Humboldt State University Athletics
SAN RAMON, Calif. – Eight Humboldt State men and women's basketball student-athletes were named to the California Collegiate Athletic Association Winter All-Academic Team released Wednesday Afternoon. Six student-athletes were members of the women's basketball team and two were members of the men's basketball team. Jovanah Arrington, Ashlynn Cox, Kindall Murie, Merritt Schoenhofer, Riann Thayer and Allison Zalin were honored from the women's basketball team, and Colin Caslick and Will Taylor were the men's basketball team representatives. Murie and Thayer are now being recognized for the third year in a row. Cox, Caslick and Taylor were all recognized last year. A total of 77 student-athletes represented the conference's 13 institutions on the seasonal list. Stanislaus State led the institutions with 11 student-athletes receiving honors, following close behind is UC San Diego with nine honors. The Lumberjacks and the Sonoma State Seawolves both had 8 student-athletes receive honors. In order to qualify for the All-Academic Team student-athletes must: 1) Be of sophomore standing or higher, and may include graduate students.2) Have a 3.3 cumulative GPA or better.3) Have competed in a Conference-sponsored sport in that season. Print Friendly Version
Read More
Wednesday, April 19, 2017
Eight Lumberjack Basketball Student-Athletes Earn Winter All-Academic Honors
Research awards at IUPUI increased by $40.5 million in 2016: Newscenter: Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEINDIANAPOLIS -- The Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis has released funding results for fiscal year 2016 showing research awards campuswide totaled $428.9 million, a $40.5 million increase over 2015.
Counting only non-IU School of Medicine awards, the campus received $67.2 million in research awards in 2016, compared to $58.1 million in 2015, a 16 percent increase.
The increase in research awards reflects, in part, the support of the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research to advance innovative research and creative activity.
Funding awards for 2016 show an increase in National Science Foundation awards, one of the office's strategic goals. NSF funding rose from $5.2 million in 2015 to $7.9 million in 2016.
NSF awards in 2016 included $200,022 for a research team led by the School of Engineering and Technology to overcome problems with one approach to increasing the capacity of lithium ion batteries.
Another National Science Foundation grant will enable researchers at IUPUI to develop a Breathalyzer-type device to detect the onset of hypoglycemia, or low blood sugar episodes, in people with diabetes.
The funding awards underscore efforts by the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research to develop and expand research programs that address important national and global needs and support economic development of Indiana and the nation.
Other external funding supported research to:
Develop information-based tools to help primary care providers improve care for patients with chronic pain, a condition that affects 100 million Americans at a cost of $630 billion annually in health care costs and lost worker productivity.
Study the use of the electronic dental record to evaluate the outcome of dental treatments.
Study nonmilitary applications of unmanned aerial systems (drone) technology, such as remote imaging for water quality, mosquito habitat mapping, disaster preparation, precision agriculture, and the utilization and analysis of data collected with unmanned aerial systems.
The office helps stimulate faculty research efforts through internal funding programs, events, workshops and proposal ...
Read More
Articulation, Transfer and Academic Services Manager Seth Kamen on the Kojo Nnamdi Show
Inside MC Online
Category: FeaturesPublished: Apr 19 2017 9:33AM On Tuesday afternoon, WAMU's Kojo Nnamdi discussed the process of transferring from a community college to a four-year school. Seth Kamen, articulation, transfer and academic services manager was the guest; you can listen to the segment here.
Related Mediakojo.PNG
Read More
Pressure cooker gauges can now be checked at Cooperative Extension
UNCE RSS News and Events
Pressure cooker gauges can now be checked at Cooperative ExtensionPosted 4/19/2017University of Nevada Cooperative Extension offers this free service to residents
Heavy Duty Pressure Cooker
It might be time to check your pressure cooker gauge and there’s a local place to have that service conducted. University of Nevada Cooperative Extension’s Las Vegas office will conduct free pressure cooker gauge testing, by appointment only. Each test is about 20 minutes.
Pressure cookers are used for high pressure canning and cooking using water or other cooking liquid in a sealed vessel. As pressure cooking cooks food faster than conventional cooking methods, it saves energy. The trapped steam increases the internal pressure and allows the temperature to rise.
If you are interested in this free pressure cooker gauge test, email or call ‘Chelle Reed 702-257-2236 to set up your personal appointment.
Cooperative Extension’s Clark County Lifelong Learning Center is located at 8050 Paradise Road, Las Vegas, Nev.
« Return to previous page
Read More
Fargo/Moorhead Campus Supports Suicide Awareness During 'Out of the Darkness' Walk
News Beat
Rasmussen College Fargo/Moorhead campus focused on supporting the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention’s “Out of the Darkness” Walk Sept. 21 as part of its September Diversity Committee initiative. About 1,000 community members—including staff and faculty from the Fargo/Moorhead campus—took part in the 3-mile walk. Many participants adorned themselves with colored beads to signify who they were honoring and supporting during the event, whether it was a parent, spouse, child, friend or themselves. The Fargo/Moorhead campus was one of the top fundraisers for Out of the Darkness last year, with over $400 donated, and the campus more than doubled that amount this year with close to $900 in donations. “The diversity committee tries to think outside the box when deciding on events to participate in,” said Chad Lystad, Fargo/Moorhead campus student advisor. “On our campus, diversity means ‘differences in experience,’ and those suffering from anxiety and depression are certainly experiencing their world in a different way than the rest of the population.” American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP) raises money for suicide research and prevention efforts across the United States. Suicide claims over 39,000 lives a year, and a suicide attempt is made every minutes of every day, according to AFSP. The walks help raise awareness about depression and suicide, as well as honor the lives lost to them. “The event is a fairly quiet and supportive one,” Lystad said. “It’s not sad, but more hopeful, and it’s extremely moving to see the level of support the attendees and participants have for the people that have experienced suicide in their families.” In addition to taking part in the walk, participants are welcome to visit with various research organizations and counseling services during the event. The college supports many different events and organizations across the nation. Read about how the college teamed up with the Minnesota Twins to ...
Read More
Janus Forum, rescheduled for April 27, to feature Heather Mac Donald and Martin O'Malley
Miami University - Top Stories
Heather Mac Donald
By Jason Barone, CAS director of communications
The Janus Forum returns to Miami’s Oxford campus on April 27, with Heather Mac Donald and Martin O’Malley discussing their views on the topic, “Can Both Black and Blue Lives Matter?”
Mac Donald and O’Malley both have had direct experience with the criminal justice system and race relations in America. They will each take the stage at 6 p.m. in the Taylor Auditorium at the Farmer School of Business, where they will present their views and engage in an interactive discussion to be moderated by Sara Rosomoff, economics major. O’Malley replaces filmmaker Dawn Porter, who regretfully needed to cancel her appearance last month.
The Janus Forum is free and open to the public, though seats are limited. A reception with the two guests will follow in the Farmer School’s Forsythe Commons.
Mac Donald has a J.D. from Stanford University and is the Thomas W. Smith Fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a contributing editor of City Journal, and author of numerous articles in such publications as The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, New Republic, and The New Criterion. Her recent book, The War on Cops, “warns that raced-based attacks on the criminal justice system, from the White House on down, are eroding the authority of law and putting lives at risk.”
Martin O'Malley
O’Malley was a Democratic candidate for president in 2016. He is a former governor of Maryland (2007-2015) who signed marriage equality into law, abolished the death penalty, and passed the DREAM Act to expand the opportunity of a college education to more local students. He is also a former mayor of Baltimore (1999-2007) who was named “one of America’s top five big city mayors” by Time for his work in greatly reducing crime and ...
Read More
Thousands expected for Science Everywhere festival
UNCG Now
UNCG’s campus will transform into a 200-acre science lab this Saturday at the third annual UNCG Science Everywhere, part of the North Carolina Science Festival.
The event, which takes place from noon to 4 p.m., is designed for children and teens ages 3-18 and features more than 70 hands-on activities – including opportunities to track honey bees, measure air pollution, create robots, use a 3-D printer and more.
“Science Everywhere is a unique program that exposes young people to the wonders of science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) in fun and engaging ways,” said Dr. Malcolm Schug, associate head of the Department of Biology. “Through a series of hands-on activities, kids of all ages have a chance to learn more about biology, chemistry, computer science, ecology, sustainability and art. The day even includes a visit to the UNCG planetarium. It’s truly the Super Bowl of Science.”
Families will begin their science adventure at one of four welcome centers, located in front of the School of Education Building, Sullivan Science Building, Coleman Building and Foust Park.
After checking in and receiving an activity passport, attendees are free to explore UNCG’s campus and observe, discover and create along the way. A free shuttle service will be provided.
Participants can purchase lunch from UNCG’s Fountain View dining hall or one of several food trucks on campus. Free T-shirts will be available in the Coleman Building.
Sponsors of the science festival include the UNCG Research and Instruction in STEM Education (RISE) Network, a coalition of educators and researchers involved in STEM, faculty and students from many STEM departments, the School of Education, the Office of the Provost and two National Science Foundation-funded projects.
In case of inclement weather, most activities will be moved indoors.
For more information, visit www.scienceeverywhere.uncg.edu.
Will you attend the science festival? Share your event photos ...
Read More
Assuring a ready fleet: A discussion with Admiral John Richardson, chief of naval operations
Latest From Brookings
Given changes in the global, technology, and information environments, competition for maritime security, a high quality workforce, improved acquisition processes, and resourcing stability continues to intensify. And while readiness is of utmost concern at the moment, hopes for a more capable fleet remain, as does the need to modernize.
On April 27, the Center for 21st Century Security and Intelligence at Brookings will host an event focused on the coming priorities for the U.S. Navy. Admiral John Richardson, chief of naval operations, will open with remarks before turning to a discussion with Brookings Senior Fellow Michael O’Hanlon.
Following conversation, questions will be taken from the audience.
Read More
Alireza Khaligh (Ph.D. EE ’06) and Wesley B. Leggette (CS ’12) are the 2017 Outstanding Young Alumnus Award Recipients
News – Illinois Tech Today
Meet Alireza Khaligh (Ph.D. EE ’06) and Wesley B. Leggette (CS ’12), this year’s Outstanding Young Alumnus Award recipients.
Following graduation Khaligh did postdoctoral work at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and then took a professorship at Illinois Tech before moving to his current role as associate professor at University of Maryland. At the University of Maryland Khaligh funded a research program on power electronics and pioneered the power electronics academic program there, attracting more than $5 million in research grants as a principal investigator or a co-principal investigator. He also became an expert for the National Science Foundation’s Energy, Power, Control, and Networks Program, a recognition highly unusual at such a young age.
Leggette is a lead inventor and key spokesperson at Cleversafe, Inc., a startup incubated at Illinois Tech that revolutionized computer-data storage. In 2005 one of Leggette’s classmates came to his dorm room for help building a software system. Leggette obliged and learned his friend was helping a campus startup to “warehouse all the data in the world.” Leggette began interning with Cleversafe the next semester and was hired full-time while still an undergraduate.
The 2017 Alumni Awards luncheon and ceremony will recognize 12 alumni and one civic leader. Help us celebrate these extraordinary winners on Friday, April 21 at noon in Hermann Hall. Registration is required, and tickets are $50 each. Come early and check out the Spring 2017 IPRO Day exhibits.
Read More
Former COD Student and Police Officer Recognized for his Service
News at College of DuPage
By Mike McKissackRecruits, COD faculty and members of the Bloomingdale Police Department gathered to
honor COD graduate and Bloomingdale Police Officer Raymond Murrell who was killed
Jan. 19 in a vehicle crash while responding to a theft in progress. Recruits in Basic
Academy 17-03 created a plaque in honor of Murrell that will be mounted on the memorial
wall in the recruit classroom.Murrell earned a degree in Criminal Justice from College of DuPage and went on to
become a police officer in the Bloomingdale Police Department. Bloomingdale Police
Chief Frank Giammarese said that while Murrell had been with the department for less
than a year, the young officer made a lasting impression.“It’s an honor and very humbling to be a part of this dedication to Ray, who had a
great impact on the Bloomingdale Police Department in a very short time,” Giammarese
said. “We want to use this tragedy as a learning experience for recruits and fellow
officers so they can see how fragile life can be. We hope this will help them understand
the importance of appreciating each day.”Pictured: from left to right, Bloomingdale Deputy Chief Tim Roberts, BA 17-03 class recruit Sturghill, BA 17-03 recruit Iwanicki
and Bloomingdale Chief of Police Frank Giammarese.
Read More
New insights into DNA repair
Brandeis University News
New insights into DNA repairThe lab of biologist James Haber advances our understanding of these processes in a paper in the journal Nature. Photo/Mike LovettBiologist James HaberApril 18, 2017A new paper in the prestigious journal Nature from Brandeis researchers in the laboratory of James Haber provides a detailed description of the processes of DNA repair.Chromosomes undergo DNA repair to correct insults to our genetic code, caused either by errors in copying the DNA or by external factors such as exposure to radiation or toxins. Most damage gets accurately repaired, so the cell is unaffected, but some result in permanent errors (mutations or chromosome rearrangements) that may lead to diseases, including cancer. Especially dangerous are double-strand DNA breaks (DSB’s) that sever the chromosome.The work was principally carried out by postdoctoral fellow Ranjith Anand with contributions by technician Annette Beach and physics Phd student Kevin Li. They examined repair of a double-strand break in yeast cells.When a DSB occurs, the cell needs to patch up the break by matching up the ends of the broken chromosome with similar DNA sequences located on an intact chromosome; the intact sequences can be used as a template to repair the break by DNA copying. To accomplish repair, the cell must be able to locate another chromosome with similar sequences to use as a template.Finding such a template is no easy task. Chromosomes are made up of base pairs — pairings of the molecules guanine and cytosine or adenine and thymine. (As you may remember from biology class, G goes with C and A with T). The end of the broken chromosome must be compared with millions of possible short DNA regions in order to find a chromosome with the same arrangement of base pairs. This search is mediated by the RAD51 protein, which promotes the matching up of the broken end ...
Read More
Embry-Riddle 2017 Spring Commencement Ceremonies Scheduled
Headlines RSS Feed
WORLDWIDE CAMPUS:
The commencement ceremony for 442 students of the Worldwide Campus will be held at 9 a.m. Saturday, May 6, 2016 at the I.C.I. Center, Embry-Riddle Daytona Beach Campus, 600 S. Clyde Morris Blvd.
The commencement speaker will be The Honorable Donald C. Winter (retired), 74th Secretary of the Navy.
For more information on the Worldwide Campus commencement and a live streaming broadcast of the ceremony, go to portal.stretchinternet.com/erauadmin/.
WORLDWIDE CAMPUS MEDIA CONTACT: Melanie Hanns, Director of University Media Relations, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University; Office: (386) 226-7538; melanie.hanns@erau.edu
PRESCOTT, ARIZ. CAMPUS (TO INCLUDE WORLDWIDE GRADUATES)
The commencement ceremony for 327 students of the Prescott Campus and 28 of the Worldwide Campus will be held at 10 a.m. on Saturday, May 6, at Prescott Valley Event Center, 3201 N. Main St., Prescott Valley, Ariz.
The graduating class includes 26 Prescott students receiving military commissions: 19 from Air Force ROTC and seven from Army ROTC.
Arizona Governor Doug Ducey will be the commencement speaker.
For more information on the Prescott/Worldwide commencement and access to a live streaming broadcast of the ceremony, go to prescott.erau.edu/campus-life/graduation.
PRESCOTT CAMPUS MEDIA CONTACT: Jason Kadah, Director of Communications, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Prescott Campus; Office: (928) 777-6731; Cell: (602) 826-4790; jason.kadah@erau.edu
DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. CAMPUS:
The commencement ceremony for 703 students of the Daytona Beach Campus will be held Monday, May 8, at 10 a.m. at the Ocean Center, 101 N. Atlantic Ave., Daytona Beach. For directions to the Ocean Center, go to www.oceancenter.com.
The graduating class includes 52 Daytona Beach students receiving military commissions: 24 from Air Force ROTC, 15 from Army ROTC and 13 from Naval ROTC.
Pilot, artist, educator and entrepreneur Erik Lindbergh will be the commencement speaker.
For more information on the Daytona Beach commencement and a live streaming broadcast of the ceremony, go to daytonabeach.erau.edu/campus-life/graduation.
DAYTONA BEACH CAMPUS MEDIA CONTACT: James ...
Read More
State Honors UMass Boston with Highest Award for Eco-Friendly Commuting
News
MassRIDES, MassCommute, and MassDOT Select UMass Boston for Pinnacle AwardUMass Boston received its first Pinnacle Award — the state's highest award for eco-friendly commuting — at the annual Excellence in Commuter Options (ECO) Awards at Fenway Park last week.
MassRIDES, MassCommute, and MassDOT have sponsored these awards since 2011. There are three levels: pacesetter, leader, and pinnacle.
Pacesetter Award winners need to meet at least five criteria, such as offering an emergency ride home program and flexible work schedules for employees. Leader Award winners need to meet the meet the same criteria as a Pacesetter Award winner and five more criteria, such as conducting quarterly promotions of ride-matching services like NuRide and offering vanpools, discounted transit passes, and on-site amenities like ATM, food, and child care. Pinnacle Award winners have to meet the same qualifications as the other two levels and meet four more criteria, such as providing shuttle services and showers for cyclists.
MassRIDES, MassCommute, and MassDOT determined that UMass Boston meets all of the criteria above. The university's green transit options and incentives include eco-friendly free shuttle buses, the Hubway bike sharing program, the HarborWalk, and motorbike parking.
UMass Boston received Leader Awards in 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2016, and a Spotlight Award for Leadership in Commuter Options in the area of walking in 2016. Wednesday was the first time it has received a Pinnacle Award.
“While our students, faculty, and staff are to be commended for availing the sustainable and healthy choices for sustainable transportation, I would love to thank certain campus departments that help to make this a success year after year - campus services, transportation services, recycling and sustainability, construction and master planning, university communications, human resources, facilities, and environmental health and safety,” said Aditi Pain, manager of the Office of Recycling and Sustainability.
UMass Boston has been honored for its green efforts by other organizations as well. UMass Boston has been part ...
Read More
WPI Baseball to Participate in Coaches vs. Cancer Initiative This Weekend
WPI News Archive
Apr 19, 2017
WORCESTER - The WPI baseball team and coach Mike Callahan will team up with the American Cancer Society and participate in the Coaches vs. Cancer initiative this weekend.
Fans will have an opportunity to pledge their support for every run the Engineers' score during their three-game series with Springfield on April 22 and 23. Fans can choose to make a donation per run or donate a flat amount to help support the life-saving work of the American Cancer Society and its Coaches vs. Cancer initiative.
To make a donation and be part of this important campaign, visit www.pledgeit.com/wpi-baseball.
Through this online platform, created by PledgeIt, fans anywhere can donate funds to help the American Cancer Society save lives. Funds raised will support the Society's mission to help ensure that lifesaving cancer research continues to get funded, and people facing cancer have the help they need.
For more information please contact or Greg McKeever, Coaches vs. Cancer Coordinator at greg.mckeever@cancer.org or 508-270-4823.
Coaches vs. Cancer is a nationwide collaboration between the American Cancer Society and the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) that empowers all coaches, their teams, and local communities to make a difference in the fight against cancer. The program leverages the personal experiences, community leadership, and professional excellence of coaches nationwide to increase cancer awareness and promote healthy living through year-round awareness efforts, fundraising activities, and advocacy programs.
For more information, please visit www.coachesvscancer.org, or find us on Facebook (www.facebook.com/coachesvscancerMA), Twitter (@CoachesMA) and Instagram (@Coaches_MA).
Read More
Film director Baz Luhrmann selected as 2017 Class Day speaker
Princeton University Top Stories
Academy Award-nominated film director, screenwriter and producer Baz Luhrmann has been selected to deliver the keynote address at the University's Class Day ceremony on Monday, June 5.
Read More
Shift climate change discussion to how ecosystems adapt, say IU scientist and co-authors
IU
IUB Newsroom »Shift climate change discussion to how ecosystems adapt, say IU scientist and co-authorsShift climate change discussion to how ecosystems adapt, say IU scientist and co-authorsFeb. 10, 2017FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEBLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- Scientists and policymakers should draw on experience from the distant past to develop a new paradigm for protecting ecosystems at a time of accelerating global change, an Indiana University paleontologist and co-authors write in a paper published today.
The article in the journal Science calls for merging conservation biology with evidence from paleobiology -- the study of the fossil record of the history of life -- and the Earth sciences. P. David Polly, professor of geological sciences in the IU Bloomington College of Arts and Sciences, is one of the authors.
The authors say factors such as climate change, resource overconsumption and pollution are reaching a point where it is no longer realistic to focus only on protecting ecosystems from change. Instead, they argue, we need an approach that conserves the ability of ecosystems to adapt to changing conditions.
"It's a way of working with ecosystems that we know we’re going to lose," Polly said. "Instead of trying to maintain them in past optimal states, we would try to maintain productivity in the face of change."
Environmental change has sped up dramatically over the past 50 years, the authors write, overwhelming ecosystems that have existed for millennia. Atmospheric carbon dioxide has surpassed 400 ppm for the first time since more than 15 million years ago, which scientists say signals irreversible climate change. Human population is projected to grow by 3 billion by 2050.
Until recently, the dominant conservation paradigm has been to protect ecosystems from being altered. But scientists believe that is no longer possible, in many cases.
Going forward, maintaining vibrant ecosystems will require finding ways to manage for their "functional integrity" -- the ability to withstand or adapt to changes ...
Read More
Study finds children with ADHD have questions for their doctor but don’t ask them
UNC Main RSS Feed – UNC News
For immediate use
Study finds children with ADHD have questions for their doctor but don’t ask them
(Chapel Hill, N.C. — April 18, 2017) — Children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder want to ask their physicians about their condition and medications but often don’t, according to researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The study could help doctors and parents leverage this interest to help children better manage their ADHD.
“We have found that there has been very little research into how providers, parents and youth communicate about ADHD and ADHD medications,” said Betsy Sleath, the lead author of the study and the George H. Cocolas Distinguished Professor at the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy. “What we do know is that kids often aren’t part of the conversation when their parents and doctors are talking ADHD. We wanted to know how the kids felt about that.”
Sleath’s team recruited 48 boys and 22 girls ranging in age from 7 to 17 years at two private pediatric practices in North Carolina who had been diagnosed with ADHD and prescribed medicine, and examined how children with ADHD perceive communication with their pediatric care providers, whether they say they take their ADHD medications correctly and where they prefer to learn about their condition.
The children were also asked if they wished their doctor talked to them more about ADHD. They were asked what made it hard to talk to their doctor about ADHD and what would make it easier to talk to their doctor about ADHD.
One-third of the children said they wished their physician talked with them more about ADHD during visits. Study participants had at least eight unasked questions on average about ADHD and its treatment. Common questions included will I grow out of ADHD, how will my medicine affect me and what are the side effects of my ADHD medicine?
...
Read More
Northwestern champions medical and scientific research
Northwestern Now: Summaries
EVANSTON, Ill. --- Northwestern University is advocating on multiple fronts for the importance of funding for medical and scientific research -- and the imperative of protecting its students and scholars -- amid great uncertainty over budget cuts, immigration law and education policies in Washington, D.C.For months, President Morton Schapiro and senior officials at Northwestern have been underscoring the University’s values as they communicate to U.S. officials about the vital contribution federal funding makes to America’s innovation, research enterprise and long-term competitiveness.“There is a great deal of concern and unease in the Northwestern community about this,” President Schapiro said. “We are committed to defending the importance of federal support for the research we do that changes lives and leads to scientific and medical advances.“Last year’s Nobel Prize in Chemistry was shared by a Northwestern professor, Sir Fraser Stoddart, whose fundamental research has had a tremendous impact on science,” he added. “This kind of discovery is the result of the advancement of knowledge that occurs at Northwestern and other top research institutions.” RELATED: Top University officials affirm strong support for research fundingThe Trump administration has raised the prospect of deep budget rollbacks in basic scientific and medical research funding, including $5.8 billion in proposed cuts from the National Institutes of Health and $900 million from the Department of Energy’s Office of Science. Both are major funders of government-sponsored research done at universities and national laboratories across the country.We are committed to defending the importance of federal support for the research we do that changes lives and leads to scientific and medical advances.”Morton SchapiroPresident“This federal funding of basic research is absolutely vital for the continued improvement in the quality of life of the people in the United States,” said Jay Walsh, vice president for research at Northwestern. “I firmly believe that after all ...
Read More
Spirit Week brings together UChicago community to celebrate religious traditions
UChicago News
The UChicago community will have a chance to interact and reflect on a variety of religious and spiritual traditions through music, food and more during this year’s Spirit Week, which runs from April 20-30.The week will feature events ranging from Muslim Friday prayers to a family celebration of Shabbat, and culminating with a public concert of music by University Professor Augusta Read Thomas at Rockefeller Chapel.
Spirit Week began in 2012, organized by Jigna Shah, director of Spiritual Life and assistant dean of Rockefeller Chapel, and Elizabeth Davenport, dean of Rockefeller Chapel. The goal of the week of events is to invite people to experience the spiritual practices of others and to expand their understanding of traditions different from their own.
“Spirit Week celebrates the coming together and the working together of different traditions,” Shah said. “It’s an opportunity to work on religious literacy, for students to get a taste of learning about different faiths.”
This year’s events, under the theme of “breathe,” include a concert celebrating the Hindu and Muslim contributions to shaping the arts of South Asia on Saturday, April 22; a lunch hosted by religious advisers Imam Tahir Abdullah and Rabbi David Wietchner on Tuesday, April 25; and the concert featuring Thomas’ works on Saturday, April 29.
For Shah, the intentionality of members of different traditions working together to hold events for the entire UChicago community is the highlight of the week.
Nikhil Mandalaparthy of the Hindu Student Sangam and Nur Banu Simsek of the Muslim Students Association brought their two groups together to organize a free concert and dinner entitled A Meeting of Two Seas: Hindus and Muslims Shape the Arts of South Asia.
The event will feature both undergraduate and graduate students and performers from around Chicago to present dances, poetry and music from South Asia. This is the first major collaboration in a decade ...
Read More
Pardee School of Global Studies Redesigns Graduate Programs
BU Today
Graduate students enrolling in the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies in the fall will have three new degree programs to choose from.
“It’s a way of ensuring that no one leaves here without us being sure they are going to have both the breadth and the depth to fulfill what the strategic plan says we are going to do, which is to create the leaders of tomorrow,” says Adil Najam, dean of the Pardee School, and a College of Arts & Sciences professor of international relations and of earth and environment.
The school has redesigned and consolidated nine existing graduate programs to create the three degrees, while creating new in-depth specializations and options within those degrees:
• The flagship Master of Arts in International Affairs (MAIA) prepares students for a wide variety of careers over four semesters and offers specializations in diplomacy, international communication, global economic affairs, security studies, and religion and international affairs. “Before this, we didn’t have a degree that had ‘security’ in the name, we didn’t have a degree that had ‘diplomacy’ in it, but those were two of our biggest strengths,” Najam says.
• The Master of Arts in Global Policy (MGP) provides a grounding in core skills of global policy over three semesters while offering specializations in environmental policy, developmental policy, and international public health policy.
• The redesigned Master of Arts in International Relations (MAIR) is an early- to mid-career program for professionals with a few years of experience in the field. In most cases, the degree can be completed in two semesters, providing skills and knowledge students need to enhance their professional careers and impact.
The Pardee School was launched in 2014 with a $25 million donation from Frederick S. Pardee (Questrom’54,’54, Hon.’06). Its goal is to bring together faculty from across the University to support interdisciplinary research aimed at advancing global human progress ...
Read More
Mānoa: Record number of presentations will be a part of 2017 Biomedical/Health Disparities Symposium
UH News
University of Hawaiʻi at MānoaContact:Posted: Apr 18, 2017Last year's session spread out through a large meeting room in Kakaako.The Annual Biomedical Sciences and Health Disparities Symposium will be held on Thursday and Friday, April 20 and 21, 2017, at the University of Hawaiʻi Mānoa (UHM) Kakaʻako campus. The symposium, sponsored by the John A. Burns School of Medicine (JABSOM) and National Institutes of Health grants RMATRIX, RCMI and INBRE III, is coordinated by the JABSOM Cell and Molecular Biology Graduate Program.The locations include the JABSOM Auditorium (651 Ilalo Street, Room 315) and the Sullivan Conference Center on the University of Hawaiʻi Cancer Center (Kakaʻako) ground floor (701 Ilalo Street).The symposium allows health sciences students, MD residents and faculty from colleges throughout Hawaiʻi to display their latest research. The 2017 symposium has attracted a record 169 recipients. They will compete in their divisions, but the setting has the feel of a scientific meeting. The researchers explain their ideas, and receive supportive input from faculty judges.The symposium also gives participants a unique opportunity for future collaboration as they learn about the studies underway by their colleagues. The research in health disparities -- the variation in rates of disease and disabilities between people in certain socioeconomic groups -- is especially relevant to Hawaiʻi citizens.The event is open to the public. CLICK TO DOWNLOAD THE SYMPOSIUM SCHEDULE PDFThe conference keynote speaker is Dr. Margaret McFall-Ngai, Director of the Pacific Biosciences Research Center at UH Mānoa.CLICK TO DOWNLOAD THE KEYNOTE SPEAKER PDFShort-form schedule of presentations:Thursday, April 20, 2017:9:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Poster Session 112:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m. Keynote address by Margaret McFall-Ngai, PhD, Director of the UHM Pacific Biosciences Research CenterFriday, April 21, 2017:9:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Poster Session 212:00-12:45 p.m. Memorial Tribute for Rosanne Harrigan, PhD1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. Poster Session 3 ...
Read More
Georgia College - one step closer to completing the Divine 9
Georgia College FrontPage RSS Feed
Senior Jasmine Gray and first-year Jazmin Hunt sit on the Zeta Phi Beta bench between Parks and Atkinson Halls.Without knowing it, Jazmin Hunt and Jasmine Gray came to the Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life on the same day, at the same time, wanting the same thing – to revive Zeta Phi Beta, an African-American sorority not seen on campus for five years.
With its revival, Georgia College is one step closer to becoming home to all nine of the Divine 9 -- which are historically African-American fraternities and sororities. During Greek Weekend this month, the new Zeta sisters were introduced to a cheering crowd of about 1,900 Greek-life students.
“It was amazing,” said Stacey Milner, assistant director of fraternity and sorority life. “What’s great about Georgia College is we have such a robust community. Those girls felt so welcomed. It was awesome seeing them reintroduced into the community but, more importantly, to be embraced by them.”
The moment tells a lot about Greek life at a small university that has a distinguished past – but aims for a more diverse and unified future.
The Greek system appeared at Georgia College in the 1970s with original sororities like Alpha Delta Pi, Phi Mu and Delta Zeta. The first African-American fraternity on campus, Alpha Phi Alpha, was also established in the ‘70s. More chapters came in the 1980s, with memberships ebbing and flowing over time.
About 35 percent of all students now join one of the 27 fraternities and sororities on campus, said Dr. Andy Lewter, dean of students.
High Greek involvement speaks to the type of students Georgia College attracts: academically successful, motivated, involved and charitable, Lewter said. Values-minded students are changing the face of fraternities and sororities. Leaders are monitoring the behavior of their own members, supporting each other and celebrating their differences.
Tiffany Bayne and Stacey Milner, co-assistant directors of fraternity and ...
Read More
CCMST Weekly News, June 25, 2010
Center for Computational Molecular Science and Technology
1. Announcements2. Statistics3. Tip of the WeekANNOUNCEMENTS
Summer Lecture Series in Electronic Structure Theory
Throughout the summer, a series of lectures in electronic structure theory will be presented at the advanced undergraduate / beginning graduate level. Lectures will be held Tuesdays and Thursdays in MSE 4202A
from 2-3PM. The summer students, 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: June 29: Symmetry-Adapted Perturbation Theory (Hohenstein)
July 1: Configuration Interaction (Hohenstein) (notes)
The complete schedule of the lectures can be found at http://vergil.chemistry.gatech.edu/opp/sched.html.
STATISTICS
FGATE
Uptime: 309 days/home directory usage: 63% (2.2TB available)/backups directory usage: 74%
LSF usage for Week 24 (6/14-6/20) (times are in minutes)GroupJobsTotal CPUAvg CPUAvg WaitAvg Trnr.Bredas14324766813%17329042740Hernandez19818860910%9531891145Sherrill10901075%90114151750749Total35152638527%150016583208
Note: percentages refer to the total CPU time available for the period.
Most productive user of the Week: pwinget 204406.
EGATE
Uptime: 208 days/theoryfs/common directory usage: 35% (432GB available)/theoryfs/ccmst directory usage: 80% (181GB available)
LSF usage for Week 24 (6/14-6/20) (times are in minutes)GroupJobsTotal CPUAvg CPUAvg WaitAvg Trnr.Hernandez6944251529%641306475Sherrill10189471%189510562964Other953280%5920593Total8846679031%53041205474
Note: percentages refer to the total CPU time available for the period.
Most productive user of the Week: atucker 423311.
TIP OF THE WEEK
By Massimo
The LSF command 'bacct' can be used to generate usage statistics (like the one reported above).
Usage statistics for your account can be generated with the following command:bacct -w -C start-date,end-date
where start-date and end-date are in the form YYYY/MM/DD. To generate statistics for all users:bacct -w -u all -C start-date,end-date
For a group of users:bacct -w -u "usr1 user2 user3 ..." -C start-date,end-date
Do you have usage tips that you want to share with the other CCMST users? Please send them to Massimo (massimo.malagoli@chemistry.gatech.edu) for inclusion ...
Read More
Women of Distinction honored at Leadership Conference
All GT News
Campus and Community Society and Culture
Women of Distinction honored at Leadership Conference
April 19, 2017
• Atlanta, GA
Click image to enlarge
The 2017 Women of Distinction Award recipients were announced at the Women’s Leadership Conference on April 1 at the Historic Academy of Medicine. The Woman of Distinction Award is presented each year to students, faculty, stuff, and alums who exhibit exemplary leadership (left to right): (not pictured) Errika Mallett, ENW & Associates with Anna Pinder accepting the award; Lea Ikkache, a masters student in music technology; Raksha Muthukumar, a third-year computer science student; Jillann Hertel, academic professional in Literature, Media and Communication; Dr. Rebecca Burnett, professor in Literature, Media and Communication.
Read More
Wednesday, April 19, 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.
Ravenous blue whale swallows nearly an entire shoal of krill in one mouthful (HuffPost Tech UK)
“Every time a blue whale opens its mouth, it’s like putting on the brakes, so it slows way down,” said Leigh Torres, principal investigator at Oregon State University’s Marine Mammal Institute. “These animals have to make decisions about what it’s worth opening their mouths for.” (see also Stuff.Co.NZ, 9news.com, Daily Mail)
OSU-Cascades’ advisory board clarifies its role (Bend Bulletin)
Tuesday’s Oregon State University-Cascades Advisory and Advocacy Board meeting clarified the role of the advisory group and updated members on the college’s 10-year strategic plan.
Whale’s-eye view of Antarctica offers new look at our warming planet (Mashable)
“We have been able to show that whales spend a great deal of time during the days socializing and resting, and then feeding largely throughout the evening and night time,” said Ari Friedlander, lead scientist on the whale study and an associate professor from Oregon State University.
Troy Snow named ‘Our Hero’ (LIFE@OSU)
Troy Snow, senior assistant director of Recreation Operations and Student Initiatives at Recreational Sports, has been named the Professional Faculty Leadership Association’s April 2017 ‘Our Hero.’
Food science & technology prof honored for research on healthful properties of berries (LIFE@OSU)
OSU berry researcher Ron Wrolstad received a top honor from his fellow scientists at a worldwide berry-health conference last month.
Pedal Corvallis expanding to OSU this spring: Launch scheduled for Earth Day celebration (LIFE@OSU)
Oregon State University (OSU), in partnership with the Oregon Cascades West Council ...
Read More
Oregon State University announces plans for arts and education complex
CORVALLIS, Ore. – Building on a decade of investment in the arts, Oregon State University leaders announced plans today for a new arts and education complex on the Corvallis campus. The initiative will expand and enhance the existing LaSells Stewart Center, bringing together music, theater, digital communications programs and the visual arts to form a center of creativity infused with science and technology.
The lead gift of $25 million comes from an anonymous donor and launches an effort to raise an additional $5 million in gifts for the project. With $30 million in private support, the university will seek future approvals for $30 million in state bonds, providing a total of $60 million for the arts and education complex.
“This is a watershed investment in our university,” said OSU President Ed Ray. “The arts drive the culture of creativity, innovation and diversity that is essential to a thriving research environment. I believe with all my heart that a relationship with the arts is integral to the human experience. In addition to enhancing our strengths in the sciences, this initiative will enrich the education and life preparation of all our students. We owe a boundless debt of gratitude to this generous donor.”
Expected to open in 2022, the OSU arts and education complex will feature performance spaces including a new concert hall and a revitalized auditorium as well as a smaller black box theater that can be configured in multiple ways for performing and teaching. The facility also will contain classrooms designed for a media-rich environment; practice rooms and spaces for choir, symphony and band rehearsal; shop space equipped for work with sound, lights, animation and video; faculty offices and seminar rooms.
“The arts and education complex is the next major step for OSU’s development as one of America’s great land grant universities,” said Larry Rodgers, dean of the College of Liberal Arts. “At OSU we ...
Read More
Greenbaum sees challenges in Olin’s second century
Olin BlogOlin Blog
Stuart Greenbaum served as Olin’s dean from 1995-2005. He has spent nearly half a century in the ‘industry’ of business education and shares his SWOT analysis in this video interview.
[embedded content]
Read more on the Olin100 website: Greebaum’s Legacy of Achievements
The son of a New York City meat dealer, Stuart Greenbaum graduated from Stuyvesant, one of Manhattan’s most selective public high schools. With degrees from NYU and Johns Hopkins, he pursued an academic and public service career as chairman of the Economics Department at the University of Kentucky, and on the staffs of the comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Reserve.
Before assuming the deanship at Olin, Greenbaum was a distinguished faculty member and academic administrator for 20 years at Northwestern University’s Kellogg Graduate School of Management. At Kellogg, he was the director of the Banking Research Center and the Strunk Distinguished Professor of Financial Institutions, and from 1988–92, he was Kellogg’s associate dean for Academic Affairs. Greenbaum is founding editor of the Journal of Financial Intermediation and has served on the editorial boards of eleven other academic journals. When he joined the faculty at Washington University, he was inducted as the inaugural Bank of America Professor of Managerial Leadership.
Dean Stuart Greenbaum’s legacy of achievements
Read More
Ping Chong, Talvin Wilks to Pay Return Visit to Theater Department
UMass Amherst: News Archive
Theater artists Ping Chong and Talvin Wilks return to the theater department on April 22 at 4 p.m. in the Rand Theater for a conversation about theater and social transformation that is free and open to all.They will be joined by theater professor Priscilla Page.
Chong is a recipient of the National Medal of Arts and a ground-breaking theater artist. He and Wilks, a frequent collaborator of Chong’s as well as a theater artist/activist in his own right, spent much of last spring as guest artists of the department.
The conversation will link their ground-breaking piece, Collidescope 2.0 and the topics of race relations, history and politics to their latest endeavor, Collidescope 3.0.
Read More
Research Week 2017: Senior Says Research ‘Set Me Apart’ When Applying for Grad School
Headlines – Tennessee Today
Lora Doherty, a senior in therapeutic recreation, has been researching how camps can help children in military families cope with a parent’s deployment.Lora Doherty
The research not only deepened her understanding of coursework but also gave her a leg up on other applicants when applying to graduate school.
Doherty, of Knoxville, is among 1,400 UT undergraduates involved in research. Between 2015 and 2016 the number of UT undergraduates doing research more than doubled and the number of faculty mentors increased 87 percent.
With her father, Thomas Doherty, being a UT veterinary medicine professor, Lora Doherty spent plenty of time on campus as a child and was always intrigued by the research posters she saw in the hallways.
Now she’s the researcher.
During the summer of 2015, Doherty worked at Operation Purple Camp—a North Carolina camp for youth from military families.
“In my major, we talk about the value of recreation and improving people’s quality of life—which isn’t limited to people with disabilities,” said Doherty. “I thought about other ways you can improve life through recreation, and Operation Purple Camp came to mind.”
Doherty returned to Operation Purple Camp in the summer of 2016 as a researcher and surveyed 100 campers. She found the camp helped kids connect with peers going through similar situations, develop a support system outside the home, and learn how to cope with a parent’s deployment.
Angela Wozencroft, associate professor in the Department of Kinesiology, Recreation, and Sport Studies, helped guide Doherty through the research process.
Doherty said undergraduate research did more than help her understand her field of study.
“I interviewed with five graduate schools and I was accepted at all five,” she said, adding that research experience “set me apart from the other applicants.”
Doherty will begin graduate school in occupational therapy in the fall.
Read More
Pitt Names Senior Vice Chancellor for Research
An interview with Rutenbar can be read here.
PITTSBURGH—Rob A. Rutenbar has been named the University of Pittsburgh’s senior vice chancellor for research. In this newly established position, he will lead the University’s strategic vision for research and innovation, enhancing existing technological partnerships.
“I am delighted to welcome Rob to the University of Pittsburgh as our inaugural senior vice chancellor for research,” said Chancellor Patrick Gallagher. “His experience as a researcher, innovator, collaborator and entrepreneur — both inside and outside of the university — make Rob uniquely qualified to support our faculty’s research and innovation efforts and to champion Pitt research on a local, national and global scale.”
Pitt Provost and Senior Vice Chancellor Patricia E. Beeson said Rutenbar is exceptionally well-suited for the role.
“His administrative, entrepreneurial and research experiences align well with our vision for a leader who drives excellence and will serve as a champion for the University of Pittsburgh,” she said.
“Rob’s experiences and expertise in both the academic world and the private sector make him the perfect individual to fully integrate and expand upon Pitt’s University-level research and medical school endeavors,” said Arthur S. Levine, senior vice chancellor for the health sciences and the John and Gertrude Petersen Dean of the School of Medicine. “In the coming years, we hope to be an internationally recognized model for how the various divisions of an educational institution can communicate and work together. Rob Rutenbar is precisely the type of professional needed to accomplish that goal.”
Working with other senior University officials, the senior vice chancellor for research is responsible for establishing and implementing a long-term plan for research infrastructure. The position manages the University’s Center for Research Computing, Economic Partnerships, the Innovation Institute, the Office of Export Controls, the Office of Research, the Research Conduct and Compliance Office and the Radiation Safety ...
Read More
Sine Language
Science and Technology @ UCSB
Like good mathematicians, Tamara Gomez and her friends wanted to solve a problem: How do you show female high school students what it’s like to major in math or a math-related field in college?The answer: “Powers 2017: Problem Solving for Women to Encourage Research in STEM.” The event is a full day of activities designed to give high school girls a good look at majoring in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) fields.
“We want to introduce them to female role models in STEM, and we also want them to have a lot of fun,” said Phoebe Coy, an officer of UC Santa Barbara’s student chapter of the Association for Women in Mathematics (AWM) and a third-year math major.
“Powers 2017” will be held Saturday, April 22, from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in UCSB’s Old Little Theater. The day will include a team math competition, math and physics activities, a panel discussion with STEM undergraduate and graduate students, lunch at the lagoon and more. The event is free and open to female high school students in the Santa Barbara, Ventura and Santa Maria areas.
Kathy Foltz, an associate professor of molecular, cellular and development biology and interim dean of UCSB’s College of Creative Studies, will welcome participants with a short address.
Women interested in attending should fill out an online form to register.
“We hope to have 50 students,” said Gomez, a third-year math major and AWM’s co-president. “Each student will be placed on a team of three to five people for the problem solving competition (they can also choose a team member when they sign up if they have one in mind). We will also be splitting up into groups to participate in fun math and physics activities.”
The competitions, Gomez said, are designed to be fun as well as instructive. “We have been looking through ...
Read More
Presa de possessió del nou degà d’Economia i Empresa, Ramon Alemany
Universitat de Barcelona - Notícies
Nou equip deganal de la Facultat d'Economia i Empresa.
També ha pres possessió l'equip deganal de Psicologia.
D'esquerra a dreta, Francisca Eugenia Pons, Xavier Garcia i Mercè Puig.
19/04/2017
Institucional
Ramon Alemany Leira, catedràtic del Departament d’Econometria, Estadística i Economia Aplicada, ha pres possessió avui com a degà de la Facultat d’Economia i Empresa.
Entre les seves prioritats al capdavant de la Facultat, Alemany remarca que vol mantenir el nivell d’excel·lència dels graus i els màsters i seguir apostant per les polítiques de desenvolupament, captació i retenció de talent. «Aquest relleu generacional és essencial per seguir incrementant els nivells de productivitat científica i que la posició internacional de la Facultat en recerca sigui també fortament competitiva; la Facultat d’Economia i Empresa ha patit una reducció molt important de PDI i PAS en els darrers anys i cal revertir aquesta tendència», afirma.
El nou degà pensa igualment que cal donar resposta a la responsabilitat social de la Facultat i comunicar millor totes les activitats que es fan al centre: «Hem de ser capaços de fer arribar a la societat que el nivell d’internacionalització de la Facultat és realment important, que l’ocupabilitat dels nostres estudiants és molt alta, que la unitat de Carreres Professionals de la Facultat garanteix pràctiques empresarials a la immensa majoria de l’alumnat, i que disposem d’un espai de cotreball per acompanyar els estudiants emprenedors i assessorar els seus projectes de negoci, etc.».
Amb vista als propers anys, Alemany apunta que s’han de crear nous màsters i postgraus propis que puguin satisfer demandes encara no cobertes, treballar per captar estudiants internacionals d’Europa, l’Amèrica Llatina i de països emergents d’Àsia i Àfrica, així com col·laborar amb altres centres de la UB per posar en marxa mà ...
Read More
Kristen Flood and the UMSL Writers Group aim to collect 300 books for local preschoolers
UMSL Daily
Early childhood education major and UMSL Writers Group President Kristen Flood displays one of the donation boxes for the Riverview Gardens book drive in front of the Triton Store. Flood says reading is a favorite activity for her own son, Lucas, whom she reads to for 30 minutes – at minimum – every day. (Photo by August Jennewein)
Kristen Flood remembers a time when she absolutely hated reading.
The University of Missouri–St. Louis undergrad was tested for reading proficiency early on in elementary school and was thought to be below reading level. She received reading tutoring and support, and a few years later, by fifth grade, she not only met the reading requirements for her grade level but far surpassed them.
Before long, she was entering reading contests and reading a book a week. At one point she even aimed to read a book a day.
Looking back, Flood believes the change came about not because of anything having to do with her own abilities, but because of the time and effort the reading specialists and her teachers put into helping her engage with books.
“Before then I don’t think anyone had really taken the time to bring books to life for me, to introduce me to the whole world of reading and what reading could mean and do,” Flood says. “I think that’s what really made all the difference.”
Now Flood is personally committed to introducing other young children to that powerful world.
The early childhood education major – and self-published author who has three novels under her belt – has recently helped to spearhead a book drive which will benefit local children at the Riverview Gardens Early Childhood Educational Center. Flood and the UMSL Writers Group, of which she is president, hope to collect 300 books for the center over the course of the next month.
The idea came to Flood ...
Read More
California state Assembly Judiciary and Higher Education committees approve four bills supported by the California Faculty Association
Daily Titan
California State Assembly committees approved four bills supported by the California Faculty Association Tuesday.
The Judiciary Committee approved AB-21, which ensures that “institutions of higher education are safe spaces free of immigration and enforcement activities.” The bill will head to the assembly appropriations committee.
Introduced by Assembly member Ash Kalra, the bill also provides that Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) students will not lose financial aid if there are changes to DACA policy from what it was on Jan. 19.
The committee took testimony on AB-21, titled “Access to Higher Education for Every Student,” as well as three other bills supported by the California Faculty Association.
The Assembly Higher Education Committee also unanimously approved AB-393. The bill, authored by Assembly member Sharon Quirk-Silva, aims to freeze California State University tuition at what it was on Dec. 31, 2016.
The California State University Board of Trustees passed a tuition increase March 22.
“We are grateful to the trustees who voted against the fee increase, recognizing that yet another student fee increase is not a sustainable way to fund the CSU system,” said Jennifer Eagan, president of CFA, during the hearing. “We can’t keep going back to the students to fund the system.”
The trustees’ decision to raise tuition was met with widespread student protest.
During the hearing, CSU State Relations director Nichole Muñoz-Murillo said that while the board understands the state’s budget woes, there is no foreseeable funding to attract faculty and maintain academic support services.
“We need to ensure that the trustees have the tools necessary to maintain academic quality and ensure access and success for our students,” Muñoz-Murillo said. “Therefore, we regrettably oppose this bill.”
Assembly member Shirley Weber introduced AB-1464, which was also heard in the higher education committee Tuesday. It was approved by the committee with an 8-3 vote.
AB-1464 looks to increase tenure-track faculty by 75 percent by 2026 ...
Read More
Georgetown Alumnus Speaks at Global Health Conference
News Archive
April 8, 2017 - Despite the rapidly changing political environment in much of the world, Georgetown alum Mark Dybul (C'85, M'92), MD, executive director of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, said he is cautiously optimistic and sees “great opportunity” in the current global health environment.
The renowned global health leader and professor of medicine at Georgetown made his comments Friday during the opening plenary session of the Consortium of Universities for Global Health (CUGH) annual conference in Washington.
“Remarkable Time”
As many would expect, Dybul wasn’t the first at CUGH to publicly acknowledge the unease about the political environment. “I understand that people are focused on the U.S., but the global atmosphere is really important,” Dybul said as he pointed out the “remarkable time” of economic and political change throughout the world.
The self-described cautious optimist described two paths forward. “One path is to look inward and backward usually with fear and its constant companion, hate. Or you can look outward and forward -- hopefully.”
Useable Data
Dybul noted that global health doesn’t exist in a vacuum. “We have to see where the world is going and fit into that context.”
Dybul sees data as important leverage in the current environment.
“There’s a huge opportunity,” he said. However, he added the global health community needs to do a much better job at capturing and translating the data in a way that is useable by policy makers.
Broadening Reach
Dybul pointed out an additional opportunity in forwarding global health objectives.
“We need to bring more and more of the people from the national security apparatus and the defense apparatus into the conversation. They are some of the best advocates,” he said.
“We should never lose the humanitarian piece, because it is huge and important. Most people do not go into politics because they want to ...
Read More
Planet hunting citizen scientists produce quick results for astronomers
Physical and Biological Sciences News
In this computer animation of the four-planet system, the planet orbits are to scale and planet sizes are to scale with each other, but not with the star and the size of the orbits. (Credit: Simone Duca)Chris Lintott of Zooniverse shows 'Stargazing Live' hosts Brian Cox and Julia Zemiro the possible planets found so far by the Exoplanet Explorers project, using gumballs to represent different types of planets.Four UCSC undergraduates worked with astronomer Ian Crossfield to develop the Exoplanet Explorers project: Nithesh Balasubramanian, Nihaal Zaveri, Yyue Yu, and Nicholas Gehlken.Thousands of volunteer citizen scientists jumped at the opportunity to help astronomers discover new planets, yielding quick results for a team led by UC Santa Cruz astronomer Ian Crossfield. The Exoplanet Explorers project, launched in early April on Zooniverse, a popular citizen science platform, has already identified nearly 200 candidate planets, including a new four-planet system.
Crossfield's team had been working with Zooniverse for months to develop the project when they got a surprise invitation to have it featured on a live television program, 'ABC Stargazing Live', to be broadcast in Australia. The researchers quickly got the project ready to launch, uploading two large sets of data for volunteers to classify. The program, hosted by British astronomer Brian Cox and Australian television personality Julia Zemiro, was presented over three nights starting April 4. More than 10,000 users participated in the project in the first 48 hours, generating more than 2 million classifications.
"It would have taken our small team months to wade through all this data, so this is very useful for us. And we got thousands of people interested in the science of exoplanets," said Crossfield, a Sagan Postdoctoral Fellow at UC Santa Cruz.
K2 Mission
Crossfield's team is using K2, the continuing mission of NASA's Kepler spacecraft, to search for planets around red dwarf stars. By measuring the brightness of stars, ...
Read More
UCSF Fresno Names Jim Comes as Chief of Emergency Medicine
UCSF - Latest News Feed
Jim Comes, MDAfter a nationwide search, UCSF Fresno Medical Education Program appointed Jim Comes, MD, as Chief of Emergency Medicine at UCSF Fresno and Vice-Chair of Emergency Medicine at UC San Francisco. Comes provides visionary leadership for the clinical, educational and research components of emergency medicine at UCSF Fresno.
As Chief of Emergency Medicine, Comes also has been named the Gene W. Kallsen, MD, Endowed Chair in Emergency Medicine at UCSF Fresno. Endowed chairs are associated with the most prestigious educational institutions and are held by distinguished faculty. To establish an endowed chair, monies are raised and invested for the purposes of funding the position in perpetuity. The purpose of this endowed chair is to support the teaching, research and service activities in the Department of Emergency Medicine at UCSF Fresno.
Comes will continue to serve as Chair of the Emergency Department at Community Regional Medical Center, one of the busiest emergency departments in the state and home to the only Level 1 trauma and comprehensive burn center from Sacramento to Los Angeles. He also will continue his academic appointment as UCSF Clinical Professor of Emergency Medicine at UCSF Fresno.
Comes has dedicated his career to graduate medical education, serving in an educational leadership role for the past 23 years. He was program director for the transitional-year internship and assistant residency director prior to serving as program director of the UCSF Fresno Emergency Medicine Residency Program from 2006 to 2017.
He earned bachelor’s degrees in chemistry and biology from the University of California, Irvine and his medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. He completed residency training in emergency medicine at UCSF Fresno at the former Valley Medical Center.
Comes has received letters of commendation from Sen. Barbara Boxer, the Fresno County Sheriff’s Office and other elected officials for his service to the community. He is the recipient of ...
Read More
Parents Concerned About Unhealthy Food Marketing to Children
Health – UConn Today
Eighty-five percent of parents surveyed about their views on food marketing to children agreed that companies should reduce advertising of unhealthy food to their kids, according to a new report from the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at the University of Connecticut.
Black and Hispanic parents in our survey were even more likely to believe that their children were impacted by unhealthy food marketing, and said they were more willing to do something about it. — Jennifer Harris
Support for policies to promote healthy eating habits for their children in the media, schools, and communities increased between 2012 and 2015 among parents surveyed for this study, with black and Hispanic parents significantly more likely to express support than white parents. The new report updates findings from a 2012 Rudd Center report with new data collected from 2012 to 2015. The report is available at www.UConnRuddCenter.org/ParentAttitudes.
“Most of the parents surveyed indicated they are willing to take action to improve food marketing to children,” says the study’s lead author Jennifer Harris, director of marketing initiatives for the UConn Rudd Center and associate professor of allied health science in the College of Agriculture, Health, and Natural Resources. “Black and Hispanic parents in our survey were even more likely to believe that their children were impacted by unhealthy food marketing, and said they were more willing to do something about it.”
Rudd Center researchers surveyed 3,608 parents with children between the ages of two and 17 to measure attitudes about food marketing and food industry self-regulation, and assess support for policies to promote healthy eating for their children.
The researchers used a cross-sectional sample of parents to compare responses by sociodemographic characteristics, including black, Hispanic, and lower-income parents, and changes in responses from 2012 to 2015. Although the responses are not representative of the entire U.S. population, the findings highlight opportunities to address parents’ concerns about ...
Read More
Panthers Conclude 2017 Regular Season with a 5-0 Win over FGCU
FIU Athletics
Story Links
Miami (April 18, 2017) – The No. 10-ranked FIU beach volleyball team (21-12, 8-5) picked up their final regular season win with a 5-0 decision over Florida Gulf Coast on Tuesday in Ft Myers. The Panthers began the match with the No. 5 duo of Anabela Sataric and Estefanie Bethancourt securing the first win, defeating Kaitlan Krivdo and Caroline Jordan, 21-18, 21-13. At the 4 spot, Lina Bernier and Katie Hogan took down Madi Wilcox and Leigh Pudwill in another two set match, 21-18, 21-10. The No. 1 pair of Margherita Bianchin and Federica Frasca secured the match with the third win by defeating FGCU's Amanda Carroll and Mackenzie Allen, 21-19, 21-19. Finally, pair No. 2 of Katie Friesen and Taija Thomas and pair No. 3 Natalia Giron and Helene Thelle battled their respective FGCU opponents to a third set, both finishing with a win, leaving the Panthers with the shutout victory. FIU will now travel to Emerson, Georgia this weekend, April 21-23, to compete in the Coastal Collegiate Sports Association (CCSA) Beach Volleyball Championship. FIU finds itself seeded fifth in the tournament, with their first match of pool play to be on Friday, April 21 against the four seed South Carolina at 10:30 a.m.
#10 FIU def. FGCU, 5-0
No. 1 Margherita Bianchin/Federica Frasca (FIU) def. Amanda Carroll/Mackenzie Allen (FGCU) 21-19, 21-19
No. 2 Katie Friesen/Taija Thomas (FIU) def. Giovanna Borgiotti/Ashley Glickert (FGCU) 11-21, 23-21, 15-9
No. 3 Natalia Giron/Helene Thelle (FIU) def. Katherine Puisis/Karissa Rhoades (FGCU) 18-21, 21-18, 15-13
No. 4 Lina Bernier/Katie Hogan (FIU) def. Madi Wilcox/Leigh Pudwill (FGCU) 21-18, 21-10
No. 5 Anabela Sataric/Estefanie Bethancourt (FIU) def. Kaitlan Krivdo/Caroline Jordan (FGCU) 21-18, 21-13
Order of finish: 5, 4, 1, 2, 3
#####
About FIU Athletics: FIU Athletics is home to more than 400 student-athletes in 18 different sports. Athletic events are played in seven different venues on FIU's campuses (Modesto A. Maidique and Biscayne Bay), including FIU ...
Read More
