Division 1A behind Louisville and North Carolina State.
The Cheer Squad placed third in All Girl Division 1A, the highest finish in program history for the All Girl squad. The Co Ed squad placed seventh in Intermediate Co Ed Division 1.
Cy also competed in the mascot competition, finishing third behind Sammy (Sam Houston State) and Cocky (Jacksonville State). It was Cy's highest finish ever at the Nationals.
The Dance Team and Cheer Squad will be hosting tryouts later this month. Information for tryouts can be found here.
Print Friendly Version
Read More
Summer Coding Camp Will Empower Local Students to Learn Computer Science
UCR Today
Free program will teach students programming skills and how to prepare for a career in the growing technology industry
By Sarah Nightingale on April 12, 2017
Share this article:
UCR’s CS For All camp will showcase programming and other areas of computer science to local high schoolers. iSTOCK
RIVERSIDE, Calif. (www.ucr.edu) — From creating the latest smartphones to making self-driving cars, tech jobs are among the highest paying and fastest growing in the U.S. economy. There are currently 500,000 open jobs in computing, but the number of computer science graduates falls short—just 50,000 each year, and, of those, only one in five are women.
A new program created by the University of California, Riverside and Riverside Unified School District (RUSD) aims to introduce coding and computer science to local high school students and promote diversity, and notably female participation, in these fields. The program is inspired by CS For All, an initiative developed by the National Science Foundation and U.S. Department of Education to empower all American students to become active citizens in our technology-driven world. The program will launch this summer, providing free one-week courses to 80 high school students from RUSD. The intensive courses will run twice, from June 19-23 and from June 26-30. Applications are due by April 26 and students can apply online or by calling 951-790-2633 (English speakers) or 951-878-0411 (Spanish speakers).
Angelov Farooq, founding director of the UCR Center for Economic Development and Innovation in the Office of Research and Economic Development and a member of the RUSD Board of Education, is leading the effort. He said similar programs in other parts of the country have been shown to increase the number of students, particularly girls and underrepresented minorities, who study computer science and go on to earn undergraduate degrees in the field.
“We have to emphasize technology and coding as an attainable ...
Read More
GiftAMeal app expanding to Motown
Olin BlogOlin Blog
Student startup, GiftAMeal, the mobile app that allows users to donate to local food pantries when they eat at partnering restaurants has expanded to a third city: Detroit.
“Foodies in Detroit can now get in on the GiftAMeal action at one of our six initial locations there,” said Jacob Mohrmann, BSBA’16, Chief Marketing Officer of GiftAMeal. “Meals will be provided through Forgotten Harvest, an organization in Detroit that rescued, harvested and distributed 48.8 million pounds of food this past year.”
And Jacob shared more good news:
“We are also happy to announce that we have now provided over 50,000 meals (St. Louis, Chicago, and Detroit combined). This is a huge step, but as Andrew [Glantz, BSBA’17] said in his interview with WGN TV, ‘in terms of how big we want this to become, we want it to be, not in the thousands, but in the millions of meals donated.’ “
GiftAMeal is also featured on the cover of StreetWise Magazine in Chicago this month.
According to the article, GiftAMeal has partnered with “20 Chicago-area restaurants and Lakeview Pantry to provide meal donations locally. Now, each time someone in Chicago uses GiftA-Meal, meals are provided to someone in the Chicago area through Lakeview. In less than a year, the app has been downloaded over 3,000 times in Chicago, and these users have been quick to rack up 10,000 meal donations on the app.”
Read More
Campus to Mark Earth Day 2017 with Festival, Lectures, Green Commuting
UMass Amherst: News Archive
Sustainability and the formal launch of the School of Earth and Sustainability (SES) mark campus-related events on and around the celebration of Earth Day 2017.The official date of Earth Day, April 22, falls on a Saturday this year, so the campus’s Earth Day Festival 2017 will be celebrated on Friday, April 21 from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. on the Student Union North Lawn.
The festival will feature more than 30 student, faculty, staff and community groups showcasing some of the things they are doing to make the community more environmentally, economically, and socially just. In addition, the Farmer’s Market will be under the Earth Day tent.
New this year is the UMass Amherst Green Commute Day. In partnership with the Faculty Senate Health Committee and MassRIDES “Try it Day” campaign, the event is meant to encourage students, faculty and staff to try an alternative to driving alone to campus on April 21 by either biking, walking, carpooling or taking transit.
Commuters will be asked to log their green commute in the free MassRIDES NuRides online tool that helps find carpool matches and provides rewards for greener trips. MassRIDES will be signing UMass Amherst community members up for the green commute for three weeks leading up to Earth Day in the Campus Center Concourse.
Commuters and the entire campus community are invited to come the Earth Day tent on the Student Union North Lawn from 8-10 a.m. before the Earth Day Festival begins to grab their free coffee and donuts and participate in the Green Commute Day Sustainable Transportation Fair which will feature Campus Planning, Transportation and Parking Services, UMass Amherst Transit, ZipCar and Enterprise Rent-A-Car and Sustainable UMass.
Also at the festival in front of the Earth Day tent at 2 p.m., there will be a student performance art piece by “The Mourner.” This cautionary tale presents a dystopian future based ...
Read More
Stuart Study Explores Tie Between Alcohol, Marijuana Use in Teens and Later Use of Synthetic Marijuana
Headlines – Tennessee Today
Gregory StuartTeenagers who have symptoms of depression and who drink alcohol or use marijuana tend to use synthetic marijuana later in life, according to a new study co-authored by UT researcher Gregory Stuart.
The study, published in the journal Pediatrics, is the first of its kind to assess whether marijuana use is predictive over time of the use of synthetic cannabinoids—the group of chemicals that mimic the effects of marijuana.
Stuart, a professor of psychology, and his collaborators hope that better knowledge about the use of marijuana and synthetic cannabinoids could lead to the design of more effective prevention and intervention programs.
“This is a longitudinal study of diverse adolescents,” Stuart said. “The primary objective is to increase the depth and breadth of our understanding of risk and protective factors for teen dating violence and other risky behaviors over time.”
The study was led by Jeff Temple, a clinical psychologist at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. In addition to Stuart and Temple, collaborators include researchers from the University of Maryland and the University of Missouri. The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the National Institute of Justice.
Synthetic cannabinoids are a large group of chemicals that are similar to THC, the active ingredient in marijuana that produces its hallmark effects. The chemicals may be sprayed on plant-based materials that resemble cannabis. They are sold in forms like potpourri or incense that are not suitable for human consumption. The chemicals can be as much as 40 to 600 times more potent than THC.
Synthetic cannabinoids appeal to adolescents and young adults because they are easy to obtain, affordable, assumed to be legal, and undetectable in urine drug screens.
The study included 964 high school participants. All students completed surveys that gathered information on synthetic cannabinoids and marijuana use, alcohol and other drug use, symptoms of anxiety ...
Read More
Pitt Hires Anthony (Tony) Gibson to Lead Washington, D.C., Office
PITTSBURGH—The University of Pittsburgh Office of Community and Governmental Relations announced that Tony Gibson has been hired as executive director of federal relations and will lead the University’s Washington, D.C., office. Prior to his appointment at Pitt, he held the role of senior adviser for legislative affairs at the National Science Foundation (NSF), where he has worked for nearly 15 years.
“As a proven policy and political adviser with more than 20 years of experience in Washington, Tony is an exceptional fit to lead our D.C. office,” said Chancellor Patrick Gallagher. “He will elevate our University’s presence in D.C. and also create a wealth of opportunities for collaboration at the federal level.”
“Tony will coordinate and leverage Pitt research opportunities, government affairs and collaboration with executive agencies and Congress. Having a dedicated presence in Washington will allow us to bring the University’s expertise and resources to policymakers in D.C. in a much more focused way,” said Paul Supowitz, vice chancellor for community and governmental relations.
“I am extremely excited to be joining the University of Pittsburgh and its strong team in Community and Governmental Relations,” Tony Gibson said. “Pitt’s excellence in research and its ability to provide real answers to the most vexing problems facing the nation are captivating. I greatly look forward to working with policymakers to ensure they understand the tremendous strength that Pitt has in translating excellence into action for the state, the region and the national science and technology enterprise.”
Gibson, who began his career in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1993, moved to the White House Science and Technology Office in 1997 before joining the National Science Foundation in 2002 as a senior legislative policy analyst. During his time at NSF, he worked as a congressional affairs group leader and legislative division director before moving into his role as ...
Read More
Good as Gold
Science and Technology @ UCSB
One aspires to an academic and research career focused on atomic resolution imaging; the other is aiming for a doctorate in materials science. Together, they have made UC Santa Barbara, the only UC campus to have multiple winners of the prestigious Barry Goldwater Scholarship.
Dolev Bluvstein and Shelby Shankel, both undergraduate students in UCSB’s College of Creative Studies have been named 2017 Barry Goldwater Scholars. UCSB engineering student Michael Abramovitch received an honorable mention from the Barry Goldwater Scholarship & Excellence in Education Foundation.
Established by Congress in 1986 to honor Senator Barry Goldwater, the scholarships are designed to foster and encourage outstanding students to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).
Bluvstein and Shankel are among 240 sophomores and juniors nationwide to receive scholarships, selected from a field of 1,286. Of the total number of awardees, six hail from the University of California, with UCSB the only campus to have multiple winners.
“I am so happy to congratulate Dolev and Shelby as recipients of the 2017 Goldwater Scholarship,” said Kathy Folz, interim dean of the College of Creative Studies (CCS). “These students have brought distinction to UCSB and to CCS. Their accomplishments are truly amazing and I look forward to their continued success, in and out of the research lab. I also wish to congratulate both students’ research mentors, who provide the opportunities and dedicated professional guidance for these young research-scholars.”
The scholarship is an important first step toward academic and professional success, providing crucial support to ambitious young scholars.
“The scholarship will help me save money for graduate school, where I hope to continue studying condensed matter,” said Bluvstein, a sophomore physics major who works in professor Ania Jayich’s experimental condensed matter group. “The Goldwater scholarship is an important milestone in my young research career and a great honor.”
Criteria for Goldwater Scholarships include a nominated student’s area of ...
Read More
Fina Birulés, distingida amb la Creu de Sant Jordi
Universitat de Barcelona - Notícies
Fina Birulés.
13/04/2017
Institucional
La professora de la Facultat de Filosofia Fina Birulés ha estat distingida amb la Creu de Sant Jordi per la seva intensa tasca de traducció, estudi i divulgació de la producció filosòfica femenina, i particularment de l’obra de Hannah Arendt.
En total, 29 personalitats i 24 entitats que han destacat pels serveis prestats a Catalunya en la defensa de la seva identitat o, més generalment, en l'àmbit cívic i cultural, rebran enguany la Creu de Sant Jordi, un dels màxims reconeixements que atorga la Generalitat de Catalunya des del 1981.
Fina Birulés imparteix les matèries de Filosofia Contemporània i Filosofia de la Història a la Universitat de Barcelona i ha estat professora visitant a les universitats de Puerto Rico, Xile, Parma, Florència i Viena. Forma part de diversos comitès en revistes especialitzades com ara Società degli Individui o Crítica Contemporánea. Revista de Teoría Política.
La seva tasca investigadora s’ha articulat al voltant de dos nuclis: la subjectivitat política, història i acció, i qüestions de teoria feminista i estudi de la producció filosòfica femenina —amb una atenció especial a l’obra de Hannah Arendt i d’altres filòsofes del segle XX—, activitat que desenvolupa en el marc del Seminari Filosofia i Gènere des de la seva fundació el 1990.
És traductora de diverses obres de filosofia contemporània, autora de nombrosos assajos i editora de volums col·lectius sobre el pensament de Hannah Arendt i altres pensadores contemporànies. Entre les seves publicacions més recents cal destacar Una herencia sin testamento: Hannah Arendt (2007), Contingencia, historia y narración en Hannah Arendt (2009), Imortalidade e história em Hannah Arendt (2009), La distancia como figura de la comunidad (2011) i Usos del anacronismo (2012).
Més informació sobre les Creus Sant Jordi 2017
Comparteix-la a:
Read More
Attend a poetry reading by Charlotte Matthews
Matthews promoting a previous poetry reading.Poet Charlotte Matthews will offer a free reading of selections from her new book Whistle What Can’t Be Said this April on the Missouri University of Science and Technology campus.
The reading will be held 2-4 p.m. Wednesday, April 19, in Room 140 Toomey Hall at Missouri S&T. The event is free and open to the public.
A professor in the Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies Program at the University of Virginia, Matthews’ works have appeared in the Virginia Quarterly Review, Borderlands, Ecotone, Tar River Poetry, storySouth and other poetry publications. In 2007, she received the New Writers Award from the Fellowship for Southern Writers. Matthews has two other collections of poetry, Green Stars and Still Enough to Be Dreaming, which were published by Iris Press in 2006 and 2008, respectively.
“Charlotte Matthews writes intimate poems that refuse to skate over the trials of childhood: she perseveres through absence, illness and loss,” wrote poet and author Ira Sadoff in a review of Matthews’ book. “Thanks to her hard work she — and we — can look out at the world with fierce and loving attention and take in our beautiful, difficult lives.”
Matthews served as a visiting professor at Missouri S&T in 2014, when she was the Maxwell C. Weiner Distinguished Professor of Humanities. While at S&T, she held numerous poetry readings for the campus and taught courses in poetry writing in the English and technical communication department.
Share this:
Read More
Alumna looks back on rewarding journey full of long hours, love of color
UMSL Daily
Ann Croghan juggled day jobs, part-time teaching and her own artwork for many years after graduating from UMSL. Her persistence on that path eventually led to her current setup at Foundry Art Centre in St. Charles, Missouri, where she teaches painting and drawing full time and also showcases her work. (Photos by Jillian Schoettle)
Two things stand out to Ann Croghan about her time as a student at the University of Missouri–St. Louis in the early 1980s: the Blue Metal Building and the professors.
“I had some fantastic teachers,” says the Missouri native.
While the space where those lessons took place no longer appears on campus maps, the excellent instruction has stayed with her. And over the course of the 35 years since she earned her bachelor’s degree from UMSL, Croghan has become a sought-after teacher in her own right.
Ann Croghan, BGS 1982, works with students at all sorts of levels. Her love of teaching is second only to her love of art itself.
She’s currently a studio artist at Foundry Art Centre, located just 15 minutes west of campus. Students of all ages and abilities benefit from her painting and drawing classes at FAC, and her work is on view at the facility six days a week.
“When this opened up it was such a gift,” Croghan says of her role. She’s been based there since 2011, and in many ways it’s been a welcome change of pace.
An art instructor in the St. Louis region for the past two and a half decades, Croghan juggled various day jobs with teaching and her own artistic pursuits early in her career. Eventually she plunged into teaching full time, but it was still a relentless schedule.
“For 15 years I was teaching at five different locations,” Croghan recalls with a chuckle. “I had my office in the back of my ...
Read More
Asian Pacific Islander Desi American President’s Reception at CSUF celebrates diversity and heritage
Daily Titan
The Asian Pacific Islander Desi American (APIDA) President’s Reception for APIDA Heritage Month celebrated diversity Thursday.
President Mildred Garcia opened the event by referencing the 75 years that passed since Executive Order 9066 evicted more than 120,000 Japanese-Americans from their homes into internment camps and the 135 years since the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 created a moratorium on Chinese laborer immigration.
“Despite these horrors in our American history, today, we as a university and nation face similar executive orders and exclusion acts that threaten our students, our families, our communities and deepest values,” Garcia said.
Keynote speaker Mamta Accapadi, Vice President of Student Affairs at Rollins College said she valued being a Titan for a day.
“We all have meaningful stories so thank you for indulging me and listening to a few of mine,” Accapadi said.
Accapadi recalled when she worked in multicultural affairs and the leaders of the Filipino Student Association came to her for help after their funding from student government for the first Filipino culture night at her institution was revoked for violating rules.
Accapadi said after looking into the issue, she found they were planning to serve the traditional Filipino dish Dinuguan, chocolate meat, at the event. She said the advisor of student government determined it was “vulgar and inappropriate.”
After researching the food online, Accapadi questioned why it was inappropriate and explained to the advisor it was a cultural pork dish. She said the advisor turned bright red and defended herself by asking why they didn’t say something.
“Asian-American heritage month is for all of us. It is a commitment I hope we make to each other to do our own learning,” Accapadi said. “I didn’t know what chocolate meat was either but remember that I felt that something else was happening. I could have asked the students but guess what, it’s not the job ...
Read More
Building to Be Renamed for Pioneer Black Educator Anne Marie Becraft
News Archive
April 13, 2017 – The 19th-century free woman of color for whom Georgetown’s Anne Marie Becraft Hall will be named April 18 founded one of the first schools for black girls in Georgetown and later became one of America’s first black nuns.
“I’m thrilled that we decided to rename one of our buildings after Anne Marie Becraft,” says Marcia Chatelain, associate professor of history and African American studies and a member of the Georgetown University Working Group on Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation. “She was a devout Catholic and deeply committed to educating young girls of color in the nation’s capital. Though she experienced both anti-Catholic and anti-black intimidation, she nevertheless responded to her calling to teach and to serve God.”
Becraft began her teaching career at age 15 in 1820, founding a school on Dumbarton Street in Washington, D.C. Her intelligence and work ethic attracted the notice of Rev. John Van Lommel, S.J., from Holy Trinity Church in Georgetown.
'Elevation of Character'
Van Lommel was so impressed with Becraft’s work and “elevation of character,” that in 1827 he “took it in hand to give her a higher style of school in which to work for her sex and race, to the education of which she had now fully consecrated herself,” according to The History of the Negro Race in America from 1619 to 1880, published in 1885 by African American historian George Washington Williams.
The new school on Fayette Street, which included 30 to 35 students, was across from the Monastery of the Visitation, established in 1799 by Rev. Leonard Neale, S.J., president of Georgetown from 1798 to 1806.
Williams called Becraft “the most remarkable Colored young woman of her time in the District and perhaps of any time.”
In 1831, she left her school in the hands of a promising student and moved to Baltimore to join the Oblate Sisters of Providence, the first African American female ...
Read More
Inspired by Work with Dalai Lama, Eve Ekman Creates App to Map Emotions
UCSF - Latest News Feed
In her house on a hill in San Francisco with sweeping views of the city, Eve Ekman, PhD, MSW, has a meditation altar, which highlights her spiritual interests.
In a nearby room, Ekman has the lamp by which her father, Paul Ekman, PhD, UC San Francisco professor emeritus in psychology, studied facial expressions – part of his work about external emotions that have permeated the public through outlets such as the television series “Lie to Me.”
“I joke that my dad is interested in emotions on the outside and I’m interested about emotions on the inside,” says Eve Ekman.
The combination of the Ekmans’ work on external and internal emotions has extended their findings beyond academia and into popular culture, and it has culminated in partnerships that include one with Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama, to create a digital map of human emotions.
Now, Eve Ekman has moved the work forward through development of an app to help people track and understand their emotions throughout the day.
An Early Interest in Social Justice
Growing up as the daughter of Paul Ekman, Eve Ekman stood a good chance of being overshadowed by her father’s accomplishments. Paul Ekman, who was a professor of psychology at UCSF from 1972 to 2004, is one of the world’s foremost experts on monitoring facial expressions and gestures to make sense of nonverbal behavior.
His interest in “micro facial expressions” began in the late 1960s when he reviewed film of depressed patients and saw in slow motion brief fleeting expressions of strong negative feelings that these patients were trying to hide to avoid suicide watch.
Upon his retirement from UCSF in 2004, to translate his research into resources that would be helpful to the general public about using facial expressions as a window to people’s feelings, he formed the Paul Ekman Group, wrote several lay books ...
Read More
Panthers Face 4 Top-Ten Opponents at Florida State’s Alumni Weekend Beach Volleyball Tournament
FIU Athletics
MIAMI (April 13, 2017) – The No. 14-ranked FIU beach volleyball team (18-10, 8-4 CCSA) travel back to Tallahassee, Florida for the Florida State Alumni Weekend beach volleyball tournament this Friday, April 14 and Saturday, April 15. The Panthers will play No. 10 Grand Canyon at 8:30 a.m. and No. 9 Stetson at 1 p.m. to open play on Friday. On Saturday, FIU will compete against the host Seminoles, currently ranked No. 4, at 10 a.m. and then close out the weekend against No. 2 Pepperdine at 1 p.m. Last weekend, the Panthers returned from Tallahassee after competing in the Staybridge Suites Invitational with a 1-2 mark, defeating No. 10 Georgia State 4-1. FIU dropped its first two matches against No. 12 South Carolina, 5-0, and No. 13 TCU, 3-2. Looking at the Antelopes: No. 10 Grand Canyon (14-6) completed play against No. 2 Pepperdine and No. 5 Long Beach State last weekend with two losses. The Antelopes were defeated by the Waves, 4-1, and the 49ers, 5-0. FIU currently leads GCU 3-0 all time, with their last match-up in 2016 that resulted in a 4-1 Panther victory. First serve is scheduled for 8:30 a.m. Looking at the Hatters: No. 9 Stetson (15-10, 8-0 CCSA) is coming off a 4-0 weekend, with two back-to-back victories over Mercer and Coastal Carolina. The Panthers are currently 2-2 against the Hatters all-time. First serve is set for 1 p.m. on Friday. Looking at the Seminoles: No. 4-ranked Florida State (18-6, 7-0 CCSA) posted a 3-0 sweep last weekend at its own Staybridge Suites Invitational with victories over TCU, 5-0, No. 15 Florida Atlantic, 5-0, and No. 12 South Carolina, 5-0. The last match-up between the Seminoles and the Panthers will be just 15 days difference since they met at the Fifth Annual Surf 'N Turf Invitational on March 31 in Miami Beach, a match which resulted in a 3-2 victory for Florida State. All time, the Seminoles a 4-2 lead in the series. The ...
Read More
Walker's No. 12 to Join LSU Legends in Alex Box Stadium
LSUsports.net
Headline News
LSUsports.net (@LSUsports)LSU Sports Interactive
The jersey of all-America second baseman Todd Walker will be retired by LSU in a ceremony at 6:45 p.m. CT Friday prior tothe Tigers' game versus Ole Miss in Alex Box Stadium, Skip Bertman Field.
The No. 12 worn by Walker joins the No. 36 worn by first baseman Eddy Furniss, the No. 15 worn by coach Skip Bertman and the No. 19 worn by pitcher Ben McDonald as retired jerseys in the LSU baseball program.
Walker, a native of Bossier City, La., becomes the 11th LSU athlete or coach to have his jersey retired, joining Furniss, Bertman and McDonald; men’s basketball players Bob Pettit, Pete Maravich, Rudy Macklin and Shaquille O’Neal; football players Billy Cannon and Tommy Casanova; and women’s basketball player Seimone Augustus.
Walker was distinguished during his LSU career from 1992-94 not only for his immense talent, but also for his tremendous work ethic. He said recently that once Bertman told him that he would be the Tigers’ starting second baseman as a true freshman, he poured all of his energy into becoming one of the nation’s best players.
"Once Skip told me that, I've never been more motivated to do anything in my life,'' Walker said.
"I wanted badly to play well. That requires a lot of sacrifice, but I wanted it bad enough that I didn't care. I didn't care about going to the beaches in the summer or going out with friends at night. Instead, I was hitting baseballs until four in the morning, and that's what I loved to do. It wasn't that I felt like I had to do that to get to the big leagues. I was just in the moment and wanting to be the best at that time.''
Walker, who was inducted into the College Baseball Hall of Fame in 2009, was ...
Read More
Georgia Tech’s civil and environmental engineering chair named dean of engineering at Rice University
Reginald DesRoches will join Rice faculty July 1
Reginald DesRoches, chair of the School of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology, will become dean of Rice University’s George R. Brown School of Engineering July 1.
Reginald DesRoches
A fellow of the American Society of Civil Engineers, DesRoches specializes in research on the design of resilient infrastructure systems under extreme loads and the application of smart and adaptive materials. He served as the key technical leader in the United States’ response to the 2010 earthquake in Haiti.
“The George R. Brown School of Engineering is a critical element in Rice’s national and international identity,” said Provost Marie Lynn Miranda. “We undertook a broad and thorough search that included extensive engagement with all stakeholder groups. In Dr. DesRoches, we found a world-class scholar, an award-winning educator, an innovative problem-solver, a collaborative and consultative leader, a creative and compelling communicator and a person of tremendous vision for engineering and higher education more widely. I am delighted that Reggie has agreed to join us at Rice and very much look forward to working with him. I am grateful for the hard work of the search committee. This is a great development for Rice.”
DesRoches joined the faculty of Georgia Tech in Atlanta as an assistant professor in 1998 after completing his Ph.D. in structural engineering at the University of California, Berkeley. In 2002 he received the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers, the highest honor given to scientists and engineers in the early stages of their careers. He became a professor in 2008, and in 2012 he was named the Karen and John Huff School Chair and Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering – a position in which he provides leadership to a top-ranked program with 100 faculty and staff and more than 1,150 students.
As chair, DesRoches has overseen a $13.5 million renovation of the ...
Read More
UC Medical Students Offer Mentorship and Laptops for Cincinnati Youth
UC Health News
Eleven local elementary school students will each receive the gift of a new
laptops from Med Mentors, a volunteer effort in the College of Medicine, at an
April 18 ceremony.
Read More
L.I.F.E. Features Books, Drones, New Orleans Literature/Movies, Essential Oils and Australia
Lone Star College CyFair News
Published on: June 01, 2016
Attendees at Lone Star College-CyFairs weekly programs this June will enjoy topics related to summer reading, drones, New Orleans Style literature and movies, essential oils and Australia.
The Learning, Inspiration, Fellowship, and Enrichment (L.I.F.E.) programs are free and held Wednesdays from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. in the library (Room 131 unless otherwise noted) at 9191 Barker Cypress.
June 1 Its Summertime and the Reading Is FantasticBlue Willow Book Shop owner Valerie Koehler gives us the inside scoop on some of her favorite new summertime books. Launching the librarys Summer Reading Program (SRP) for Adults. Meet in LRNC 215.
June 8 Bring in the DronesProfessor Buck Buchanan found amazing uses for drones or Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) at Lone Star College. Learn about how drones will change the face of our world in the near future. Meet in LRNC 144.
June 15 Literature and Movies - New Orleans StyleLets get literary with a whirlwind tour of New Orleans and the books and movies that come from or were inspired by the Big Easy. Scott Furtwengler presides. Meet in Recital Hall ARTS 102.
June 22 Essential OilsBe your own family physician with essential oils. Join us as we learn to save money by using essential oils for almost any issue we might encounter in the home. Take control of your health naturally with Stephanie Kutterer of doTERRA essential oils. Meet in LRNC 144.
June 29 Take a Trip Down Under, MateAbraham Korah leads us on outback wanderings on the smallest continent, Australia, specifically Sydney, Melbourne, and Cairns on the eastern coast. Meet in LRNC 144.
Call the library at 281.290.3214 for L.I.F.E. program information or go online to LoneStar.edu
Read More
Looking for a unique holiday gift? Visit the Lone Star College-North Harris student art sale.
Lone Star College North Harris News
Published on: November 20, 2015
Are you looking for a one-of-a-kind gift for someone this holiday season? Look no further than the annual Lone Star College-North Harris student art sale on December 1 and 2 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Fine Arts building lobby.The art ranges from ceramics to jewelry to drawings and sketches, all created by students taking an art class at LSC-North Harris. Not only is this an excellent opportunity for students to showcase their work, it also helps them understand the business-side of marketing, pricing and displaying their art, said Roy Hanscom, art professor at LSC-North Harris.The sale is open to the public. Art may be purchased with cash or check only and a small percentage of the sales will benefit a campus student club, the Visual Arts Association. Hanscom advises shoppers to arrive early to campus for the best selection, as the art sale has earned quite a reputation with staff and community members looking for holiday gifts or just a unique piece of art for their home or office. Lone Star College-North Harris is located at 2700 W.W. Thorne Drive, one-half mile south of FM 1960 East, between Aldine-Westfield and Hardy Roads. For more information about the college, call 281.618.5400 or visit LoneStar.edu/NorthHarris.Lone Star College has been opening doors to a better community for more than 40 years. Founded in 1973, LSC remains steadfast in its commitment to student success and credential completion. Today, with almost 83,000 students in credit classes, and a total enrollment of more than 95,000, Lone Star College is the largest institution of higher education in the Houston area and one of the fastest-growing community colleges in the nation. Stephen C. Head, Ph.D., is the chancellor of LSC, which consists of six colleges including LSC-CyFair, LSC-Kingwood, LSC-Montgomery, LSC-North Harris, LSC-Tomball and LSC-University Park, seven centers, LSC-University Center at Montgomery, LSC-University Center at ...
Read More
Wednesday, April 12, 2017
Chancellor's Award for Excellence: Kayla James
University at Albany University at Albany Headlines
Chancellor's Award for Excellence: Kayla James
Kayla James was inspired by a course on law and criminal justice taught by Prof. James Acker. (Photo by Mark Schmidt)
ALBANY, N.Y. (April 13, 2017) – Chancellor’s Award winner Kayla James of Baldwin, N.Y., sees a future in academia for herself.
James, a double major in criminal justice and psychology, remembers Introduction to Law and Criminal Justice as being the best and one of the most challenging courses she has taken at UAlbany.
“The topics were relevant to everyday life and I felt as though it was the first time I could directly connect what I was learning to topics that would arise when I left the University,” James said. Professor James Acker held the class to high standards.
“His passion for the subject reinforced my choice of becoming a Criminal Justice major,” James said. “I also valued his kindness and openness to helping students. He even wrote me a letter of recommendation for the School of Criminal Justice B.A./M.A. program.”
Kayla James, center, receives her SUNY Excellence Award from Chancellor Nancy Zimpher and Interim President James Stellar.
After graduating in May, James will enter graduate school in the School of Criminal Justice with a concentration in crime causation, prevention and intervention.
Down the road, she plans on actively participating in criminal justice research and working for a government agency.
“I would also like to begin pursuing a Ph.D. and other credentials that would allow me to teach in higher education. Ultimately, I want to be doing something that makes me happy and that I am passionate about,” James said.
James began her involvement in the Emerging Student Leader Program, where she serves as a leadership coordinator. She has been an orientation leader, a resident assistant, an EOP tutor, an Intercollegiate Athletics Advisory Board member and is a Purple & ...
Read More
Clemson University commits to thorough site evaluation process for electrical power facility
Newsstand | Clemson University News and Stories, South Carolina
CLEMSON — Clemson University will take the next several weeks to conduct a thorough evaluation of all appropriate campus sites upon which to locate a natural gas combined heat and power (CHP) facility to be constructed by Duke Energy Carolinas.
The university committed to the review in light of concerns from residents near the originally proposed site on the eastern edge of campus near the Clemson Armory, as well as others in the community. The review, which has begun, is not expected to delay completion of the facility, which is scheduled to become operational in spring of 2019.
“Clemson values its relationship with the city and region and is taking seriously the questions raised by residents,” said Brett Dalton, executive vice president for Finance and Operations. “Construction of this highly efficient facility is vital to meeting the long-term power needs of the university in a way that also allows Clemson to reduce its carbon footprint. At the same time, the university is committed to working with its partner Duke Energy to locate and build the facility in a manner that takes into account the impact on local residents, as well as the needs of the university.”
The site review will include careful examination of the technical requirements to build the facility, proximity to existing Duke Energy electrical transmission infrastructure, the potential future land use needs of the university and impact on the community, among other considerations.
“Construction of this facility represents a complex engineering and logistical challenge, and we intend to be deliberate and thoughtful in our approach to finding a location that best meets the needs of the university and the community, and which does so at a reasonable cost,” Dalton said.
When completed, the $51 million facility will have the capacity to generate 16-megawatts of electrical power to help meet the future power needs of the university and the surrounding area. ...
Read More
Softball Splits Doubleheader at Lehigh
Fordham Newsroom
PDF Box Scores: Game One | Game Two
Source:: Fordham Athletics
Read More
MEN’S BASKETBALL SIGNS CITRUS COLLEGE FORWARD CALVIN MARTIN
Athletics News
Apr 12, 2017
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- Sacramento State head men's basketball coach Brian Katz announced the signing of Citrus College forward Calvin Martin today. Martin, who will enroll at Sacramento State as a junior, becomes the first junior college player the Hornets have signed since 2013.A 6-foot-6, 235-pound power forward from Ridgecrest, Calif., Martin played the past two seasons at Citrus College of Glendora, Calif. He joins Agua Fria High School swingman Bryce Fowler, who was signed during the early period, as the two players to sign with Sacramento State thus far.Martin did not miss a game during his two-year career at Citrus College, appearing in all 61 contests. As a sophomore, he was the only member of the team to start all 31 games and was named honorable mention all-league after helping the Owls to a 24-7 overall record and an 8-2 mark in league. The team qualified for the Sweet 16 of the CCCAA Regional Playoffs where it lost to Antelope Valley, 74-71, on a last second 3-pointer.During that season, Martin averaged 7.9 points, 8.4 rebounds, 0.5 blocked shots, 1.1 steals and 19.9 minutes per game. Every player on the roster averaged less than 25 minutes per game. Of his 261 rebounds, a massive 122 came on the offensive glass. That breaks down to 3.9 offensive rebounds per game, a figure that led the Western State Conference's East Division. He shot .472 (91-of-193) from the field, scored in double figures on nine occasions, posted double-figure rebounds 13 times, and had five double-doubles. That included a run of four straight double-doubles from Dec. 3-15.As a freshman (2015-16), Martin played in all 30 games (two starts), averaging 5.8 points, 4.8 rebounds, 0.4 blocked shots, 0.6 steals and 16.8 minutes per game while shooting .512 (63-for-123) from the field."Calvin is a winner. He will do all the things that don't show up in the box score - screen, run the court, defend, and he is an incredible rebounder," Katz said. " ...
Read More
Inaugural ‘Salukis United in Diversity Conference’ set
SIU News
April 12, 2017
Inaugural ‘Salukis United in Diversity Conference’ set
by Christi Mathis
CARBONDALE, Ill. -- Television commentator and best-selling author Keith Boykin will speak at Southern Illinois University Carbondale in April, one of the highlights of the inaugural four-day Salukis United in Diversity Conference.
A variety of activities are planned during the April 19-22 conference, designed to bring the campus and community together to highlight and strengthen SIU’s diversity and inclusivity.
The celebration begins on April 19 as faculty and graduate teaching assistants make presentations and discuss diversity from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Student Center’s Ohio Room. Afterward, the Chancellor’s Diversity Council will host a “Meet and Greet” event in the Mississippi Room, giving everyone a chance to get acquainted with the council and discuss their thoughts about campus diversity.
Students will gather at the Student Center at 4 p.m. on April 20 to participate in a Unity March and Celebration as a show of support for international and underrepresented students, faculty and staff. Students are encouraged to wear shirts that illustrate their diverse backgrounds, according to conference organizer Naomi Tolbert, a political science and international affairs major who is also vice president of cultural experiences and diversity for the Honors Assembly, a student trustee on the SIU Board of Trustees and a McNair Scholar.
“This will be an inspirational Saluki celebration of the differences we have and a time to embrace them and come together,” Tolbert said.
The walk will conclude in the area around the Shryock Auditorium steps for a campus-wide celebration featuring remarks by Interim Chancellor Brad Colwell, a barbecue and music provided by a disc jockey.
There will be Safe Zone workshop sessions at 10 a.m., noon and 2 p.m. on April 21 in the Mississippi Room at the Student Center, giving everyone the opportunity to learn about LGBTQ issues and how to help ...
Read More
McCay Brings Home Jacks Fourth CCAA Athlete of the Week Award
Humboldt State University Athletics
ARCATA, Calif.- Humboldt State senior Marissa McCay was named California Collegiate Athletic Association Field Athlete of the Week after her performance at the Chico Twilight this past weekend. McCay earned a NCAA provisional qualifying mark while finishing first in the Long Jump in the Chico Twilight meet last Friday night. Her jump of 5.76 meters also moved her into the third spot on Humboldt States All-Time list. McCays selection is the fourth time this season one of HSU'S female athletes has been acknowledged as the CCAA athlete of the week. "Hard work and perseverance best describes Marissa," Said head coach Scott Pesch. "She's and ideal role model and one of our teams leaders." The Jacks will send athletes to competition in both Long Beach, Calif. And Ashland Ore this weekend. Print Friendly Version
Read More
African-American veterans in mental health care are not as activated as White veterans : Newscenter : School of Medicine
INDIANAPOLIS – Patients who are activated--meaning they have the knowledge, skills and confidence to manage their health and health care--have better health outcomes. A new study provides evidence that male and female African-American veterans receiving outpatient mental health services are not as activated as White veterans.In addition to demonstrating an association between race and lower patient activation, the study shows that the relationship between African-American veterans and their mental health providers is not as strong as the relationship between White veterans and their providers. This difference persisted after adjusting for socio-demographic factors and the study participants’ length of time with their providers. Stronger patient-provider relationships--known as working alliances--have been linked to higher treatment adherence. The study also reported that the African-American veterans had significantly lower medication adherence rates than White veterans."A clear implication from this study is that one size does not fit all. We need to tailor our efforts to meet the needs of African-American veterans--and meet them where they are," said VA Center for Health Information and Communication, Regenstrief Institute and Indiana University Center for Health Services and Outcomes Research investigator Johanne Eliacin, PhD, the health services researcher who led the new study. "When it comes to being activated and engaged in their own health care, African-American veterans have more specific challenges that need to be better understood and addressed."There needs to be more research to develop strategies to motivate patients to be involved in their care and to work more effectively with their providers. And we need to learn how to help them sustain engagement over time." Dr. Eliacin is a clinical psychologist and psychological anthropologist. She also has an appointment as an assistant research professor in the Department of Psychology in the School of Science at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis. Her research focuses on sociocultural determinants of mental health and on reducing health disparities. ...
Read More