Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Former CSUF professor Phil Janowicz announces 2018 congressional bid for District 39 seat against Ed Royce

Daily Titan

“It’s only fitting that I announce my campaign where I was initially inspired to run—right here at Cal State Fullerton,” said Phil Janowicz, who kicked off his 2018 Congressional campaign kickoff in CSUF’s Becker Amphitheater, amid cheers from his core supporters.
Janowicz, the president and CEO of education consulting firm Quill and Abacus, was once a chemistry professor at CSUF where he mentored over 100 students in the Supplemental Instruction Program and his research lab.
“When I realized how many of my students were struggling to meet basic food and housing needs, I decided I had to do more than teach chemistry,” Janowicz said in his first speech as a political candidate.
Now, he’s challenging CA 39th Congressional District Rep. Ed Royce’s incumbent seat.
“My opponent is running from his record of voting with Trump 96 percent of the time,” Janowicz said, stirring boos from the crowd. “My opponent runs from the voices of his constituents, refusing to hold town hall meetings or answer questions from our community.”
Rep. Royce could not be reached for a response.
A major voice of Royce’s constituency outcry has been Indivisible CA D-39, which previously held a vigil to “mourn” Royce’s relationship with constituents on Feb. 23, and held a demonstration in front of Royce’s Brea office on March 23.
Janowicz himself is a member of Indivisible CA D-39.
Indivisible CA is “united against the Trump agenda” and counts Republicans among its members, Janowicz said.
“There’s a lot of enthusiasm among people in Indivisible (CA D-39),” said assistant professor of health science and Indivisible CA D-39 member Shana Charles. “Everybody who’s met him said that they really appreciate not only his values, but also his intelligence, his dedication and his willingness to step up and fight this fight for us.”
Charles is a volunteer for Janowicz’s campaign and ...

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Washington’s First Census Research Data Center Opens at Georgetown

News Archive

April 26, 2017 – Georgetown’s McCourt School of Public Policy yesterday opened the first Research Data Center (RDC) in Washington, a joint project of the U.S. Census Bureau and the school’s Massive Data Institute.
The center provides secure access to qualified researchers at Georgetown and nearby universities and institutions examining a wide range of social and economic issues.
“The Georgetown RDC strengthens and animates Georgetown and the McCourt School’s commitment to world-class, 21st-century research and scholarship,” said Robert Groves, Georgetown's provost and the former director of the U.S. Census Bureau. “We are very pleased to partner with the Census Bureau to provide expanded but secure access to these critical data.”
Studying Critical Issues
The Georgetown RDC is the first Census Research Data Center to open in Washington, D.C. and the 24th RDC in the country.
The university’s J. Bradford Jensen, who helped establish the first university-based RDC at Carnegie Mellon University, will serve as executive director of Georgetown’s RDC.
“The restricted-use microdata provided by Census through the RDC, like the American Community Survey, the Census of Manufacturers, and Current Population Survey, will be an incredibly valuable resource to Georgetown and other qualified researchers,” said Jensen, the McCrane/Shaker Chair in International Business at Georgetown’s McDonough School of Business. “We hope Georgetown faculty, graduate students and other researchers studying critical issues in economics and workforce issues, health and health care, statistics and demographics will get in touch about how we can work together.”
Accessing Data
Nate Ramsey, lead administrator of the Federal Statistical Research Data Center program at the Census Bureau's Center for Economic Studies, will serve as acting administrator of Georgetown’s new center.
RDCs are Census Bureau facilities, housed in partner institutions that meet all the physical and information security requirements for access to governmental restricted-use microdata.
An RDC allows qualified researchers with ...

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New Vice Chancellor to Nurture Inventions, Bring Products to Market at More Advanced Stage

UCSF - Latest News Feed

In a bold move to bring its life science inventions to market with higher value, so they are more likely to reach patients and better support the university’s mission, UC San Francisco has hired Harold E. “Barry” Selick, PhD, as its first vice chancellor for business development, innovation and partnerships.

Selick will oversee proof-of-concept studies of promising UCSF life science inventions – which encompass drug molecules, device prototypes, digital health applications, and more – to gather evidence on which inventions are most likely to help patients as new therapies, diagnostics or software.

One aim is to keep inventions from languishing on companies’ shelves, which often occurs when firms license early-stage inventions but do not invest the necessary resources to develop them. Another is to increase the licensing revenues earned by UCSF inventions: companies are likely to pay more for innovations with more proven value, Selick said.

“It’s high-risk, high-reward,” Selick said. “But we’re going to bias the odds of success in our favor by working with the smartest people in the world: scientists from UCSF and, on our advisory board, some of the most accomplished investors from Silicon Valley, who will be helping us cherry-pick the most promising programs. With this strategy, UCSF can begin to invest more fully in itself and develop even more technologies to benefit patients.”

For drug candidates or devices, proof-of-concept studies could take the form of small-scale clinical trials to demonstrate that they have adequate safety and efficacy in patients for a licensing company to launch larger, more definitive clinical trials. Similarly, digital health applications and diagnostic technologies could be advanced to the point where they could be evaluated in real-world scenarios prior to undergoing the more rigorous development required for commercialization.

Deep Industry Knowledge, Longstanding UCSF Ties

A former pharmaceutical company CEO with broad biotech experience, Selick has deep industry knowledge and longstanding ...

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FIU Golf Takes Two C-USA Superlative Awards

FIU Athletics

Story Links

IRVING, Texas (April 26, 2017) -- FIU senior Camila Serrano (Bogota, Colombia) has been named Conference USA Golfer of the Year and junior Katerina Krasova (Ricany, Czech Republic) earned Most Improved Golfer as the All-Conference USA awards were announced by the league office Wednesday. The selections are made by the 11 head coaches in the league. Serrano was the highest-ranked player in the league by Golfstat after the Conference Championships, and the only one ranked among the Top 200 players in Division I, finishing the season ranked 81st in women's golf. She was 44-1 versus the top players in the league, losing just once to teammate Krasova, in the regular season. Serrano posted four finishes in the top five at 10 tournaments for the season, three more times in the top 10, including a tie for ninth at the C-USA Championships last week. Her average finish was in the 89th percentile, finishing with a record of 658-85 and a stroke average of 72.57, which was the best of her career by more than a stroke from her freshman year and three strokes better than her sophomore and junior campaigns. Serrano's senior season lowered her career average by more than half a stroke over 101 tournament rounds. She was the top vote getter for all-conference and earned First-Team All-C-USA honors for her outstanding season. She is a four-time all-conference selection and the third-straight Golfer of the Year from FIU. Serrano took home four Golfer of the Week honors this season and was the 2014 C-USA Women's Golf Freshman of the Year."Cami had a very solid year," said Vogel. "She finished in the top 10 in seven of our 10 events. It's a testament to her good play in the tournament and she kept good focus and good game plan each time out. She was pretty impressive."
 
Krasova finished almost four strokes better in 2017 that the previous season with a 75.36 ...

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A Look Back at the Historic 2017 Season

LSUsports.net
Headline News





Brandon BerrioAssistant Communications Director



BATON ROUGE – From start to finish, the LSU gymnastics team made history in 2017 with its consistency and team performances. Ultimately the Tigers finished the season, the 40th under head coach D-D Breaux, as the NCAA national runner-up to match the best finish in school history.
By the Numbers: 2017 LSU Gymnastics Season• LSU totaled a 197.7375 in to match the best finish in school history as the NCAA national runner-up. The score marked the second-highest for the program at an NCAA Championship.• LSU set a then record score of 198.275 in the NCAA Semifinal II to earn a spot in the sixth NCAA Super Six in school history. The score is the best ever in a prelim and the second-best score in NCAA Championship history. • The squad captured three championships during the historic season. LSU totaled a 197.450 at the NCAA Lincoln Regional for the program's 16th regional title and fifth straight. • LSU scored a 198.075 at the SEC Championship to win the second league title in school history. The score was enough for the fifth highest in school history and the third highest by any team at an SEC Championship. • LSU went on a tear during the season and captured the inaugural SEC regular season title after sweeping the league with a 7-0 record. The Tigers clinched the championship at home against No. 3 Florida with a score of 198.150 for the fourth highest in school history. • LSU defeated Florida, Georgia and Alabama in the same season for just the second time in school history. The Tigers finished with a record of 12-0 against the three SEC powerhouses. • Finished with a 34-2 record overall for the most wins in a single season in school history. It marked just the second time in school history LSU has surpassed the 30-win mark. • The Tigers ended the season with a 21-1 record in the postseason. ...

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Rice’s Lydia Kavraki wins ACM Athena Lecturer Award

Rice University News & Media



David Ruth713-348-6327david@rice.edu
Jade Boyd713-348-6778jadeboyd@rice.edu
Rice’s Lydia Kavraki wins ACM Athena Lecturer Award
Computer scientist recognized for groundbreaking research on robotics, biomedicine
HOUSTON — (April 26, 2017) — Rice University computer scientist Lydia Kavraki has received one of the most prestigious honors in her field, the Association for Computing Machinery’s (ACM) Athena Lecturer Award.
Kavraki, the Noah Harding Professor of Computer Science and professor of bioengineering, was recognized for inventing randomized motion-planning algorithms in robotics and for the development of robotics-inspired methods for bioinformatics and biomedicine.
Lydia Kavraki (Photo by Doni Soward/Rice University)
“I am deeply honored by this award,” said Kavraki, who joined Rice’s faculty in 1996. “It recognizes years of work done with my students and collaborators at Rice and around the globe. I am also delighted that ACM has chosen to name one of its top awards after Athena, the goddess of wisdom in ancient Greek mythology, who was a patron of human ingenuity and an astute adviser of heroes. It strikes a chord with me, as her picture was on the cover of my textbooks when I was growing up in Greece.”
Given annually since 2006, the Athena Lecturer Award celebrates women researchers who have made fundamental contributions to computer science. The award carries a cash prize of $25,000 and the honoree is invited to give a lecture at a major ACM conference of her choice that will be recorded for the association’s website.
“Planning the motion of objects in a three-dimensional space has been a central challenge in the robotics field for a long time,” said ACM President Vicki Hanson. “Lydia Kavraki’s Probabilistic Roadmap Method (PRM) has had a tremendous impact. It is now widely used in robotics applications in industry and is a foundational idea for numerous researchers in the field.”
Though the award recognizes Kavraki’ ...

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El 27 d’abril torna la jornada 'Girls in ICT Day' per promoure l'interès per les TIC entre les noies

Actualitat UPC


La iniciativa internacional Girls in ICT, Expanding horitzons, Changing attitudes se celebra anualment a més de 150 països de tot el món amb l’objectiu d’encoratjar les noies a estudiar carreres de l’àmbit de les TIC. Quatre campus de la Universitat participen, per segon any consecutiu, en aquesta acció, oferint tallers i xerrades per a l’alumnat de secundària i de batxillerat, amb la idea d’aprofitar millor el talent femení, fer valdre el treball de les dones en la ciència i l’enginyeria, apropar els estudis politècnics a les dones joves, així com incrementar el nombre de vocacions científiques i tecnològiques.Per part seva, la Facultat d’Informàtica de Barcelona (FIB) i l’Escola Tècnica Superior d’Enginyeria de Telecomunicació de Barcelona (ETSETB) organitzen, al Campus Nord, conferències i activitats sobre com programar un robot o una app. Alícia Casals, experta en robòtica, presentarà la xerrada Robots: màquines o companys?; Elisenda Bou, fundadora i CTO de Vilynx, parlarà sobre com crear una start-up i Lourdes Mercadal, experta en Internet, Mòbils i Innovació, oferirà una xerrada sota el títol Del teclat a la veu. Pel que fa a les activitats als laboratoris, van des d’experiències divertides amb ones electromagnètiques fins a tallers de mesura del pols cardíac i la respiració fent ús de telèfons intel·ligents. L’Escola Politècnica Superior d’Enginyeria de Manresa (EPSEM) organitza, d’una banda, la xerrada sobre les dones i les TIC a càrrec de Rosa Artisó Carrera, sòcia fundadora de SAYÓS&CARRERA, i de l’altra, un taller sobre Internet de les coses i missatgeria instantània. Així mateix, l’Escola d’Enginyeria de Telecomunicació i Aeroespacial de Castelldefels (EETAC) oferirà una xerrada-taller sota el títol La realitat augmentada i la realitat virtual ...

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Attend Talk on Making Ends Meet in a Capitalist Democracy

Lone Star College CyFair News

Published on: April 04, 2017
Lone Star College-CyFairs next Center for Civic Engagement (CCE) community deliberative dialogue, set April 20, examines the different approaches that can be taken to improve peoples quality of life.

Income and wealth disparities are a fact of life in a capitalist democracy such as ours, said John Duerk, CCE coordinator at LSC-CyFair. That said, does anyone have a responsibility to minimize the chasm that exists?  If so, how can it be achieved?  What role can private enterprise play?  Governing institutions?

Join this Deliberative Dialogue: Making Ends Meet: How Should We Spread Prosperity and Improve Opportunity? from 3 p.m. 4:30 p.m. in the Conference Center on the LSC-CyFair campus at 9191 Barker Cypress.

One of the CCEs goals is to get people thinking about actions they can take to address challenges in their immediate community and the broader society.

For event information, contact Professor Melanie Steel via phone at 281.290.3906 or email Melanie.Steel@LoneStar.edu.






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Lone Star College-North Harris announces fall 2015 fine arts calendar

Lone Star College North Harris News

Published on: September 08, 2015

The Lone Star College-North Harris Division of Fine Arts has announced an exciting lineup for the upcoming fall semester. Mark your calendars now and come enjoy the many art, music and theatre productions at LSC-North Harris. All events are open to the community and free, unless otherwise noted.

September and October Fine Arts Calendar:
Visions 2015Current works by LSC-North Harris non-art faculty will be displayed in the Library Gallery from Sept. 15 Oct. 9. Art opening and reception will be Sept. 15 at 1 p.m.
Oaxaca a.i.rLSC-Kingwood art professor Mari Omari will present her cochineal (crimson dye) paintings and installation work from Artist in Residency in Oaxaca, Mexico. Fine Arts Gallery, Sept. 17 Oct. 9. Art opening and reception will be Sept. 17 at 1 p.m.
Art Lecture SeriesRomanian-born, Texas-based artist Adela Andea will present a conversation on the medium of light, what constitutes the medium of light, and her artistic approach and aspiration about light sculpture and light installation as a part of this series. Andea is best known for creating uniquely illuminated and kinetic sculptures.Sept. 23 at 1 p.m. in the Teaching Theatre, Community Education Building, Room 101.
Seeing Through the Dragons EyesLSC-North Harris art professor Gary Conners will present new works that explore the interweaving of cultural identity and assimilation from a Western artist relating to the traditions of East Asian. Fine Arts Gallery, Oct. 13 Nov. 6. Art opening and reception will be Oct. 13 at 1 p.m.
Tracers Written by an ensemble of actors who served in Vietnam, Tracers explores their military training and combat, but is primarily concerned with the rigors of companionship and loyalty within a platoon of soldiers. The play finds the horror and solace within relationships among men at war, and the ties that link them to the battles, long after the guns go silent.
Directed by John Cash CarpenterOctober 14-17 at 7:30 p.m. October 18 at 2 ...

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Carolina’s Innovation Showcase features promising commercial, social ventures

Campus Updates – The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

More than 300 entrepreneurs, investors and community leaders from across the region gathered at UNC’s Annual Innovation Showcase to connect, share and collaborate with faculty, students and staff who are launching new social and commercial enterprises.
Hosted by Innovate Carolina at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the high-energy event featured 70 promising faculty and student-created ventures, including the work of enterprising UNC researchers, who explained how their ideas are primed to make a significant economic and social impact in the state and around the globe. The showcase provides an opportunity for networking with startup ventures, while highlighting key programs in the Innovate Carolina Network, as well as the many ventures that receive their support.
“The Showcase is a great example of our University’s thriving innovation ecosystem and how its variety of programs make a tangible difference the everyday lives of citizens in North Carolina and around the world,” says Judith Cone, vice chancellor for innovation, entrepreneurship and economic development at UNC-Chapel Hill. “It’s a tremendous opportunity to celebrate the many impressive faculty and student ventures at UNC, while recognizing the entrepreneurial strength and economic impact that extends from our University and throughout the local community, region and state. With innovation as a cornerstone of UNC’s strategic framework, we will continue to collaborate and build upon our successes together.”
The showcase offers investors, industry leaders and other professionals who support entrepreneurs a chance to learn about each venture through breakout rooms organized by UNC-Chapel Hill programs. Each venture presents its latest innovations and ideas during the breakout sessions.
Innovate Carolina brings together key groups from across the University and community – including those at the Innovation Showcase – to support a cohesive innovation ecosystem, while working with innovators to help advance ideas and put them to use for the public good.
“We are creating what’s nothing short ...

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Well Said: Robots and minds

College of Arts & Sciences




As technology advances and robots are further integrated into daily life, the line between a mechanical tool and a potentially living thing is becoming more blurred.
But do robots actually have minds? And if they do, how will human interaction with robots change?
In this week’s episode, we talk about robots and minds with Kurt Gray, an assistant professor of psychology and neuroscience in the College of Arts & Sciences.


Join us every Wednesday for the University’s podcast as we talk with Carolina’s newsmakers and experts. Each episode, students, faculty, staff and alumni will discuss what’s going on in classrooms, labs and around campus, and how it pertains to the local, national and international headlines. Head here to listen to the podcast. 


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Dr. Kane on Genetic Testing for Prostate Cancer

Newsroom: InTheNews

Publication Date: 4/19/2017
ByLine: OncLive
URL Link: http://www.onclive.com/onclive-tv/dr-kane-on-genetic-testing-for-prostate-cancer
Page Content: ​Features Christopher Kane, MD
News Type: National
News_Release_Date: April 21, 2017
NewsTags: Cancer; Urology; Surgery

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UI student-owned business wins $100,000 at prestigious TCU start-up competition

Iowa Now - Research

HealthTech Solutions, a business founded by two University of Iowa students, both from Iowa, that makes it easier to connect organ donors with recipients, won the grand prize in a start-up venture competition sponsored by TCU.The team won $25,000 in cash and $75,000 in in-kind services, including marketing/advertising, IT consulting, legal consulting, and financial services consulting.

Health Tech Solutions was founded by Dalton Shaull, a 2016 UI engineering graduate from Oskaloosa, Iowa, and Eric Pahl, a Health Informatics doctoral student from Ames, Iowa. The company modernizes communication in organ transplant, using a real-time mobile software application that facilitates instantaneous communication and information flow. The innovation allows clients to coordinate organ transplants in a real-time, collaborative communication process so that no donated organ goes to waste and the more than 120,000 people in the US waiting for a donated organ will receive one.

The business is headquartered in the Bedell Entrepreneurship Learning Laboratory (BELL), the University of Iowa’s start-up incubator for student-owned businesses managed by the John Pappajohn Entrepreneurial Center (JPEC).

The Barrentine Values and Ventures Competition brought together students from 51 universities with start-up businesses that benefit specific populations, communities, and/or the environment to compete at TCU’s Neeley School of Business.


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Georgia Tech Researcher Honored with Alan T. Waterman Award

Science and Technology

Science and Technology

Georgia Tech Researcher Honored with Alan T. Waterman Award


Award recognizes innovation with carbon nanotube technologies




By
John Toon | April 13, 2017
• Atlanta, GA








[embedded content]

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has recognized Baratunde "Bara" A. Cola of the Georgia Institute of Technology and John V. Pardon of Princeton University with the nation's highest honor for early career scientists and engineers, the Alan T. Waterman Award. This marks only the second time in the award's 42-year history that NSF selected two recipients in the same year. (Credit: National Science Foundation)

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has recognized Baratunde "Bara" A. Cola of the Georgia Institute of Technology and John V. Pardon of Princeton University with the nation's highest honor for early career scientists and engineers, the Alan T. Waterman Award. This marks only the second time in the award's 42-year history that NSF selected two recipients in the same year.

Bestowed annually, the Waterman Award recognizes outstanding researchers age 35 and under in NSF-supported fields of science and engineering. In addition to a medal, awardees each receive a $1 million, five-year grant for research in their chosen field of study.

"We are seeing the significant impact of their research very early in the careers of these awardees," said NSF Director France Córdova. "That is the most exciting aspect of the Waterman Award, which recognizes early career achievement. They have creatively tackled longstanding scientific challenges, and we look forward to what they will do next."

Cola pioneered new engineering methods and materials to control light and heat in electronics at the nanoscale. He serves as an associate professor at Georgia Tech's George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering.

In 2015, Cola and his team were the first to overcome more than 40 years of research challenges to create a device called an optical rectenna, which turns light into direct current more efficiently than today's ...

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Interactive Visualization Illustrates Uncertainty of NFL Draft

Society and Culture

Society and Culture

Interactive Visualization Illustrates Uncertainty of NFL Draft






April 19, 2017
• Atlanta, GA








Click image to enlarge




Next week, 253 players will hear their names called over the course of three days in the 2017 NFL Draft. For many, it will be the beginning of a long and lucrative career in professional football. For most, it will be the highlight in an increasingly competitive business.

An interactive visualization created by a team of researchers in the Georgia Institute of Technology’s School of Interactive Computing illustrates just how fleeting the career of a professional football player can be and how difficult it can be for teams to differentiate between the superstars and the busts.

The visualization, which catalogues each of the 32 teams’ draft picks from 2007-16, indicates with a green icon a player who is currently active on the team that drafted him. A blue icon indicates a player still in the league, but playing on a different team, and a red icon indicates a player that is no longer active in the NFL.

A quick glance at all 32 teams’ charts presents a healthy dose of red in comparison to the green and blue, illustrating the brevity of the average NFL career. An analysis has shown that the average length of a career decreased by about two years, from 4.99 years to 2.66, from 2008-14.

Only one team, the Carolina Panthers, have more than one player still active on their roster from their 2007 draft.

From a team perspective, the ebb and flow of a given franchise’s success can be traced within the colors of the visualization.

The Atlanta Falcons, owners of an 11-5 record and a near Super Bowl championship this past season, have experienced their fair share. After a 13-3 season in 2012, their third straight season of double-digit wins, they surprised many by slipping to four, six, and eight victories over the ...

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Contreras Ties NCAA Record For Triples In A Game In 7-4 Win Over San Diego State

gohighlanders.com

Box Score San Diego, CA—Mark Contreras went five for five with three triples and three RBIs, and seven different Highlanders' pitchers held San Diego State to just seven hits in the UC Riverside Baseball Team's 7-4 victory over the Aztecs Tuesday evening. The win snapped a five-game losing streak for the Highlanders.Contreras put UC Riverside (14-22) on top in the first with an RBI triple down the right field line that scored Collby Schultz. Michael Farris then made it 2-0 Highlanders with a fielder's choice grounder.UCR starter Hazahel Quidaja faced the minimum six batters through the first two innings, but the Aztecs tied the score in the bottom of the third thanks to a Alan Trejo RBI single, and a Chase Calabuig suicide squeeze.Angel Landazuri (2-3) took over for Quijada in the fourth, and he tossed one-and-a-third innings of hitless baseball, striking out three. Devin McKessson, Johnny Breidenthal, Nick Shur, and Trenton Toplikar also kept San Diego State off the board through the eighth.The Highlanders regained the lead in the top of the fifth off of Aztecs relief pitcher Adrian Mardueno (1-1). Mardueno was wild throughout the inning, walking Schultz and AJ Sawyer to lead things off. Contreras drove in his second run of the game with a double down the left field line, and Sawyer came home thanks to a passed ball to make it 4-2 UC Riverside. Harrison Pyatt came on in relief of Mardueno, but he uncorked a wild pitch that scored Contreras from third.UC Riverside kept up the pressure in the top of the sixth, and once again, free passes and wild pitches played a role. Matt Hardy drew a lead off walk, and two batters later, so did Sawyer. Contreras then lined a single up the middle to put the Highlanders up 6-2. Sawyer scampered home on a wild ...

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The Human Side of Engineering

Caltech News tagged with "staff + student_life + faculty_profile + grants_and_giving"


Mentors in the Caltech course Design for Freedom from Disability gave students Stephanie Moon and Lawrence Lee a new view of the power engineers have to benefit others.Says co-instructor Andy Lin: "It's gratifying to see that the work I'm helping with is making a difference in students' lives and the lives of people with disabilities. At the end of the course, I get teary-eyed. I see how the students want to maximize their engineering skills to help people."Read more.

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UCSB Shakes Off Four-Run Deficit, Bests CSU Bakersfield 6-4

Santa Barbara Athletics News


Apr 25, 2017





SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – The UC Santa Barbara bullpen, led by a standout effort from freshman righty Chris Lincoln, combined for five shutout innings and the offense rallied for runs in four of the team's final five at-bats to overcome a 4-0 deficit and win 6-4 over CSU Bakersfield in Tuesday's midweek action at Caesar Uyesaka Stadium.
The Roadrunners (20-16) built a 4-0 lead after 3 1/2 innings off UCSB (18-20) starter Ben Brecht, who entered the contest with a streak of four consecutive quality starts. The Gauchos meanwhile were held off the board early by CSUB's Mathew Seibert, who was making his first career start.
Seibert, who had just nine innings of Division I experience before Tuesday's game and was in a controlled start, thrived in the first three innings but faltered to start the fourth, giving up a pair of one-out singles to put UCSB in business for the first time.
Reliever Kenny Johnson came in at that point for the Runners, but couldn't stop UCSB's momentum as JJ Muno rolled a grounder through the left side to load the bases. Freshman catcher Eric Yang plated the Gauchos' first run with an RBI groundout, and then Colton Burns came through with a line double into the left-center gap to bring in a pair and cut the deficit to one.
After that three-spot, Lincoln came on for UCSB in the top of the fifth. He greeted CSUB leadoff hitter Mark Pena with a backwards K, and then received some help from his shortstop to get out of the inning. With a runner on first and two outs, Max Carter chopped one to the left side of the infield and off the glove of third baseman Kenny Corey. The ball trickled towards left field, but Muno made a heads-up play, scooping the ball up and racing to tag Andrew Penner, who was ...

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Engineering at 50

All News @ UCSB

As spirits ran high in the decades following World War II, a palpable feeling of optimism pulsed through the nation. Technology held vast promises for a better future, from transistors that revolutionized radio and other telecommunications to the early computer networks that would become the present-day internet.On the West Coast, twin senses of curiosity and possibility took hold, and it was in this climate of discovery and innovation that engineering at UCSB came into being.
And now, with curiosity and possibility still prevailing, the UCSB College of Engineering celebrates 50 years of discovery and innovation.
A College is Born
Albert Conrad, the first dean of the College of Engineering

Ohio-born Albert G. Conrad landed at UCSB by way of Yale University in 1962,  An electrical engineering professor and sometime violinmaker, Conrad became the inaugural dean of UCSB’s newly established School of Engineering.
At that time, electrical engineering was the fastest-growing engineering discipline in California and on the West Coast. And it was the first department at UCSB’s fledgling engineering school, followed shortly thereafter by departments of mechanical and chemical in 1964 and 1965, respectively  
But Conrad had even bigger plans. Seeing the potential of engineering education at UCSB, he lobbied then-Chancellor Vernon Cheadle in 1966 to grow the school into a College of Engineering.
“This would place it in a category with Berkeley, UCLA and Davis,” Conrad wrote in a letter to Cheadle. His request was granted and in four months the school of engineering was transformed into its own college.
“Dean Conrad was an iconic figure,” said Hua Lee, UCSB professor of electrical and computer engineering. “Students regarded him as an institution.” . Often sporting green — his favorite color, Lee noted — Conrad was the kind of person who would take the time to visit with the junior members of faculty and the students.
According to Lee, such collegiality was important in the ...

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Vanderbilt joins 40 academic partners to create, deploy robotic technology in critical manufacturing sectors

Vanderbilt News



by Brenda Ellis | Apr. 25, 2017, 2:33 PM | Want more research news? Subscribe to our weekly newsletter »








Vanderbilt University is one of 40 academic partners in a new robotics manufacturing institute in Pittsburgh that will be funded with $80 million from the Department of Defense and $173 million in matching funds from more than 200 participating partners, including companies, local governments, academic and nonprofit organizations.
The Defense Department awarded the contract for the Advanced Robotics Manufacturing (ARM) Innovation Hub to a consortium called American Robotics Inc., a nonprofit venture led by Carnegie Mellon University. The institute is the 14th — the eighth led by the DoD — in the federal government’s wide-ranging Manufacturing USA program.

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Media Inquiries: Brenda Ellis, (615) 343-6314 brenda.ellis@vanderbilt.edu







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Pediatric Support for Mental Health

SDSU College of Sciences


SDSU researchers find that providing mental health care to young people in a primary care setting can help fight stigma and other barriers to receiving treatment.


“In these interventions, kids learn not to withdraw from what’s upsetting them.” Anxiety and depression are the most common mental health problems in children and adolescents. Youth with these disorders often go to their primary care physicians for referrals, but only a small number of them obtain much-needed mental health care.  A new study led by researchers at San Diego State University suggests that providing a brief behavioral therapy in the pediatric primary care setting can help more young people get the help they need. The brief intervention’s benefits were especially noteworthy in Latino youth, more than three quarters of whom showed significant improvement. About three in 10 children and adolescents suffer from significant anxiety and/or depression that affects their ability to learn in school, form and maintain meaningful relationships, and engage in activities. The study’s lead author, V. Robin Weersing, professor in SDSU’s Joint Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology, said that our mental health system is not currently suited to identify and successfully treat this many youth.  Additionally, families report barriers to pursuing mental health referrals that they might receive, including stigma, limited time, transportation and financial difficulties. However, statistics show that nine out of 10 kids and teens do regularly see a pediatrician, presenting an opportunity to piggyback mental health services on top of their existing medical care. To learn how effective that approach may be, Weersing and colleagues recruited 185 ethnically diverse children and adolescents ages 8 to 16 who were identified by their pediatrician as struggling with anxiety and/or depression. The study occurred at several pediatricians’ offices in San Diego and Pittsburgh. Half of these youth received outpatient referrals to standard outpatient mental health care, with the researchers continuing ...

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Urban Life is #Tweetable

Tufts Now All Stories

Half of the people on the planet live in cities, so we decided to find out whether urban residents are happy and whether some cities are more desirable than others. We found some of the answers in an unconventional place—your Twitter feed.Every time somebody posted something about their life, their dreams or simply what they ate for dinner, we analyzed it for sentiment—how many positive or negative words tweeters used to describe their feelings. Over two years we looked at millions of social media posts in eight U.S. cities for our book Urban Social Listening: Potential and Pitfalls for Using Microblogging Data in Studying Cities.
Tweets are the digital versions of those fabled crumbs that Hansel and Gretel dropped in the forest. They are a rich source of new insights into a range of social phenomena. Big companies already have mined this new frontier of social listening to market their products and guide their decision-making and investments. Twitter and other microblog data have been used to aid rescue efforts after earthquakes, tweak public transit routes and monitor heart disease rates in rural areas.
For government agencies and other organizations looking to address the challenges facing urban America, this kind of digital eavesdropping can be transformative. Our own work seems to contradict conventional wisdom that residents in cities experiencing population decline must surely be unhappy.
For our research, we created rankings from a vocabulary-based analysis of all words in a tweet containing some kind of sentiment. For instance, the word “good” generated a positive score, while “terrible” led to a negative score. After totaling up the scores, we were able to rank the happiness quotient in the eight cities based on whether residents expressed positive or negative sentiments. We compared our happiness scores with data from the U.S. census, like income and educational attainment—the conventional ...

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Bodhi Time with the CAPS Therapy Dog! - Finals Workshops

Events at UCF

Kick off finals week by taking some time for yourself by visiting Bodhi the therapy dog! Take a break, de-stress, and relax at CAPS

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Input sought on environmental review of proposed land-use change

Student News

In support of offering more housing for UC Santa Cruz students, the campus is looking at changing the land-use designation for 14 acres on the west side of campus.The land, between Family Student Housing and Porter College, is designated Campus Resource Land and needs to be changed to Colleges and Student Housing to be part of the student housing initiative. As part of the process, the campus is preparing an environmental impact report to analyze the potential impacts of a land-use change.
The first step is to develop a scope for the environmental review, and the campus is seeking input into what needs to be evaluated as part of the environmental impact report.
Members of the public can learn more online, and submit feedback by emailing eircomment@ucsc.edu.
The campus will host an information session on the student housing initiative and scoping meeting for the environmental impact report from 6–8 p.m. on May 4 at the Santa Cruz Police Community Room, 155 Center Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95060.
Under a University of California student housing initiative, UC Santa Cruz is looking to add up to 3,000 beds for upper-division students, students with families, and graduate students. The campus is working to deliver the beds through a public-private partnership with the first ones available by 2020.
The 6 p.m. information session will provide an overview of the housing initiative, the planning studies that have led to the selection of the site, and the environmental review process. Campus representatives will answer questions at the end.
The 7 p.m. scoping session will provide an opportunity for members of the public to offer comment to be part of the formal record.

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UW Daily – April 25, 2017

UW Daily

UW System
On Campus
COL: Meet UW-Marshfield/Wood County student Jeremiah Glamann, Hub City Times, April 24
COL: Guest column: Networking a critical part of college life, Column, Baraboo News Republic, April 24
COL: Hundreds march for science in central Wisconsin, Stevens Point Journal, April 24
COL: Campus play finds comedy in mysteries, Baraboo News Republic, April 24
EXT: Busy nurses find a learning ally in UW Flexible Option, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, April 24
EXT: 4-H pledges to re-engage, Agri-View, April 25
EAU: UW-EC backs housing code changes, Eau Claire Leader-Telegram, April 25
EAU: Annual Devroy forum features Jenna Johnson, Eau Claire Leader-Telegram, April 24
EAU: Jobs abound for UW-Eau Claire student body, Eau Claire Leader-Telegram, April 24
EAU: UW-Eau Claire grads awarded for entrepreneurial drive, Eau Claire Leader-Telegram, April 23
EAU: Doc’s cool plays well at Eau Claire Jazz Festival, Eau Claire Leader-Telegram, April 23
EAU: Hundreds march for science in Eau Claire, WEAU-TV 13, April 22
EAU: Hundreds participate in March for Science in Eau Claire, WQOW-TV 18, April 22
EAU: 52nd Street: Jazz once again flows through streets, venues of downtown Eau Claire, Eau Claire Leader-Telegram, April 22
EAU: Cultivating young gardeners at Prairie Ridge Early Learning Center, WEAU-TV 13, April 22
GRB: Premiere for “The Great Ledge” (documentary featuring UWGB Prof. Luczaj), WFRV, April 24
GRB: Don’t know much about history? (Column by UWGB Profs. Nesvet and Shelton), Green Bay Press-Gazette, April 24
LAX: La Crosse hosting financial literacy events for Money Smart Week, La Crosse Tribune, April 24
LAX: Thousands honored in La Crosse for volunteering, News8000.com – WKBT, April 24
LAX: ABC’s Mary Bruce Visits UW-L, The Racquet, April 24
MAD: Mystery human species Homo naledi had tiny but advanced brain, New Scientist, April 25
MAD: Students seek transparency, influence in UW investments, business dealings, Capital Times, April 25
MAD: Controversy over Alice Goffman leads Pomona students to say her alleged racial insensitivities disqualify her from visiting professorship, Inside Higher Education, April 25
MAD: Hands-on work at ...

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Chili peppers, marijuana may reduce gut inflammation

UConn Today



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Are Tattoos Toxic?

Campus Life – UConn Today


Pharmacy professor David Grant teaches one of his most popular lectures, on the toxic heavy metals in the ink used for tattoos.






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Paulick appointed to helm UAA CIO.

Green & Gold News


Dear UAA Community,
Paulick appointed to helm UAA CIOAdam Paulick was appointed this week as UAA’s chief information officer, taking on the position Pat Shier filled before Shier began serving as interim vice chancellor for Administrative Services when Bill Spindle left in October.
“Direct appointment was the best path forward,” Shier said, “considering the Strategic Pathways Phase 1 IT study and implementation work underway already, the demands of keeping our robust IT and communications infrastructure working reliably, and Adam’s demonstrated investment in UAA governance.”
Paulick has worked with ITS since his arrival at UAA in July 2013. In that time, he has helped improve UAA’s infrastructure and customer communications, and demonstrated his capabilities as an IT leader.
Paulick began his work as UAA’s interim CIO on Oct. 16.
Before leading a transformation of the Infrastructure Services section at UAA IT Services, he had amassed more than nine years’ experience as an IT consultant in the private sector and many years’ IT leadership and operations in the public sector, including the top spot for the State of Alaska Telecommunication System.
Paulick holds certifications in project management and information systems security, and served as interim State of Alaska CIO.
Arizona State University’s W.P. Carey School of Business awarded him a bachelor’s degree in accounting, and Paulick also has experience in budgeting and legislative reporting.
“We have an excellent IT team, and I expect the continuation of great work for our customers as we creatively deal with the budget pressures before us,” Shier said. “We wish to thank Adam and the entire IT team for the relevant, high-value, customer-focused work they accomplish for the university every day.”

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Research Foundation Workshop - Colleague, Collaboration, Connection (5/10/2017)

SJSU Events Calendar at SJSU Main Campus - King Library








Event Details


Research Foundation Workshop - Colleague, Collaboration, Connection

Start Date: 5/10/2017Start Time: 11:30 AM
End Date: 5/10/2017End Time: 1:00 PM

Event Description:Come and meet colleagues at this fast-paced mixer that will introduce you to the amazing variety of expertise and research activities of the SJSU faculty and staff. You will have the opportunity to have brief one-on-one discussions about your research interests and efforts with most attendees in timed intervals. Near the end of the workshop there will be additional opportunities to have longer discussions with potential collaborators to set the stage for moving forward with your successful colleague collaboration connections.
 If you are interested in attending, please register (https://goo.gl/forms/gUNLAkdDJiBTQbm63) no later than Friday, May 5.
Event TypeProfessional DevelopmentWorkshop





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Baseball. Spartans Comeback From A Four Run Deficit To Win 6-5 Against Saint Mary’s

San Jose State Spartans News -- www.sjsuspartans.com

Graham Gomez and Zach Wallace combine to pitch five shutout innings to end the game.

April 26, 2017




Final Stats






Box Score San Jose, Calif. – A three-run home run by Shane Timmons got the San José State University baseball team (14-24-1) back into the game and the Spartans took advantage of free passes issued by the Saint Mary’s (26-14) pitching staff to erase a four-run deficit to win 6-5 on Tuesday night.Heading to the home half of the fifth inning, the Spartans trailed 5-1 when Timmons (1-for-4, R, 3 RBI) blasted a three-run homer over the left center wall to cut the Gaels lead to 5-4.  It scored Aaron Pleschner (3-for-4, 2 R, BB) and Michael Breen (R, 2 BB) who got on with a single and walk.SJSU relievers Graham Gomez and Zach Wallace were solid out of the bullpen, entering the game in the fifth and seventh innings, pitching a combined five shutout innings to keep the Spartans in the game.  The pair of lefties allowed only three baserunners in those five frames.The Spartans had scoring opportunities in the sixth and seventh innings but a runner was left in scoring position each inning until they finally broke through in the eighth.Johnny Mendoza (1-for-3, BB) led off the eighth with a single against Gaels reliever Jonathan Buckley.  Mendoza advanced to second on a sacrifice bunt by Anders Davidson with two strikes on him.  Joseph Stefanki pinch ran for Mendoza eventually coming around to score on a passed ball by Gaels catcher Jackson Thoreson to tie the game up 5-5.Buckley issued four walks in the inning, three of them coming after getting two outs.  Kellen Strahm (1-for-4, 2 RBI, BB) drew the last walk of the inning with the bases loaded to score Corey Olivet for the winning run, putting the Spartans up 6-5.Wallace finished the game with an ...

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Uncertain Correspondence: What Vladimir Putin Can Teach Us about Donald Trump

_www.emory.edu

Upcoming Ongoing EventsYour browser must support JavaScript to view this content. Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings then try again.All Ongoing EventsYour browser must support JavaScript to view this content. Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings then try again.

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Concrete canoe team claims 1st place at regional competition

KU News Headlines

LAWRENCE — The concrete canoe team from the University of Kansas School of Engineering is headed to a national competition. The group took first place in the Mid-Continent Regional Concrete Canoe Competition last week at the University of Arkansas. The win gives the team the opportunity to compete at the national competition in June.

"I'm thrilled,” said Brittany Multer, a junior in civil engineering and co-captain of the team. “We always hope for the best, but it's always an amazing shock to hear all your hard work paid off."

The competition has several components. Teams must build the canoes — KU has been at work on design and construction since this year’s rules were released in the fall — and make a presentation about the project. Then, the moment of truth: Students have to prove the boats actually work in a series of races.

Pitted against teams from 13 colleges and universities across Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Illinois, KU’s entry earned first place in the “design report” category for a technical paper describing the design and construction of the craft; the team took third place for its oral presentation describing the process, as well as second place for the quality of its product. After that, the team raced well enough to give it first place in the overall competition.

Multer said KU’s entry, a canoe named “Voyager,” won because of the team’s attention to detail.

"Our design was pretty intricate,” she said. "And we spent a lot of time sanding our canoe, which a lot of teams don't do. One of the judges touched our boat and said, 'Smooth.'"

The team can’t change anything about the canoe itself for the national competition, but Multer said it was likely members will work on “stepping up their game” to improve the design report and oral presentation for the national ...

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New Method to Identify Nanoparticles in Tissue May Shed Light on their Health Impact

University News





New Method to Identify Nanoparticles in Tissue May Shed Light on their Health Impact
Stony Brook biomedical engineer and colleagues nationally detail the cost-effective method in Microscopy Research and Technique


Stony Brook, NY – March 29, 2016 – A team of researchers from Stony Brook University, SUNY Polytechnic Institute, and George Washington School of Medicine have demonstrated a pioneering method for the rapid visualization and identification of engineered nanoparticles in tissue. The research, detailed in a paper published in Microscopy Research and Technique, is a cost-effective hyperspectral imaging method for nanomaterial analysis that may shed light on nanomaterials’ potential health impacts.
As nanoparticles are increasingly incorporated into industrial processes and consumer products, studying the potential effects of exposure is critical to ensure the health and safety of workers, consumers, and the environment. In particular, the semiconductor industry utilizes metal oxide nanoparticles in a fabrication process, which has been identified by the industry as a critical area for health and safety research due to the potential for worker exposure.
In the paper, titled “Hyperspectral Imaging of Nanoparticles in Biological Samples: Simultaneous Visualization and Elemental Identification,” the researchers were able to detail how they located metal oxide nanoparticles in an ex vivo porcine skin tissue model of cutaneous exposure.
Molly Frame, PhD, Associate Professor and Distinguished Service Professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Stony Brook University, and a co-author on the paper, provided all the tissue samples that were imaged for the research. The imaging procedures were led and completed by Sara Brenner, MD, and colleagues at SUNY Polytechnic Institute.
“Our findings were made possible through this unique collaboration, and the journal recognized them as highly significant in the area of nanotechnology research,” said Dr. Frame. “By laying the groundwork for the most efficient means with which to visualize nano materials in great detail, we are able to better evaluate the health implications of ...

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Stony Brook Professor Receives NIH Grant for Chronic Fatigue Management Program

Medical Center & Health Care



Stony Brook Professor Receives NIH Grant for Chronic Fatigue Management Program
The Program Involves Stress Reduction Techniques, Social Support

STONY BROOK, N.Y., October 17, 2011 – Fred Friedberg, Ph.D., Research Associate Professor and Clinical Psychologist in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science at Stony Brook University School of Medicine, through the State University of New York Research Foundation, received a $600,000 grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to continue testing a home-based self management program for people with chronic fatigue and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS).
 The NIH grant runs for two years, effective until the end of August 2013. In 2008, Dr. Friedberg, Principal Investigator, received an initial one-year $100,000 NIH grant to launch the home-based self management program for chronic fatigue and CFS patients, with the expectation to learn how to help patients more effectively manage their conditions.
 “There are no effective and established medical treatments for these illnesses, and the behavioral program is intended to help patients function and feel better,” says Dr. Friedberg, pointing out that the causes of chronic fatigue and CFS are still unknown.
 CFS remains a controversial illness. Yet, the NIH and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have designated CFS as an important public health issue and recognize the need to better define, diagnose and treat the illness. For more on CFS, see this CDC link.
 “Cognitive-behavioral treatment, a type of stress management training combined with low level exercise, has shown promise to help people with CFS cope better and lessen illness severity,” explains Dr. Friedberg. “This ongoing study tests a home-based version of cognitive-behavioral treatment that is based on a self-help model of illness management. We also want to see if this type of intervention saves health care costs, an important issue because of the ever increasing expenditures for health care.”
 The self-help program involves lifestyle change and stress reduction techniques, including graduated ...

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Lone Star College students receive 2017 Repsol Student Innovation award

Lone Star College System News

Published on: April 25, 2017 Repsol presented four Lone Star College students its 2017 Student Innovation Award. The award recognizes local students for excellence in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM).

The LSC students recognized were Fabio Andrean, Aerospace Engineering sophomore; Monica Argumedo, Civil Engineering sophomore: Milton Cruz, Engineering sophomore; and Mueed Ahmad, Computer Science freshman. The students were selected through an application process that evaluated academic performance, career choice, recommendations from professors and honors undergraduate research.

We are so proud of our students, said Linda Leto Head, LSC vice chancellor, Workforce Education & Corporate Partnerships. Energy is very important to our economic development and we would like to thank Repsol for helping build the next energy workforce. It is evident that the Repsol leadership is extremely dedicated to education in the U.S.

The projects submitted by the LSC students as part of the application process were:

Nuclear Fusion: the Energy Source of the Future Andrean
Becoming a More Innovative Thinker Argumedo
Creating the Real Future: Revolutionizing Man-made Structures into Multipurpose Structures Cruz
Affordable Consumer Solar Power through Efficient Programming Ahmad
Sam Houston State University students along with students from Conroe ISD were also recognized at the event. The 19 Conroe ISD students were selected by their participation in the 2017 Sci://Tech Exposition held in February. A panel of judges of local Repsol employees evaluated applications submitted by LSC and SHSU students, selecting four winners from each school.

We believe its important to invest in students because they are the future leaders in our industry and our communities, said Mariano Ferrari, Repsol Houston Office and U.S. business unit director. We need their talent and enthusiasm to achieve our goal of building a more sustainable energy future.

The 2017 Repsol Student Innovation Award winners were presented a certificate and merchandise from Repsol Honda MotoGP racers Marc Marquez and Dani Pedrosa. The collegiate recipients were also ...

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Chorale, orchestra to perform Broadway hits

Lone Star College Kingwood News

Published on: April 22, 2016

The Kingwood Chorale and Chamber Orchestra invite the community to its 100 Years of Broadway Concert May 6-7 at 7:30 p.m. at the First Presbyterian Church of Kingwood.

The 100 Years of Broadway Concert will be May 6-7 at 7:30 p.m.

Hertzenberg
Toes will tap and memories will be created at the last Kingwood Chorale and Chamber Orchestra concert of the 2015-2016 season.
The Lake Houston Musical Arts Society (LHMAS) and Lone Star College-Kingwood invite the community to its 100 Years of Broadway Concert May 6-7 at 7:30 p.m. at the First Presbyterian Church of Kingwood. The chorale and orchestra will perform hit music from various eras of Broadway shows-from the 1920s to the present.
This event is a nice diversion for the chorale and our faithful audience. We usually sing classical choral masterworks, said Dr. Todd Miller, chorale conductor and music professor at LSC-Kingwood. There are many songs that are well-known and are sure to be crowd favorites.
The concert consists of 90 musicians who will perform Broadway classics from hit productions such as The Music Man, South Pacific, My Fair Lady, The Phantom of the Opera, Godspell, and Rent. The performance features Kingwood native Kristen Hertzenberg, and John Cornelius, composer, arranger and pianist. Hertzenberg is best known for her roles in The Phantom of the Opera, Master Class, Hair, and Million Dollar Quartet. Cornelius arranged a new setting of Day Day Day from Godspell for this concert.
We will perform songs by Rodgers and Hammerstein, Gershwin and Andrew Lloyd Webber, just to name a few, Miller said.
Tickets to 100 Years of Broadway are $20 for general admission and $15 for senior citizens and students. The First Presbyterian Church of Kingwood is located at 5520 Kingwood Drive. To purchase tickets or for more information, visit www.lhmas.org.
Register now for credit classes online through myLoneStar. Classes are offered days, evenings, or weekends ...

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Life on Mars! In the LSC-Montgomery Biotechnology Lab

Lone Star College Montgomery News

Published on: November 18, 2015





On the heels of the release of the science fiction filmThe
Martianand NASAs confirmation of water on mars, the Lone Star College-Montgomery
biotechnology program secured a two-year grant from the Texas Space Grant
Consortium (TSGC) to evaluate the responses of microorganisms when exposed to
surface conditions similar to those found on Mars.



On the heels of the successful release of
the science fictionfilm The Martian,
staring actor Matt Damon, and the uncanny timing of NASAs confirmation of
water on mars, the Lone Star College-Montgomery biotechnology program secured a
two-year grant from the Texas Space Grant Consortium (TSGC) to evaluate the
responses of microorganisms when exposed to surface conditions similar to those
found on Mars.
TSGC, a NASA-funded organization formed in
1989, consists of institutions in Texas networked to ensure that benefits of
space research and technology are available to the public of Texas. Academic
members include both large and small public and private institutions and the
consortium has developed a mix of higher education, research infrastructure and
public service projects.
"It was pretty cool timing, said Lone
Star College Biotechnology Institute (LSCBI) director Dr. Daniel Kainer. Right
about the time approval was granted, NASA made the big announcement that they
discovered liquid water on Mars. With the movie The Martian coming out at the same time, it made our project both current
and relevant to the LSC-Montgomery student body.
This type of real-world experience is so
valuable to our students, said LSC-Montgomery president Dr. Rebecca Riley. Experiential
learning is a great opportunity for them to gain a competitive edge in todays
job market or adds to their resume when transferring to four-year programs.
The biotechnology team will examine ways in
which cyanobacteria, commonly known as blue-green algae, can be integrated into
sustainable life support systems for future astronauts who travel to, and
possibly colonize, on Mars. Students will ...

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College Closed January 20 in Observance of Martin Luther King Day

Lone Star College Tomball News

Published on: January 15, 2014
LSC-Tomball will be closed in observance of the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., holiday on Monday, January 20. All offices will be closed and classes will not be held.

The LSC-Tomball Community Library will be closed, as well. 

Normal business hours will resume on Tuesday, January 21.







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Roar-UP! Become part of the PRIDE at LSC-University Park

Lone Star College-University Park News

Published on: March 28, 2014 The pride of LSC-University Park will be on full display April 3 as we welcome the community to a Roar-UP Open House event. Join us from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. and experience what LSC-University Park has to offer.
Information booths will give potential students and parents a glimpse of academics, continuing education and student life at LSC-University Park. Presentations on advising, admissions and financial aid are scheduled in both English and Spanish. University partners will be also in attendance to answer questions about transfer opportunities and their four-year programs.
Visit with current students, faculty and staff, experience a tour of LSC-University Park and enjoy food and prize drawings with entertainment from 104.9 Tu Música. Plus, look for ticket giveaways for the Houston Rockets and Sam Houston Race Park Concert Series.
LSC-University Park is located at 20515 SH 249 (249 and Louetta Road), Houston, Texas 77070. For more information on the Open House, please contact Deshonta Holmes, Director of Admissions and Outreach, at 281-290-2770.
LSC-University Park is the sixth LSCS campus located in the former Compaq Computers world headquarters complex. The 71-acre campus houses four university partners, a charter high school, several business partners, Lone Star Corporate College and the LSC Energy and Manufacturing Institute. Under the first President, Shah Ardalan, LSC-University Parks vision is to be nationally recognized as the model for the innovative college of the 21st century. In just two years, LSC-University Parks Invitation-2-Innovate (i2i) has resulted in many local, national and global recognitions, including one patent for the Education and Career Positioning System. The campus is located at the corner of State Highway 249 and Louetta Road across from Vintage Park. For more information about LSC-University Park, call 281.290.2600 or visit LoneStar.edu/UP.
Lone Star College System has been opening doors to a better community for 40 years. Founded in 1973, LSCS remains steadfast in its commitment to student success and ...

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Modern languages students to present at Initials research forum

K-State Today Student Edition

April 20, 2017

Modern languages students to present at Initials research forum

By Melinda CroThe modern languages department is hosting Initials, a student research forum, from 4-5:30 p.m. Friday, April 21, in Hale Library's Hemisphere Room. 
Students will share their research projects conducted over the course of the academic year. Topics include creative writing, translation, literature and linguistics.
Initials was founded in 2013 by Melinda Cro, associate professor of French, and Laura Kanost, associate professor of Spanish, to create a means for students to share their research and creative endeavors with the campus community as a whole. The modern languages department brings together faculty and students with diverse interests in a common goal — to learn about languages, cultures and literature.
Undergraduate students, their presentation, area of study and mentor are:
Katherine Boulanger, "De Gaulle's Spirit in Translation," modern languages — French, Kathleen Antonioli and Melinda Cro.
Catherine Caffera, "'Germany for Germans:' Examining the Social Media Use of Two Major Political Parties in Germany," modern languages — German and international studies, Janice McGregor.
Angélica Castro, "Neither Here nor There: The Search for Identity in Undocumented Immigrants Brought to the US as Children," modern languages — Spanish, Maria Depaoli. 
Eric Gudenkauf and Rey Irwin, "Sandmann to Sandman: A Parody into Madness," modern languages — German, Sara Luly. 
Katlyn Krause, "Atenas, Costa Rica comparada con el modelo para ciudades latinoamericanas," modern languages — Spanish, Laura Kanost. 
Lameese Madi, "La 'Playlist' du rap français: un dossier pédagogique," modern languages — French, Melinda Cro. 
Madison May, "L'Interdiction Burkini: La Discrimination Légalisée," modern languages — French, Kathleen Antonioli. 
Thomas Meek, "Los vegetales te harán feliz," modern languages — Spanish, Megan McCoy and Mary Copple. 
Anna Paczuska, "Priestesses and Patriarchy – The Daily Lives of Ancient Greek Priestesses," modern languages — classical studies, Benjamin McCloskey. 
Anne Recker, "Conservation in Costa Rica: Finding a Balance," modern languages — Spanish, Laura Kanost.
Frantina Williams, "Sprache und Identität im Saargebiet (Language ...

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