Monday, April 24, 2017

UTA golfers looking for SBC Championship glory

UT Arlington Mavs Blog


The UTA men's golf team is in sunny Miramar Beach, Fla. for the annual Sun Belt Conference Championships at Raven Golf Club at Sandestin Golf & Beach Resort.  The tournament starts Sunday with 36 holes of stroke play that concludes Monday with a final round.  The top four finishers in the team competition advance to match play, with the semis and finals each taking place on Tuesday.
A few of the golfers hit a nearby course for a quick nine holes upon arrival.  Check out this video report of the round, which includes a short feature on the interesting haircuts on seniors Zach Galliford and Josh Radcliff.




Live coverage links, as well as recaps, highlights, interviews and photos, from the championships will be available each day on UTAMavs.com.  There will also be extensive coverage on UTAMavs social media channels, including Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat and Facebook.Click here for a tournament preview.




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Wayne Law, American Bar Association host discussion on labor and employment law careers

Law School News

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Wayne Law, American Bar Association host discussion on labor and employment law careersApril 13, 2017DETROIT – On Tuesday, March 21, six attorneys in the field of labor and employment law took part in a panel discussion sponsored by the Wayne Law Career Services Office and the American Bar Association Section of Labor and Employment Law. The attorneys answered questions and offered advice to students who want to enter the labor and employment law field.

Featured attorneys were:

Carey DeWitt of Butzel Long
David Kotzian of Gasiorek Morgan Greco McCauley & Kotzian
Antoinette Star Porter of DTE Energy
Sarah S. Prescott of Salvatore Prescott & Porter
Michael Griffie and Hannah Treppa of Butzel Long moderated the discussion.

Photo attached:

Participants in the labor and employment panel discussion at Wayne Law are, from left, Hannah Treppa, Antoinette Star Porter, David Kotzian, Sarah Prescott, Carey DeWitt and Michael Griffie.



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Masterpiece Moments: Artist at the table to celebrate community commitment to the arts

Oklahoma State University - News and Communications




Masterpiece Moments: Artist at the Table will combine artists’ talents and the community’s commitment to the arts in a fun-filled night on Saturday, May 6, at 6 pm.
The premier event, held in the ConocoPhillips OSU Alumni Center, will include wine, heavy hors d'oeuvres, a silent and live auction, and entertainment, with proceeds supporting the Oklahoma State University Museum of Art’s exhibitions and educational programming.
Famous artwork and artists – Warhol, van Gogh, and Degas, for example – will be the inspiration behind a gallery of tablescape creations. These interpretive works of art will be constructed by friends and advocates of the OSU Museum of Art.
“Masterpiece Moments will be an evening to honor and promote what the OSU Museum of Art is all about: education and community outreach,” said Shawn Howell, Masterpiece Moments co-chair and OSU Museum of Art Advocate. “The evening will be a vivid, colorful walk into the magical world of many different artists, with a sample of their style displayed by our talented tablescape designers.”
Since opening its doors in 2013, the museum has had more than 16,000 visitors. It houses OSU’s permanent collection of art, and hosts a variety of exhibitions, educational programs, and community events each year.
“As an Advocate, I am passionate about the role of the museum in our community,” said Brenda Spaulding, Masterpiece Moments co-chair and OSU Museum of Art Advocate. “Because it is becoming increasingly more difficult to provide art within our public schools, I think these types of educational programming and resources can help bridge that gap.”
Howell and Spaulding belong to a group of OSU Museum of Art Advocates who support the museum and its outreach to the community through their advocacy, volunteer work, and various contributions. The Art Advocates play a vital role in expanding the museum’s reach in the community, helping provide transformational art experiences to as many ...

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Bill Nye Challenges Students to Change the World

UT Dallas News Center Natural Science And Mathematics


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campus

During UT Dallas Event, 'Science Guy' Stresses Role Students Can Play in Preserving the Planet
April 24, 2017
Bill Nye’s message to The University of Texas at Dallas crowd was straightforward: Your generation must change the world.The mechanical engineer, science educator and television show host told the 1,200-strong crowd in the Edith O’Donnell Arts and Technology Building Lecture Hall that “if you like to worry about things, you are living at a great time.” But he emphasized the role that the current students’ age group — which he christened “Generation S, for Science!” — can play in ensuring the long-term well-being of the planet.Nye said the silver lining was that revolutionary changes occur quickly in modern times.Nye meets Leo Arroyo, son of UT Dallas librarian Liz Muñoz, at a book signing on campus.“My grandfather went into World War I on a horse. Twenty years later … everything had changed. War became mechanized,” Nye said. “So let’s change everything. Let’s go to all electric cars, let’s go to distributed electrical systems. Let’s use photovoltaics and the wind, geothermal, tides — we’ll do all this, transform the electric grid, and be the world leader.”Nye’s lecture, held last month, was a University-wide effort by the Eugene McDermott Library; the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science in honor of its 30th anniversary; the School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics; the Naveen Jindal School of Management; and the Student Union and Activities Advisory Board.Meandering between topics such as space exploration, renewable energy and the science of sundials over the course of 75 minutes, the lecture carried an urgent but hopeful tone. Nye stressed the link between gender equality and reduced rates of population growth, a key factor in the health of the environment.“Raising the standard of living of women and girls is ...

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Institutional research offering data navigation training for NAU employees

NAU NewsNAU News

Faculty and staff interested in taking the Data Navigation Overview Training (DATA01) from Institutional Research and Analysis have several upcoming opportunities to do so.The Data Navigation Overview Training will help newer employees find and use the most frequently requested reports and build contacts for questions they can’t answer. The session also is valuable for employees interested in broadening their understanding of data and resources at NAU.
The training focuses on “hot topics” – offices or issues that receive the most questions.  An overview of NAU’s new Data Governance Initiative will be provided, and experts from the Budget Office, the Comptroller’s Office, Cline Library, Human Resources and Institutional Research and Analysis will provide key insight. This training will not provide in-depth content about each of these areas, but instead will provide a broad overview of available data and resources. Time will be provided at the end of the training for questions.
The course is available at the following times:
2-3:30 p.m. April 26 in the College of Health and Human Services Auditorium, Building 66, Room 101
9-10:30 a.m. May 5 in the Cline Library Assembly Hall
9-10:30 a.m. May 23 in the College of Health and Human Services Auditorium, Building 66, Room 101
Online training will be available soon. Please refer to the Data Governance website for updates.
To register, follow the instructions available on HR’s website.





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BASEBALL FALLS IN FINALE AT SEATTLE U

Athletics News




BELLEVUE, Wash. – Seattle U's Sean Sutton hit a walk off 3-run home run with two out in the bottom of the ninth as the Redhawks took the finale of a three-game WAC series with Sacramento State by a 7-4 score on Sunday.


Sacramento State (20-20, 6-9 WAC) won the series after a 3-2 victory on Friday and a 9-0 shutout on Saturday. The Hornets had a 4-0 lead on Sunday but Seattle U (13-24-1, 5-10 WAC) tied the game with four runs in the fourth inning and won it in the bottom of the ninth.


Tanner Olson recorded the first two outs in the bottom of the ninth but Michael Ciancio drew a walk before a Curtis Perrin single moved the winning run to third. The all-WAC first baseman a year ago, Sutton hit a 1-2 pitch over the wall in right to win the game for the Redhawks.


Sutton was the hero in the ninth but it was five shutout innings of relief from Tyler Oldenberg that enabled to Redhawks to rally for the win. Oldenberg allowed just two hits and one walk with five strikeouts after replacing starter Conner Moore in the fifth inning.


Sacramento State knocked out Moore early as the visitors got the scoring started in the first inning as James Outman and Vinny Esposito had consecutive doubles with one away to score a quick run.


In the second, the Hornets loaded the bases with one out on singles from Dawsen Bacho and Trent Goodrich and a Ricky Martinez walk. Ian Dawkins drove in Bacho with a groundout and Goodrich would score on a wild pitch. Esposito made it a 4-0 Hornet lead driving in Martinez with a single in the fourth.


Seattle U came back with four runs in the bottom of the fourth, scoring all four with two away. With runners on second and third and two out Jeffrey Morgan drove in two with a single to left. Seattle U followed with single and walk to load the bases and Austin Lively tied the game with a double to right center, but the inning ended as the Hornets cut down Griffin Andreychuk at the plate.


The Hornets threatened but left two men on in the fifth and had two baserunners in the sixth inning. Relievers Ty Fox and Alex Dentoni combined for four scoreless innings out of the Hornet bullpen while allowing just four hits. Oldenberg pitched around an error in the seventh inning and set the Hornets down in order in the eighth and ninth.


Seattle U left 10 men on base in the game while the Hornets stranded nine. Esposito and Goodrich each had two hits for Sacramento State with Goodrich adding a stolen base. The Redhawks had 11 hits with four players recording two-hit games.


Sacramento State had six players hit better than .300 in the series with Dawkins hitting .400. The Hornets outscored the Redhawks 16-9 with a 2.60 team ERA.


The Hornets will be in Stockton Tuesday to face Pacific at 6 p.m.












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Lorne Henne: building relationships through messaging

DePaul Newsline

For 25 years, Lorne Henne has helped people across the university connect with each other and the broader DePaul community. As a CRM business analyst for Information Services, Henne coordinates and tracks email communications from groups and departments to faculty, staff, current students and retirees to provide timely and targeted messages that help maintain and build relationships.
"Last academic year, users sent out nearly 4.5 million emails to members of the university community, so we do manage to stay fairly busy," Henne laughs.  
Customer relationship management, or CRM, is a strategy and technology used to manage interactions with constituents with the goal of creating, improving and retaining relationships. Henne and his team work with nearly every office and department at DePaul, from assisting Alumni Relations with bringing graduating students into the alumni community to issuing compliance related communications to helping Human Resources throughout the employee lifecycle: onboarding, communication updates about Healthy Vin-cent$, 403(b)s and other benefits, and the exit survey. Henne's team even provides CRM training to some departments so they can create and send their own mailing campaigns. 
"I'd be hard pressed to find an office that hasn't worked with us in one form or another," Henne says. "We're very fortunate at DePaul to have such an engaged and involved community. Everyone I deal with has developed a strong web of contacts and is deeply committed to providing a high level of service to others. It's those everyday connections fostered by faculty and staff that really make our job easier."
Though Henne is now part of a small team of three in Information Services, he first started his career at DePaul as a manager of Classroom Technologies for University Libraries. In 1991 Henne was tasked with designing and equipping classrooms with technologies to facilitate teaching. As the use of technology grew, Classroom Technologies moved to Information Services and Henne's role shifted ...

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New speech lab makes public speaking easier for students and staff

News

PCC / News / April 24, 2017 /


New speech lab makes public speaking easier for students and staff

Photos and Story by Janis Nichols |

Students and faculty at Rock Creek no longer have to practice their presentations in front of their bathroom mirror. The new speech lab in the Student Learning Center in Building 7 provides a dedicated space for students and faculty to practice their presentations. The lab includes built-in equipment, allowing speakers to fully practice using audio/visual aids. There’s even room for an audience of four to help people shake their fear of public speaking.
“This new resource connects students and faculty to success in the classroom,” said Karin Gitchel, coordinator of the Student Learning Center. “The lab is an extension of whatever class or project the student is connected to. We have welcomed students and faculty from Speech, English, Communication, Vet Tech, English for Speakers of Other Languages, Business Administration, ASPCC and even a few people who will present at the Rock Creek TEDx event May 25.”
Along with providing the equipment to help students practice with audio/visual aids, the room offers students the opportunity to record their speeches for self-critiques.
Gitchel also encourages all users to invite classmates to the practice sessions. “Friends are more likely to be supportive, but classmates who share a class or project will have a better understanding of what the assignment is about and will know if the presentation has met the intention.”
Chris Edwards, a PCC communications studies instructor, said the lab had been on a Subject Area Committee (SAC) list for years. “While other campuses are planning to open a lab, I believe Rock Creek now has the only speech lab in the district.” The lab is open to all PCC students Monday through Thursday, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and on Fridays from 8 a.m. to noon.
Students are encouraged ...

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Laios Wins Discus Throw; CWRU Women Finish Fourth at 2017 UAA Championships

Case Western Reserve Athletic News


Apr 23, 2017





The Case Western Reserve University women's track and field team wrapped up competition at the 2017 University Athletic Association Outdoor Championships on Sunday, finishing fourth out of the seven teams at the meet, hosted by the University of Chicago in Chicago, Illinois.
The Spartans finished the meet with 103 points, placing behind Washington (213.50), host Chicago (182.50) and Emory (140.50). Following Case Western Reserve in the standings were Carnegie Mellon (86), NYU (52) and Brandeis (38.50).
Junior Cassandra Laios won the conference title in the discus throw with a mark of 39.10 meters. This marks the fourth time in program history that a Spartan has claimed the conference title in the event, the first since Amanda Kline in 2012.
In addition, two more Spartans claimed All-UAA honors on Sunday. In the javelin throw, sophomore Shannon Carroll placed second with a toss of 35.57 meters, her second All-UAA honor of the meet after finishing third in the shot put on Saturday. In the 400-meter hurdles, sophomore Olivia Newman placed third in the event with a time of 1:03.77.
Case Western Reserve also scored in a pair of relays on Sunday. The 4x100-meter relay team of Newman, junior Skylar Braga, freshman Bari Love and senior Abby Casalnova finished fourth with a mark of 50.00 seconds, while the 4x400-meter relay team of Newman, Casalnova, junior Marie-Louise Kloster and freshman Vanessa Pasadyn placed fifth with a time of 4:01.79.
Other individual scoring finishes on Sunday came from Kloster in the 400-meter hurdles (fifth, 1:05.17), Pasadyn in the 800-meter run (seventh, 2:20.41), junior Rachel Willard in the triple jump (eighth, 10.61m), freshman Marina Yu in the discus throw (sixth, 31.72m) and Laios in the javelin throw (fifth, 27.58m).
During the two-day competition, the Spartans totaled six All-UAA honors, including conference championships from Laios in the hammer throw and shot put on Saturday.
With the UAA Championships now behind them, the Spartans will turn their focus to the home ...

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Ken Hirth, Pennsylvania University

Academic Calendar

Monday, April 24, 20177:00 PM - 8:00 PM (CT)

Event Type
Graduate Colloquium
Contact
Kristin Huffine815-995-7627
Department
Center for Latino and Latin Studies
Link
https://calendar.niu.edu/MasterCalendar/EventDetails.aspx?EventDetailId=28454


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Protecting the Rights of LGBTQ Individuals

University at Albany University at Albany Research Headlines


UAlbany partners with START-UP NY company Nowigence, Inc. to launch global data tracker mapping important events concerning the LGBTQ+ population






















The UAlbany LGBTQ+ News Activity Tracker will track positive and negative events on a global scale. (Photo by Thomas Hawk, Flickr used by permission)



ALBANY, N.Y. (April 12, 2017) -- For LGBTQ+ individuals living in the United States, gaining equal rights under the law has been a long, sometimes violent path. It wasn’t until 2015 that the Supreme Court of the United States struck down laws banning same-sex marriage as violations of the 14th Amendment guaranteeing due process and equal protection.

UAlbany’s own alum Harvey Milk, one of the first openly gay elected officials in the U.S., also stands as one of the first martyrs in the fight for equal rights following his 1978 assassination. But for LGBTQ+ individuals all over the world, the threat of torture or death for living ‘openly’ are as real today as it was for Milk nearly 40 years ago.

Now the University at Albany and a START-UP NY company are hoping to do something about the plight of LGBTQ+ persons on a global scale.


Developed via a partnership between UAlbany and Nowigence, Inc., one the of the University’s START-UP NY companies, the newly launched UAlbany LGBTQ+ Activity Tracker gathers data globally and over time to map a pattern of positive and negative events concerning the LGBTQ+ population.

The UAlbany LGBTQ+ News Activity Tracker (powered by Nowigence) was developed to track events (such as protests, violence, and efforts at legislation and protection) related to the LGBTQ community in various newspaper articles and media outlets worldwide. The tracker gathers data globally and over time to map a pattern of positive and negative activity trends concerning the LGBTQ+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer/questioning and others aligned with their cause) population.















Project director and UAlbany Associate Professor ...

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MSU students train wild mustangs for Montana nonprofit that helps veterans

MSU News - Agriculture (College)




April 19, 2017 -- By Jessianne Wright for MSU News Service



BOZEMAN -- Nine wild mustangs stepped foot onto Montana State University’s Agricultural Research and Teaching Farm on Jan. 3. They came to MSU virtually untouched, hailing from Bureau of Land Management facilities in Burns, Oregon, then were adopted by the Montana nonprofit, Heroes and Horses, to ultimately be used for therapeutic mountain pack trips with combat veterans.
Heroes and Horses is a program that uses horses and the remote wilderness to challenge and inspire combat veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. The veterans learn horsemanship skills and wilderness survival, then embark on progressive, multi-day horse pack trips in order to overcome their difficulties and replace devastating memories with positive ones.
A handful of MSU students, with the help of local trainers and volunteers, assisted in gentling and training the adopted wild horses over the course of nearly 90 days as the first step in helping these horses transition into a life of mountain adventure. The horses, gelded males ranging from 2 to 6 years old, left MSU on March 28, headed to Arizona to begin the second phase of their training.
“The horses trained by MSU students, faculty and staff will ultimately serve as tools to teach military veterans new skills to start a post-military life,” said Dr. Shannon Moreaux, DVM and an associate professor of equine science in MSU’s Department of Animal and Range Sciences in the College of Agriculture.
“By using BLM feral horses for this service learning project, we are also providing a far-reaching service,” Moreaux said. “The horses will be uniquely repurposed and will have a better life than living in a long-term holding facility; we will have provided a significant amount of publicity for the BLM Wild Horse adoption program. And, ultimately, we save taxpayer money while helping to protect sensitive ecosystems from overpopulation.”
Professional trainers, including renowned horse ...

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Sunday, April 23, 2017

Mobility Summit Held on Campus

Michigan Tech 'Latest News'


Michigan Technological University brings together interdisciplinary teams and keynote speakers to discuss everything from autonomous vehicles to communication networks to airports.Mobility is more than a vehicle that gets efficiently from point A to point B. That vehicle could be autonomous; it might be connected to a larger wifi network; it might navigate traffic on a busy highway; its driver might be texting. The whole vehicle system—and the larger infrastructure and human systems it is embedded in—are interconnected, multiplatform, and overloaded with data. That vehicle may also move across roads, water, skies, and unmapped terrain.
In other words, mobility research these days is about more than transport. That's why Michigan Tech is hosting its inaugural Mobility Summit this Thursday.
Pasi Lautala, the director of the Michigan Tech Transportation Institute and assistant professor of civil engineering, says the university has the opportunity to leverage its expertise and build better interdisciplinary research teams to meet the challenges of 21st century mobility. 
"To secure our future mobility, solutions must come in multiple fronts, ranging from technology to better understanding our behavior as humans," Lautala says. "Just like freeways were once a cornerstone of American competitiveness, mobility will be that in the future."
Kirk Steudle, director of the Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) will be the featured keynote speaker in the afternoon. Paul Rogers from the US Army Tank Automotive Research Development and Engineering Center (TARDEC) is also speaking earlier in the day. The summit will include poster presentations, research discussions/visioning in the broad theme of mobility technologies (similar to the recent Tech Talks), and a lunch session with MDOT Director Steudle.
As a key research area that spans civil engineering, mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, computer science and cognitive science, mobility needs more than traditional paths to move the field forward. Whether it's leading tests in Lake Superior in our backyard, ...

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New Spring Break 'Hot Spot' for Geology Students

SSU NewsCenter


Cabo, Vegas and Miami may be the trendy spring break spots, but for one group of Sonoma State University students the geologic wonderland of Death Valley was the hot place to be this spring.




Students in GEOL 420: Integrative Field Experiences spent their week south of Death Valley honing their ability to make valid geologic field interpretations through detailed field mapping and report writing. "The trip is strenuous both physically and mentally, but students always leave the field with greatly improved skills and much more confident in themselves as geologists," says Phil Mooney of the Sonoma State Geology Dept., who accompanied students with lecturer David Bero on the trip.

Students spend the week at the SHEAR Center (Shoshone Education and Research Center) in Shoshone, Calif., a cooperative research station that facilitates field trips and research in the Death Valley region. They're up for breakfast and to pack their lunch at 6 each morning and out in the field by 8:30. After a full day of geologic mapping, scrambling off trail, up and down the mountains in order to walk the contacts and observe the outcrops, they're back at the research center by 6 p.m. to eat, put their feet up, and get ready for the next day of mapping.

The capstone course of the geology major presents the students with the opportunity to demonstrate the skills they've acquired within their core courses.

It's the task of the 14 students in the class to identify the various rock units, observe the complex angular relations between them, record the orientation and structural trends within the units, and create a professional geologic map during their eight days of field work. Back in the classroom, students occupy the remainder of the semester with cataloging their observations and data in a summary of the geologic history of the area.

It's not all work, though. Death Valley National Park is ...

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CSUCI students host College Night at the Getty

CSU Chanel Islands News

Camarillo, Calif., April 17, 2017 — Spring is the theme of the 2017 “College Night at the Getty,” which is organized primarily by students from CSU Channel Islands (CSUCI) with support from some other Southern California universities.From 6 to 9:30 p.m. Monday night, April 24, any and all college students are invited to a free evening of art, music, activities, free food, and plenty of interactive exhibits at the iconic Getty Museum in Los Angeles.“Getty College Night is a special night exclusively for college students,” said Peter Tokofsky, Senior Public Program Specialist for the Getty Museum. “There will be hands-on art activities, special tours of galleries and personal interaction with curators. The intent of College Night is, in a welcoming way, to make college students aware of what we do.”Working with Tokofsky, a group of CSUCI students enrolled in the Museum course co-taught by Professor of Art History Irina D. Costache and Business Lecturer Michael Seay, created and organized the night, coming up with the “Spring” theme and arranging activities to entertain a crowd of more than 2,500 students ages 18-24.“We’re going to have a flower crown-making installation and an interactive photo booth,” said class member Baylee Tyler, 24.Lush gardens and a spectacular view of Los Angeles are part of the Getty experience, as well as art depicting gardens and the natural world, so the students are working on spring-themed events, which will include drawing from a live model at a Drop-in Springtime Figure Drawing Session.College Night 2017 highlights two exhibitions: Breaking News: Turning the Lens on Mass Media and Photography and Concrete Poetry: Words and Sounds in Graphic Space at the Getty Research Institute.Students will be able to voice their own opinions on news and media with a Los Angeles ‘Zine Fest workshop, an introduction to self-publishing in which students can use appropriated texts and images to create something original. ...

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Summer 2017: Registration

PolyCentric



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Faculty in the News: Making video game robots like living creatures, and trying to make sense of the Fresno shooting

CSUSB News



NOTE: Faculty, if you are interviewed and quoted by news media, or if your work has been cited, and you have an online link to the article or video, please let us know. Contact us at news@csusb.edu.
Stuart Sumida, professor of biology at Cal State San Bernardino, was specifically mentioned on a video game news website, Gamasutra.com, as a consultant for PlayStation 4’s “Horizon: Zero Dawn,” which features sophisticated robots, called Machines, that “also exhibit unmistakable animal-like behaviors and movements,” the article said. “These Machines are a key feature of the game’s unique primordial futurist milieu.”
Sumida has done anatomical consulting on myriad projects, including films “The Lion King,” “Dinosaur,” “Hercules,” and “Harry Potter,” and Disney World rides  “Countdown to Extinction” and “Expedition Everest.”
The article was published April 21, 2017, and may be read at “Making ‘Horizon: Zero Dawn’s ‘ machines feel like living creatures.”
News media continued to turn to Brian Levin, professor of criminal justice, in the aftermath of the April 18 shooting in Fresno, which is being investigated as a hate crime. Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer has said the four killings were fueled by Muhammad’s hatred of white people. The suspect, Kori Muhammad is black. All of the murder victims were white.
In an interview with The Fresno Bee, Levin, director of CSUSB’s Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism, called some people’s haste to affiliate the suspected Fresno mass shooter with foreign terrorists “the bumper sticker analysis.”
“His rantings are not part of a violent Jihadist movement. He’s not inspired by ISIS or Al-Qaeda. He’s someone who has crafted his own brand of extremism,” Levin said. “Some of these violent extremists craft their own idiosyncratic ideology from a buffet of often related hatred that exists on social media – and that’s what happened here.”
Levin compared Muhammad ...

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Summer Tuition Payment

ELIfe

Heads up! If you registered for summer 2017 courses and haven’t submitted your tuition payment or have financial aid in place, you must do so by Monday, April 24 at 5 p.m. to avoid being dropped from your courses! If you have questions about payment, visit NOVA’s summer 2017 payment information here. You can also call the ELI Hotline at 703-323-3347 for assistance.
Of course, there’s still plenty of time to register for summer if you haven’t done so already! ELI’s first summer session starts Tuesday, May 16 with additional start dates on Monday, May 22 and Monday, June 5. Check the full list of summer 2017 courses here.
Just remember, if you register for summer courses on or after Monday, April 24, your payment is due by 5 p.m. the next business day.
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Team Karting Kompetitif UPI Sukses Raih Podium di Kejuaraan Eshark Rok Cup Round 3

Kabar UPI


Bandung, UPI
Team kompetitif UPI meraih podium ke-3 kelas Gearbox Universitas dan Penghargaan The Most Overtakes pada Kejuaraan Eshark Rok Cup Round 3 yang diselenggarakan pada tanggal 15-16 April 2017 di Sentul International Karting Circuit, Bogor.

Driver Team Karting Kompetitif UPI yang berkompetisi di round 3 kali ini diantaranya, Ajie Nur Syamsi, M. Agung Nugraha, Nurul Anwar Iskandar, dan Redza Muhammad.
Kelas yang diperlombakan pada round ini adalah Senior Rok GP, Master Rok GP, Junior Rok, Gearbox, Cadet Rok, dan  Mini Rok. Di race kali ini Team Karting Kompetitif UPI menyiapkan 4 mesin tempurnya untuk mengikuti kelas Gearbox yang menargetkan podium seperti round sebelumnya.
Eshark seri 3 diikuti 19 peserta dari berbagai universitas dan umum mengikuti kelas gearbox ini, panasnya persaingan antar tim karting dan pembalap lain semakin membara. Dimulai dari sesi latihan telah meningkatkan isensitas persaingan. Setiap tim berusaha mencari setingan terbaik untuk unit gokartnya demi memaksimalkan kemampuan drivernya masing-masing.
Tidak mau kalah start, Team Karting Kompetitif UPI yang menurunkan 4 pembalap memaksimalkan kesempatan ini untuk mencari settingan terbaik sebagai amunisi race keesokan harinya. Terbukti, hasil yang diperoleh Nurul Anwar Iskandar menempati best time terbaik ketiga class gearbox, disusul oleh M. Agung Nugraha best time kelima, Redza Muhammad kesembilan dan salah satu tunggangan pembalap Ajie Nur Syamsie mengalami over heat saat sesi latihan berlangsung yang mengakibatkan tidak bisa memaksimalkan latihan dan waktu perbaikan cukup lama, sehingga target pada race keesokan harinya mengikuti pra-final dan final.

Pada saat race berlangsung, terjadi persaingan sengit antar pembalap kelas gearbox dan pembalap Team Karting Kompetitif tidak patang menyerah terus melakukan perlawanan kepada pembalap lain. Akan tetapi sesuatu hal yang tidak diinginkan terjadi pada saat final terjadinya kebocoran selang radiator di salah satu tunggangan pembalap Ajie Nur Syamsie sehingga tidak bisa melanjutkan pertandingan.
Walaupun demikian hasil kerja keras team kompetitif UPI membuahkan hasil yang manis terbukti dengan diraihnya podium oleh sang driver legendaris Agung Nugraha yang menempati podium Ke-3 kelas Gearbox ...

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CU nurtures relationship with Saudi Arabia, progressive women’s university

University News – CU Denver Today

A University of Colorado Denver delegation’s trip to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to strengthen bonds and open doors to new opportunities proved very successful. It left university leaders, including CU President Bruce D. Benson and First Lady Marcy Benson, with a strong feeling that the best of the relationships are yet to come.
The CU delegation met with leaders of Saudi Arabia, some of whom were educated at CU Denver, over a week in late March.
CU President Bruce D. Benson receives a Saudi Arabian dallah – a coffee pot and cups – from His Royal Highness Prince Sultan bin Salman, President and Chairman of the Board of the Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage. A dallah has special significance as coffee is a welcoming beverage to share friendship.“They were honored to have us, and the fact that President Benson and Marcy came along was a real sign of friendship and commitment from this university,” said CU Denver Chancellor Dorothy Horrell. “My goal for the trip was to deepen our relationships and explore new opportunities, and I came away feeling we were enormously successful.”
The delegation was deeply honored to have an audience with His Royal Highness Prince Sultan bin Salman, President and Chairman of the Board of the Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage (SCTH). President Benson and HRH discussed the value of education and partnership between our organizations.
The CU delegation meets with Dr. Zuhair Fayez, a CU alumnus and honorary doctorate recipient, in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Pictured in the front row, from left, are: Kat Vlahos, Professor and Chair of the Department of Architecture, College of Architecture and Planning; Andrea Wagner, Vice Chancellor of Advancement; CU Denver Chancellor Dorothy Horrell; CU First Lady Marcy Benson; and Noelle DeLage, Assistant Vice Chancellor of Advancement. Back row: CU President Bruce Benson; Fayez, chairman of ...

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New many-toothed clingfish discovered with help of digital scans

UW Today » Science


Environment  |  News releases  |  Research  |  Science

April 17, 2017








A set of curious researchers, state-of-the-art visual technology and a bit of good luck helped find a new fish whose tooth collection could put a shark to shame.
Scientists at the University of Washington, Texas A&M University and the Western Australian Museum have discovered and named a new genus and species of clingfish after stumbling upon a specimen preserved in a jar dating back to the 1970s. The fish was unmistakably different from the other 160 known clingfishes, named for the disc on their bellies that can summon massive sticking power in wet, slimy environments.
The researchers named the new species “duckbilled clingfish” (Nettorhamphos radula) for its broad, flat snout ― not unlike the bill of a duck ― that houses an impressive number of tiny, conical teeth.

A close up of the fish’s teeth.Kevin Conway and Glenn Moore

“This fish has characteristics we just haven’t seen before in other clingfish. It’s the teeth that really gave away the fact that this is a new species,” said lead author Kevin Conway, a fish taxonomist and associate professor at Texas A&M University.
A detailed description of the new genus and species was published April 14 in the journal Copeia.
Scientists, including co-author Adam Summers of the University of Washington’s Friday Harbor Laboratories, are interested in clingfish for their ability to stick to rough surfaces. The finger-sized fish uses suction forces to hold up to 150 times its own body weight. Understanding the biomechanics of these fish could be useful in designing devices and instruments to be used in surgery, or to tag and track whales in the ocean.
Conway and co-author Glenn Moore of Western Australian Museum discovered the new clingfish while looking through specimens preserved in jars at the museum in Welshpool, Australia. It’s common for unknown specimens collected during surveys ...

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CHAMPIONSHIP #25: Tribe Women's Tennis Tops UNCW to Win the CAA Crown

College of William & Mary


GREENSBORO, N.C. – For the third-straight year and 25th time overall, the William & Mary women's tennis team captured the Colonial Athletic Association Championship, downing UNCW, 4-2, on Sunday afternoon at the Piedmont Tennis Center. The Tribe's lone senior, Marie Faure, put the exclamation point on the title, rallying for a three-set victory in the clincher at the No. 2 singles. After UNCW (11-8) claimed the doubles point, the Tribe (14-10) responded with singles wins from sophomore Lauren Goodman and freshmen Natalia Perry and Rosie Cheng to go along with Faure's triumph. The Green and Gold, which was the top seed in the league championship, won the CAA crown for the fourth time in five years under head coach Tyler Thomson. W&M owns 25 of the league's 33 all-time championships and will play in the NCAA Championship for the 22nd time in program history after securing the league's automatic bid. The Seahawks were the first No. 6 seed in CAA history to advance to the title match after upset wins over No. 3 Charleston and No. 2 Elon.Goodman quickly pulled the Tribe even at one with a dominating win at the fifth singles position. The Tribe sophomore dropped just one game in a commanding 6-0, 6-1 victory over Sabrina Barisano. It was Goodman's third win in as many days at the CAA Championship as she pushed her win streak to five matches. The Fort Wayne, Ind., native improved to 16-14 overall, 13-9 in duals and 6-2 at No. 5.
 
Perry put W&M on top for good with a straight-sets win at No. 3. The Tribe rookie bounced Alix Theodossiou, 6-2, 6-1, for her 20th win of the year and first at the CAA Championship. Her previous two singles matches in the quarterfinals and semifinals were abandoned with the team results decided. Perry claimed her 10th dual-match victory and fifth at the third spot.
 
Like Goodman, Cheng ...

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Boise State is Finalist for Operation Hat Trick Excellence Award

UPDATE

Boise State University is a finalist for the Operation Hat Trick Excellence in Service Award. The award recognizes a collegiate institution’s efforts to support the recovery of wounded service members and veterans through sales of co-branded merchandise, where a portion of proceeds is donated to charities which assist in rehabilitation of veterans.
This was a combined effort between Boise State Trademark Licensing, the Bronco Shop and Veteran Services. The Bronco Shop offered specific Boise State co-branded hats (from ‘47 Brand) for sale, and worked with Veterans Services to use veteran students as models for social media promotion. The Bronco Shop also had a special display of Operation Hat Trick product at the Nov. 4 football game that had been designated as Veterans Night, and donated 10 percent of proceeds of those sales back to Veterans Services.
Because Boise State is a finalist, Operation Hat Trick will make a donation of $2,500 to a charity of Boise State’s choice,. The overall winning school will be given a donation of $5,000 to a charity of its choosing and the winner will be announced at the Collegiate Licensing Company Seminar in Nashville, Tennessee, on May 11.
The charity chosen on behalf of Boise State Veteran Services is the Idaho Veterans Gardens. The goals of the organization are to provide a safe, peaceful and healing environment, youth mentoring and education, to create a beautiful community garden, to inspire others to be better and to give back to veterans, and to plan for future growth.



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Granato Contract Extended

College Hockey News from CHN


April 21, 2017
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CHN Staff Report






Related ArticlesTony GranatoWisconsin



Wisconsin extended the contract of head coach Tony Granato one extra year, taking him now through the 2021-22 season.
Granato, and his new "dream team" coaching staff of brother Don Granato and Mark Osiecki, is coming off his first season behind the bench of the Badgers. Wisconsin went 20-15-1 this past season, after having 12 wins in the previous two years combined.
Wisconsin finished second in the Big Ten this season, then lost to Penn State in overtime of the semifinals of the Big Ten tournament.







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Broncos Sweep CSU San Marcos with 8-4 Win in Game Four

Cal Poly Pomona

POMONA, Calif. – The Cal Poly Pomona baseball team completed a series sweep of Cal State San Marcos at home on Sunday, winning game four 8-4 to close out the series. With only two weeks left of the regular season, the Broncos continue to push for that first-place spot in the South Division, improving to 25-18 overall, and 21-11 in the CCAA. Kyle Dohy picked up the win as he started on the mound for CPP, throwing six innings while only giving up four hits and two earned runs while striking out eight batters. He improved to 5-2 on the year. Alex Kline got the offense going in the second inning, singling through the left side of the field, scoring both Brennan McKenzie and Jason Padlo. Kline later came around to score on an error while Jacob Bernardy scored on a wild pitch to take a quick 4-0 lead. Padlo finished with a team-high three hits as Frankie Nogales, Nic Hernandez, and Kline each had two hits. Holding a 6-2 lead, the Broncos added two more runs in the sixth as Hernandez knocked a ball into center field, scoring Nogales and Chris Stratton. The Broncos will hit the road next weekend as they take on CCAA North Division opponent Sonoma State in a three-game series starting on Saturday. Print Friendly Version



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Utah Valley University dancers bring home the gold at Dance Team Union event

UVU Press Releases

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Utah Valley University dancers bring home the gold at Dance Team Union event


14 April 2017

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University Marketing & Communications: Layton Shumway | 801-863-6863 | LShumway@uvu.edu
Written by: Barbara Christiansen | 801-863-8208 | BarbaraC@uvu.edu
Utah Valley University’s Dance Team brought home the gold from the Dance Team Union College Classic in Las Vegas April 6-8. The group not only took first place but was ranked first in every category by every judge.
The event focuses on dancers creating artistry. The UVU team of 19 young women was judged on that artistry, along with execution, technique and performance including audience appeal.
“They were encouraging dance groups to be individual and unique and allow for creativity,” said Ashley Hardison, the group’s coordinator. “We thought it would be a good fit for our team.”
UVU’s team competed in both jazz and hip-hop. For the finals, first place winners in all the categories were judged together. Other teams included Brigham Young University and schools from California, Illinois, Texas and Nebraska.
“We have a really talented team,” Hardison said. “It was fun to watch them go out on the floor and do their very best. They gave a lot of time and effort and energy in everything they did. They go above and beyond, taking every moment and enjoying it.”
Hardison danced at and graduated from UVU. She coached at UVU from 2005-2009, and returned two years ago. The dance team coach is Bri Sorenson, who is also an alumnus and is in her third year of coaching.
The group’s theme this year is “Live Your Passion.” The national theme is “Everything You Have — Twice as Hard.”
Team members exemplified that national theme by concentrating on the two-minute, 15-second routine. Several told Hardison, “I am going to give it everything I have. I can do anything for two ...

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UW Vice President for Student Affairs Candidate Withdraws | News

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April 21, 2017


One of the finalists for the position of vice president for student affairs at the University of Wyoming has withdrawn from consideration, meaning the first campus visit by a candidate will be Thursday and Friday, April 27-28.
Lori McDonald, dean of students at the University of Utah, had been scheduled to visit UW April 24-25. That is no longer the case.
The remaining candidates are Tim Alvarez, vice president for student affairs at North Dakota State University; Sean Blackburn, UW’s current associate vice president for student affairs and dean of students; and Bill Schafer, most recently the vice president for student life at West Virginia University.
As part of a two-day interview, each candidate is scheduled to give a public presentation. Alvarez’s visit to UW for interviews will be April 27-28; Blackburn, May 1-2; and Schafer, May 4-5. The times and locations of their public presentations will be announced later.
The vice president for student affairs oversees UW units focused on student life, including Residence Life and Dining Services, the Dean of Students Office, Campus Recreation, Student Health Service, the University Counseling Center and the Wyoming Union.





















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Doctoral Graduate Receives International Recognition

Newswire

Alumna Rufaidah AlMaian received first place at the seventh annual Industrial Engineering and Operations Management (IEOM) International Conference in Rabat, Morocco.

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Going Online to Boost Lift-Off

University at Albany University at Albany Headlines















Innovation 518's mission summary.


Albany, N.Y. (April 20, 2017) — Innovate 518, the Capital Region’s “Innovation Hot Spot,” is now online at www.innovate518.com.
Innovate 518 aims to help small technology-based Capital Region businesses with solid growth potential get off the ground. The program does so by providing access to incubators and other entrepreneurial service providers that offer mentorship, business services and strategies for obtaining new capital.
It is a collaborative effort managed through the University in partnership with the Center for Economic Growth (CEG) and RPI. Funding is provided by Empire State Development's Division of Science, Technology and Innovation (NYSTAR).
Innovate 518’s website will provide a virtual platform for Capital Region entrepreneurs and others across New York State to easily access all of the program’s resources. This includes information on facilities, funding, experts in the industry and possible tax incentives.
“This website is our first big step to garner the attention of entrepreneurs in New York through a digital platform,” said Matt Grattan, UAlbany’s director of community and economic development. “By creating an easier way to access our resources, we will be able to nurture New York’s startup ecosystem, help support our affiliated partners, and attract external funding.”
“CEG has a long history of partnering with our regions entrepreneurial ecosystem,” said Michael Lobsinger, center director for Business Growth Solutions at CEG. “Our goal is to work with the Innovate 518 partners to ensure start-ups get on the right track as quickly as possible.
Also on the Innovate 518’s website is an online tutorial called “Corporation in a Box” for early-stage technology start-ups. Developed by Albany Law School, the tutorial provides an interactive experience to ensure that businesses are leveraging the law school’s legal education services. The availability of the online tool was made possible through Albany Law’s affiliation with UAlbany.
In addition to the website, Innovate 518 plans ...

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Meet a Tiger: Julio Hernandez

Newsstand | Clemson University News and Stories, South Carolina

This Tiger has had a lot going on in the three short months that he’s been with Clemson. In addition to his every day role working with students, faculty and staff, he is the co-chair of the inaugural Men of Color National Summit, which will be held this week.
Meet Julio Hernandez.
Title: Associate Director for Hispanic Outreach
Years at Clemson: Three months
What I do at Clemson: At Clemson, I provide leadership and support to vice presidents, associate vice presidents and the Office of Inclusion and Equity to recruit, retain, and foster a welcoming environment for Hispanic/Latino students, staff and faculty. I am currently working on developing programs, services, events, and activities to promote understanding and appreciation for the Hispanic/Latino culture on campus and in the surrounding community. In addition, I serve as the university’s representative and advocate for Hispanic/Latino students and student groups. Finally, I advise, mentor, and guide Hispanic/Latino students on academic and social issues.
What I love about Clemson: I love working with the best and brightest students, staff, and faculty in the country. I enjoy coming to Clemson University every day, working alongside individuals committed to setting the standard for excellence. In addition, I love the direction and future where Clemson University wants to move toward.
Accomplishment I’m most proud of: An accomplishment I’m most proud of is having a good reputation with businesses, institutions of higher learning, school districts, law enforcement, non-profits and community leaders for my service toward students and my community. I work toward being a person of value, instead of trying to become a person of success.
Where I see myself in five years:  I see myself completing my Ph.D. from Clemson in educational leadership. I am working on starting my doctorate program in the Spring 2018 semester. In addition, I see myself ...

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Baseball Comeback Against VCU Falls Short in Extra Innings

Fordham Newsroom


Bronx, N.Y. – VCU’s Steven Carpenter singled home pinch runner Alex Gransback in the top of the tenth inning, while Matt Jamer stranded the tying run on base in the bottom of the frame, giving the VCU Rams a 4-3 win over the Fordham Rams in 10 innings, to complete a baseball sweep at Houlihan Park on Sunday.
Source:: Fordham Athletics







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WOMEN'S GOLF WINS BIG SKY CHAMPIONSHIP ON PLAYOFF HOLE

Athletics News


Apr 23, 2017





BOULDER CITY, Nev. — Three rounds of golf was not enough to decide the 2017 Big Sky Conference Women's Golf Championships but Sacramento State made the most of the 55th hole to earn the school's second conference title.The Hornets saw Idaho rally over the final three holes to draw even as both team's had a three-round total of 900. The teams then were split into two groups of five and played 18th hole with each team counting its four lowest scores. Sacramento State counted four pars while the Vandals had two bogeys to give the title to the Hornets for the first time since 2007.During the third round, sophomore Julia Becker carried Sacramento State with a 2-under par round of 70. Becker jumped out to a quick start with birdies on three of the first five holes. She started her streak with a birdie on the par-5 second and later added birdies on the par-3 fourth and par-5 fifth. A bogey on the par-4 sixth was immediately followed by a birdie on the par-4 seventh. The Las Vegas native then parred her next eight holes to stay at 3-under par. A bogey on the par-5 16th was her lone miscue on the back nine and she closed with a pair of pars. During the day she moved from a tie for 24th to finish tied for eighth place.Astha Madan ranked second on the team with a 76 and tied for 11th overall at 77-77-76-230. Madan played the front nine at 1-over with a birdie on par-3 fourth and two bogeys. She moved to 3-over on the back nine with bogeys on the par-3 12th and par-5 13th. She added a birdie on the par-4 14th but had two bogeys over her final four holes.Chloe Bartek and Nishtha Madan each shot 78 to complete the team total for the day. Bartek ...

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University to honor its authors on Thursday

SIU News

April 17, 2017University to honor its authors on Thursday
CARBONDALE, Ill. -- Southern Illinois University Carbondale will celebrate the accomplishments of faculty and staff who have recently seen their works through to book publication.
The biennial “Celebration of Campus Authors” will recognize the creative, research and academic work of 28 university employs who published works in 2015 and 2016. The ceremony and reception, which will also recognize the university’s 2017 Excellence Award recipients, begins at 3 p.m., Thursday, April 20, in Morris Library’s John C. Guyon Auditorium..
The criteria these authors were required to meet included:
Items include complete books or e-books (monographs).
Items include subsequent editions for which one author was an active employee of SIU in 2015 or 2016.
At least one co-author must have been an active SIU Carbondale employee in 2015 or 2016.
Items must have been published by a recognized publisher or vendor. 
A list of previously recognized authors is available here.





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HSU Jumps Highlight Border Battle Success

Humboldt State University Athletics

ARCATA, Calif. – Humboldt State track and field hit national qualifying marks and set personal records against regional competition during Saturday's Border Battle held in Redwood Bowl.  The HSU women had a successful day with many strong performances. Marissa McCay, Ellie Earle-Rouse, and Brailee VandenBoom swept the women's high jump. McCay continues to improve and she finished with her personal best 5-10 in the high jump, hitting the national automatic qualifying mark. Freshman Earle-Rouse also recorded a personal best jump to finish second. Her mark of 5-7.75 is a national provisional qualifying mark, which ties her for 11th in nationals. Brailee VandenBoom finished third with a 1.58m.   Earle-Rouse also recorded personal bests in the 800m and 100m hurdles races. Tatiana Gillick and Kori Gilley ran strong times in the 1500m, taking first and third respectively, as well as first and second in the 800m. The women's 4x100 team comprised of McCay, VandenBoom, Alyssabeth DeJerz, and Je-Ni Hardy recorded a new season-best time of 47.78.  Annie Roberts, Megan Alfi, Imogene Carson, Catie LeDesma, and Andie LeDesma finished in the first five positions in the 5000m. In the throws, Ariel Oliver moved to eighth in the nation in discus with a new personal record of 49.40m, and she secured her spot at Nationals. Oliver also took first in the shot put (13.86m) and fifth in the hammer throw. Ashley Ross recorded a personal best of 33.69m, giving her a first place finish in the javelin. Lilly Bankas finished second in the discus and shot put. "The 4x100s were very exciting to watch with such an evenly matched race for both genders," said Head Coach Scott Pesch. "Both teams did great, and these are the events that make spectators love track & field. I'm glad we were able to put up such a strong showing on our home turf." The men finished first in both ...

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Research awards at IUPUI increased by $40.5 million in 2016: Newscenter: Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis

Science & Research


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 ...

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Lake Elmo Woodbury Campus Sponsors Country Mile Race

News Beat

The Lake Elmo/Woodbury campus sponsored the 33rd Annual Woodbury Country Mile half marathon and 5k Aug. 24 hosted by the Woodbury Area Chamber of Commerce.Rasmussen College campuses are always looking for new ways to get involved in the community, and the Lake Elmo/Woodbury campus decided the race would be a great opportunity this year. “We wanted to support the local community and the chamber, and we are passionate about health and fitness,” said Mollie Bower, Lake Elmo/Woodbury campus director said. “We are now a Public Benefit Corporation, so this was a great way for us to show community support.” On race day the weather looked ominous, but Bower, and the others participating in the race, weren’t about to let it get in their way that day. “It went great,” Bower said. “We were concerned that we might get rained out as it was storming heavily on the way there, but it ended up being perfect running weather.” The highlight of the event for Bower was finishing the race with her entire family cheering her on in stands. It was her first half marathon and she finished fifth in her age group. Check out information on Rasmussen College becoming a Public Benefit Corporation to learn more about the college’s involvement in its communities. 


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Miami ranks in the top 10 for best public entrepreneurship education

Miami University - Top Stories








Students in Miami's Farmer School of Business work on the creative side of entrepreneurship.
The Princeton Review and Entrepreneur magazine ranked Miami University's Institute for Entrepreneurship No. 8 in the nation among public institutions for its undergraduate entrepreneurship education.
Miami is included in Entrepreneur magazine’s “Top 25 Undergraduate Schools for Entrepreneurship Studies for 2017,” featured in its December issue, available in print and online now.
This is the ninth consecutive year Miami has made the Top 25 list, ranking No. 16 in the nation overall. Miami offers a range of entrepreneurship programs, including tracks in corporate, social and start-up entrepreneurship. 
"Our program has grown exponentially over the past several years, both in terms of number of students and experiential learning opportunities," said Brett Smith, director of the Institute for Entrepreneurship and founding director of the Center for Social Entrepreneurship. "This year, we welcome the first cohort of 900 first-year business students into our new 'Business Quotient (BQ)' common core with our course on Innovation & Creativity in Business, and we are excited at what the future holds for them as well as our faculty. Our mission remains the same – to provide the best undergraduate entrepreneurship experience in the country."
The Princeton Review names the top 25 undergraduate and graduate schools based on data from an annual survey sent to administrators at more than 2,000 institutions. The ranking includes weighing several factors: offering entrepreneurship opportunities in and out of the classroom; the number of mentorship programs offered; scholarship and grant opportunities; and how many successful entrepreneurial efforts by students, faculty and alumni.


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What Putin and Russia want

Latest From Brookings

Pavel Baev, nonresident senior fellow in the Center on the United States and Europe, addresses the character and ambitions of  President Vladimir Putin and discusses what policies to pursue in managing the challenging U.S.-Russia relationship.

Also in this episode, Molly Reynolds, fellow in Governance Studies, provides her regular “What’s Happening in Congress” update. This week: special elections in Kansas and Georgia and avoiding government shutdown.
Show Notes:
Putin might not wait for Trump to sort out his Russia policy
Pressure Points: The Syria Intervention as an Instrument of Russia’s EU Policy
Arctic Security Matters – Russia’s Arctic Aspirations
What does the ACA repeal fight tell us about the upcoming battle over tax reform?
Ways to listen to this episode:
Thanks to audio producer Gaston Reboredo and producer Vanessa Sauter, and also thanks for additional support from Eric Abalahin, Jessica Pavone, Nawal Atallah, Kelly Russo, and Rebecca Viser.
Subscribe to Brookings podcasts here or on iTunes, send feedback email to BCP@Brookings.edu, and follow us and tweet us at @policypodcasts on Twitter.
The Brookings Cafeteria is a part of the Brookings Podcast Network.



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National Student Employment Week Winners

News – Illinois Tech Today

The Student Employment office would like to thank all students, faculty, and staff who participated in this year’s National Student Employment Week. We were blown away by the number of responses, and by the quality of the nominations. We had a blast meeting everyone and going through the entries. The 2017 winners are listed below. Sixty-nine student employees and 53 supervisors were nominated. Thank you to everyone who took the time to write about all of the ways you appreciate your student employees and supervisors.
See a complete overview of last week’s activities and events on the Student Employment website, including a list of all nominees, the nomination submissions for the winners, pictures, and quotes that really stood out to us about the student employment experience.
Distinguished Student Employees:
Michael Lenardi,  phonathon manager, Institutional AdvancementNominated by Joey Carillo
Excerpt:
“As a manager this year Michael has demonstrated excellent leadership, flexibility, and incredible amount of responsibility and follow through. Michael has maximized on the incredible amount of leadership potential that he has in our program and we will be sad to see him graduate this spring, although I know that he will go on to do amazing things.”
Elvis Reyes, OTS, lab controllerNominated by Jhirmack Paul
Excerpt:
“Mr. Reyes is one of the hardest working, dependable, dedicated, trustworthy and intelligent student employees I have had the pleasure of having on my team since I have been running the OTS PC labs group in 2013.”

Manoochehr Assa, graduate assistant, School of Applied TechnologyNominated by Scott Pfeiffer
Excerpt:
“Manoochehr is an outstanding student worker who goes above and way beyond on every project. He has increased efficiency in strategic marketing direction for the School of Applied Technology by building our social media presence on social media.”
Distinguished Student Supervisors:
Melisa Lopez, service manager, IIT One StopNominated by Loreta Sutkus and Golzar Shobeiri
Megan Campanile, ...

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COD Cosmetology Students Offer Free Beauty Services on Campus

News at College of DuPage




By Mike McKissackCollege of DuPage Cosmetology students celebrated Beauty Week by offering free services
on the Glen Ellyn campus. During the event, students provided free consultations,
manicures and skin mapping, as well as a variety of hair techniques, including braiding,
line trimming and thermal styling. Men’s services included manicures, edge lineups
and beard shaping  Click here for more photos.The COD Cosmetology program salon is currently open to the spring term. Located at the College’s Addison Center, 301
S. Swift Rd., the salon is open on Mondays, from 6 to 8 p.m.; Tuesdays, Wednesdays
and Thursdays, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.; Fridays, from 9 a.m. to
3 p.m.; and Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Salon services are available by appointment
or walk-in. Under the supervision of licensed instructors, students perform a full
range of beauty services including, cuts, styling, color, manicures, pedicures, skin
services, facial waxing and more.The Cosmetology program at College of DuPage provides students with the knowledge and skills necessary for
success in the beauty industry. The College offers an A.A.S. degree as well as a certificate
in Cosmetology. Students who successfully complete 50 credit hours through the program
and pass a practical and written exam will be awarded a certificate from COD which
allows graduates to apply for a cosmetology license from the state.



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