Thursday, July 13, 2017

Two faculty members, alumnus inducted into American Philosophical Society

Princeton University News

Two Princeton University faculty members and one University alumnus are among 32 new members recently elected to the American Philosophical Society, the nation’s oldest scholarly organization.

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Physics' Abolhassan Jawahery Comments on Large Hadron Collider's Discovery of New Particle - New Scientist

College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences



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IU School of Medicine faculty appointed editors of PLOS Science Communication Blog

IU

INDIANAPOLIS -- With the goal of connecting and engaging the public with science, free of jargon and full of insight, the Public Library of Science (PLOS) Science Communication Blog (#SciCommPLOS) has named three Indiana University School of Medicine faculty as the new editors: Drs. Krista Hoffmann-Longtin, Jason Organ, and Bill Sullivan assumed this role on June 26, 2017.“We hope to build bridges between scientists and the general public by explaining why science is important and meaningful in everyday life,” said Organ, an assistant professor of anatomy and cell biology. “Our goals for #SciCommPLOS are to highlight interesting and impactful science for the public in accessible ways, and to teach scientists about the art of storytelling as an effective means to communicate their science.”
The opportunity to lead #SciCommPLOS emerged from ongoing collaboration among Hoffmann-Longtin, Organ, and Sullivan, who actively engage students and faculty to improve science and health communication through courses and workshops at IU School of Medicine and IUPUI, and the public through science outreach blogging.
“The internet and social media provide powerful tools to communicate science, yet many scientists have avoided engaging the public online,” said Sullivan, a professor of pharmacology and toxicology. “Consequently, some fields like healthcare, climate science, and evolutionary biology have been overrun with misinformation, alternative facts, and conspiracy theories. Because scientific fields continue to increase in complexity, the American public – whose tax dollars fund federal research grants – is left behind. The goal of the #SciCommPLOS blog is to connect and engage the public with science.”
The new editors are encouraging scientists, health professionals, researchers, and the public to read and contribute to the blog. “Communication isn’t just about message transmission,” added Hoffmann-Longtin, assistant professor of communication studies. “It’s about working together to develop shared meaning. And that can only come from open conversation, with a foundation of trust and respect.” 
For more information, ...

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Predicting heart events after liver transplant

Northwestern Now: Summaries

CHICAGO - The first app and score to determine the one-year risk of a liver transplant patient dying or being hospitalized for a heart attack or other cardiovascular complication has been developed by Northwestern Medicine scientists.“Knowing the patient’s risk is critical to help prevent the frequent cardiac complications that accompany liver transplant surgery and to determine which patients are likely to survive the transplant,” said Dr. Lisa VanWagner, an assistant professor of medicine and preventive medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and a Northwestern Medicine physician.Liver transplant surgery is among the highest-risk cardiac surgery. Unique blood flow changes occur in patients with end-stage liver disease. And during a liver transplant, massive changes in blood volume and adrenaline surges affect heart function.“Identifying persons who are at highest risk may mean restricting transplantation so that we maximize the benefit of scarce donor organs to persons who have a lower risk of a cardiac event and are more likely to survive the stress of a liver transplant,” VanWagner said.In those who are at higher risk, evaluation and consultation with a multidisciplinary team of physicians can help manage a wide array of cardiac conditions related to liver transplant patients.The new app and method to establish risk is called the Cardiovascular Risk in Orthotopic Liver Transplantation (CAR-OLT). It’s intended for use in those ages 18 to 75 with liver disease who are undergoing evaluation for liver transplantation.The app is both web-based (e.g., you can search the calculator and use it online) or you can download the app through a smartphone (iTunes or Google Play stores).The paper was published in the journal Hepatology July 13.Prior to the new Northwestern risk-scoring method, physicians used several risk tools that had been developed in a non-liver transplant population. One such tool, the revised cardiac risk index, is no better ...

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Steven Davis

UChicago News

Steven J. Davis studies business dynamics, employment, labor market institutions, economic fluctuations, public policy and other topics. He is a former editor of the American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics and an elected fellow of the Society of Labor Economists. He is also a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research, senior academic fellow with the Asian Bureau of Finance and Economics Research, advisor to the U.S. Congressional Budget Office, and visiting scholar and consultant, respectively, with the Federal Reserve Banks of Atlanta and Chicago.Davis is known for his influential work using longitudinal data on firms and establishments to explore job creation and destruction dynamics and their relationship to economic performance. He is also a co-creator of the Economic Policy Uncertainty Indices and the DHI Hiring Indicators, and he co-organizes the Asian Monetary Policy Forum, held annually in Singapore. Davis has received research grants from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Ewing Marion Kauffmann Foundation, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, and other organizations, including several grants from the U.S. National Science Foundation. In 2013, he received the Addington Prize in Measurement, awarded by the Fraser Institute for Public Policy, for his research on “Measuring Economic Policy Uncertainty.”

His teaching experience includes Ph.D. courses in macroeconomics and labor economics at the University of Chicago, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the University of Maryland; MBA courses in macroeconomics, money and banking, business strategy, and financial institutions for Chicago Booth; and executive MBA courses in macroeconomics for Chicago Booth in Barcelona, London, and Singapore. Davis has also taught undergraduate courses in microeconomics, econometrics, and money and banking at Brown University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

In addition to his scholarly publications, Davis has written for the Atlantic, Bloomberg View, Financial Times, Forbes, Wall Street Journal and other popular media and appeared on Channel News Asia, CNBC, CNN, ...

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Bird Man

BU Today

When it comes to high-risk activities, bird-watching doesn’t usually make it to the top of the list. But College of General Studies Professor Emeritus William “Ted” E. Davis, Jr., has faced peril more than once while observing birds for research or pleasure.
In 1965, Davis (GRS’66), who was 29, and his father were stalking grassland birds in Tanzania when their vehicle was charged by a black rhinoceros. (“We had a very good driver and he raced away from it,” he says.) But the scariest confrontation happened in Australia in 1990. He was a visiting research fellow at the University of New England (Australia), collecting foraging data about thornbills. While out driving one day, he spotted an eastern brown—a five-foot-long creature said to be the world’s second most venomous snake and one that is known to attack humans—slithering onto the dirt road ahead of him. “I hit the brakes, but I got so close to him that I lost sight of him,” he recalls. Davis peered out the window and suddenly found himself eye to eye with the snake, which had reared like a cobra. Fortunately, he’d rolled up the window seconds earlier; the reptile retreated.
“I have always heard that when people get terrified, they get this horrible cramp in the pit of their stomach,” he says. “That was the first and only time I’ve had that happen.”
Since retiring from BU in 2003, Davis has devoted most of his time to bird research. His lifelong interest in ornithology has taken him to more than 50 countries—sometimes accompanied by his wife, a biologist—and he’s seen more than 4,000 species of birds in the wild. (There are roughly 10,000 species in the world.) Despite all the traveling, he’s found time to publish histories of American and Australian ornithology—including Contributions to the History of Australasian Ornithology (published in ...

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Mānoa: Research reveals Rapa Nui people cultivated and managed crops

UH News

University of Hawaiʻi at MānoaContact:Posted: Jul 12, 2017Moai (statues) on Rapa Nui. Credit: Terry Hunt.A rock mulch garden on Rapa Nui with taro (Colocasia esculenta) growing. Credit: Terry Hunt.Research by an international team, including University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa Geology Professor Brian Popp, has shed new light on the fate of the ancient people of Rapa Nui (Easter Island).“It's been proposed that vast forests of giant palm trees were cut down by the people of Rapa Nui leaving them, among other things, without canoes. With no canoes, they could no longer fish so they ate chickens, rats and agricultural crops. However, Rapa Nui is not a tropical paradise with fertile soils so crop productivity decreased. This ‘ecocide’ hypothesis attributes societal collapse on Rapa Nui to human overexploitation of natural resources. That’s the traditional narrative,” said Terry Hunt, Dean of the Clark Honors College and professor of anthropology at the University of Oregon and co-author of the study.This new study challenges that interpretation, and instead shows that the ancient population ate roughly equal amounts of seafood and terrestrial resources.“We also discovered that agricultural crops consumed must have been planted in soils that were deliberately managed and manipulated to provide better yields,” said Catrine Jarman, lead author of the study and a graduate student at the University of Bristol. “Previous work has shown that plants of Rapa Nui were grown in rock mulch gardens and planting enclosures known as manavai. These had been carefully constructed and deliberately managed, and our study showed that the islanders may have added fertilizers.”The research team analyzed archaeological material dating from 1400AD to the historic period from the Kon Tiki Museum in Oslo, Norway. These included some material from excavations led by the famous Norwegian explorer and anthropologist Thor Heyerdahl in the 1950s and 1980s. Other ...

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Invite Sustainability into your Classroom

Georgia College FrontPage RSS Feed

The Office of Sustainability is always seeking ways to engage with our students, and we would enjoy the opportunity to speak to your classes. Early in the fall semester is the perfect time for us to speak about all of our sustainability initiatives on campus, including recycling, composting, the West Campus Garden, our internship program and much more.We are available to chat for 5 minutes or speak for a full lecture time. If you are interested in having us visit your classes, please email sustaingc@gcsu.edu. We look forward to visiting. 


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OSU inks largest research grant in its history to begin ship construction



CORVALLIS, Ore. – Oregon State University has just received a grant of $121.88 million from the National Science Foundation to spearhead the construction of a new class of research vessels for the United States Academic Research Fleet. It is the largest grant in the university’s history.
This grant will fund the construction of the first of three planned vessels approved by Congress for research in coastal regions of the continental United States and Alaska. When funding for the next two vessels is authorized, the total grant to OSU could increase to as much as $365 million. The first vessel is slated to be operated by OSU for research missions focusing on the U.S. West Coast. The NSF will begin the competitive selection of operating institutions for the second and third vessels later this year – likely to universities or consortia for operations on the U.S. East Coast and the Gulf of Mexico.
“Oregon State University is extremely proud to lead this effort to create the next generation of regional ocean-going research vessels funded by NSF,” said OSU President Edward J. Ray. “Our exceptional marine science programs are uniquely positioned to advance knowledge of the oceans and to seek solutions to the threats facing healthy coastal communities – and more broadly, global ecological well-being – through their teaching and research.”
OSU was selected by the National Science Foundation in 2013 to lead the initial design phase for the new vessels, and to develop and execute a competitive selection for a shipyard in the United States to do the construction. Gulf Island Shipyards, LLC, in Louisiana was chosen and will conduct the detailed design verification over the next year. Officials hope to have a keel-laying ceremony for the first vessel in the spring of 2018, with the ship delivered to OSU for a year of extensive testing in 2020.
This new class of modern well-equipped ships is essential ...

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Jr. Cyclone Club Memberships Available Now!

Iowa State University



CALLING ALL JR. CYCLONES!

REGISTRATION FOR THE 2017-18 JR. CYCLONE CLUB
IS NOW OPEN FOR JUST $59!




 









ONE OF A KIND CYCLONE POWER T-SHIRT




FREE ADMISSION TO IOWA STATE EVENTS

Football: Jr. Cyclone Club Hillsides for all home games
Women's Basketball: General Admission
Volleyball: General Admission
Wrestling: General Admission
Gymnastics: General Admission
Soccer: General Admission
Softball: General Admission
Men's Basketball: Available for select games


EXPERIENCESIncluding clinics, special events, and MUCH MORE!

 





Hillside Parent Passes available for $99 each!(Limit of 2 per household. Children must be JCC members.)


 









FAN FEST

When: Sunday, August 20, 2017
Time: 1-3 PM
Location: Bergstrom Football Complex
What: Interactive sport stations, inflatable games, autograph sessions for fans and more!
FREE ADMISSION AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC!





CYCLONE EXPERIENCEFootball Kids Zone & Jr. Cyclone Club Station

When: Home football games
Time: Open 3 hours before kickoff at each home game (weather permitting). Closes 30 minutes prior to kickoff.
Location: NE corner of Jack Trice Stadium between parking lots 85E and S8. Click here for a map.
What: Inflatable attractions, face painting, and activities for kids.
FREE ADMISSION AND OPEN TO ALL KIDS!



Celebrate your child’s special day with the Cyclones by hosting
his or her birthday at an Iowa State Athletic Event!
 

Packages Include: tickets, clone cones, hot dogs, beverages, photo with Cy and more.
Click here for more information.





What is the Jr. Cyclone Club?The Jr. Cyclone Club is the official kid's club for Cyclone fans 12th grade and younger.

What are the Jr. Cyclone Club Hillsides?In Jack Trice Stadium, the northeast and northwest hillsides are designed solely for club kids and their parents. In order for the hillsides to remain exclusive for Jr. Cyclone Club families, hillside football tickets are NOT sold to the public. Jr. Cyclone Club parents may purchase a football season parent pass in order to sit with their Jr. Cyclone Club member on the hillsides ...

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History/Social Sciences Instructional Materials Now Available for Review

UCR Today


This invitation is open not just to educators but also to interested students, faculty, staff, and community members
By Sandra Baltazar Martinez on July 12, 2017
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All of the history/social science instructional materials currently up for consideration are now available in Room 217, the Learning Resources Display Center (LRDC), on the second floor of Tomás Rivera Library. ucr file

BY MELANIE RAMIRO 
California’s textbook adoption process is ready to take its next step forward – but first, the State Department of Education needs your input.
All of the history/social science instructional materials currently up for consideration are now available in Room 217, the Learning Resources Display Center (LRDC), on the second floor of Tomás Rivera Library. These materials are intended for use by elementary and middle school students, ranging from kindergarten through eighth grade.
“The LRDC provides a way for all interested parties to have some input into the textbook adoption process,” said Christopher Martone, UCR Library’s coordinator of Education Services and one of the State Board-appointed reviewers for History/Social Sciences instructional materials.
“If you want to review any of the materials, you can make an appointment to meet Christopher in Education Services,” explained Christina Cicchetti, Education/Reference librarian. “He will make the materials available for your review.”
This invitation is open not just to educators but also to interested students, faculty, staff, and community members. After reviewing the materials, patrons can submit their comments directly to the California State Department of Education by following these instructions.
“California has a network of Learning Resource Display Centers throughout the state,” Cicchetti added. “We serve Riverside County specifically, but anyone could come from anywhere to use our LRDC.”
Each LRDC can choose whether they want to display the materials while they are being reviewed, or only after the state’s adoption has been approved. In the inland southern California ...

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NY Times contest cites student essay on rap music

Olin BlogOlin Blog

Jack Zuckerman’s 450 word persuasive essay on the importance of teaching rap music in schools was one of  a record-breaking 7,895 entries in The New York Times’ Fourth Annual Student Editorial Contest. That’s stiff competition, but the rising sophomore was pleased to discover he earned one of 45 honorable mentions. Congrats, Jack! There were 10 winners and 15 runners-up. You can read Jack’s essay below the Q &A.
Jack Zuckerman
We caught up with Jack in his hometown Manheim Township near Lancaster, PA, where he’s been working this summer at a minor league baseball stadium. He plans to double-major in film studies and business, possibly marketing.
Q: Were you surprised when you received the NY Times Contest honorable mention?I was definitely surprised, especially because they didn’t send out emails. I found out while I was scanning the titles of recognized essays and saw my own at the bottom.
Q: Which artists would you feature in a course on rap?At least one from every major area in rap music, so maybe Tupac for the West Coast, Nas for the East Coast, OutKast for the South, and then an artist not necessarily affiliated with a geographical movement like MF Doom.
Q: Are you going to try to get into Prof. Jeffrey McCune’s  Kanye West course next year? [McCune is associate professor of women, gender and sexuality studies and African and African-American studies at WashU. He teaches “The Politics of Kanye West: Black Genius and Sonic Aesthetics.” ]Definitely, but “try” is the key word there.
Q: What are you looking forward to when you return to campus?I’m mostly looking forward to seeing my friends and getting more involved with my activities on campus.
Here’s the editorial Jack submitted to The New York Times contest:We Should be Teaching Rap Music in SchoolsI didn’t understand Toni Morrison ...

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NASA Names Dune on Mars for Late Geosciences Alumnus Nathan Bridges

UMass Amherst: News Archive

NASA announced on July 11 that it has named a rippled linear dune of dark Martian sand “Nathan Bridges Dune” after planetary scientist and UMass Amherst geosciences alumnus Nathan Bridges (Ph.D. 1997). He died in April of a sudden heart attack at age 50. He was a planetary research scientist at John Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.Bridges was leader of the “dune campaign” in NASA’s Curiosity team. The Martian feature was one research stop on the Curiosity rover’s mission to investigate active Martian dunes, according to NASA. A memorial recognition by the Lunar and Planetary Institute says, “Bridges was a senior expert on the geology of Mars, remote sensing techniques, and the role of wind-driven processes in planetary erosion and sedimentation on Earth, Mars, and Titan, Saturn’s largest moon.
Among his many important findings, Bridges discovered that wind is as important a geologic process on Mars as it is on Earth, despite the much lower density of the Martian atmosphere. He was an integral part of multiple Mars missions and instrument teams: he served as a co-investigator on the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) instrument on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, a co-investigator on the Mars Science Laboratory, Curiosity rover, ChemCam instrument, and a science team member on two Mars-2020 rover instruments, SuperCam and the Mars Environmental Dynamics Analyzer.”
Julie Brigham-Grette, department head of geosciences, recalls, “I remember him so well among a fun group of graduate students mapping other planets with George McGill and NASA funding. His sudden passing is a sad loss not only for his family, his colleagues at NASA and Johns Hopkins, but for our campus geoscience community. His wife Karen is also an alumna of our department.” Bridges is also survived by two children, Sarah and Matthew.



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New State Law Grants In-State Tuition for Military Veterans, Dependents

Headlines – Tennessee Today


A new state law will enhance access to UT for military veterans, service members, and their dependents.State of Tennessee Public Chapter 31 went into effect July 1. It waives out-of-state tuition and fees for military veterans, service members, and their dependents who are living in Tennessee and enrolled in any of the state’s colleges or universities using veterans’ educational benefits, regardless of their home of record.
“We will definitely get more students. It will definitely have an impact on UT,” said Veteran Student Services Coordinator Jayetta Rogers. She said she has been getting calls daily since the law was passed by the state legislature this spring.
The law has the most impact on active duty military personnel now residing in Tennessee who were living in another state (their home of record) when they enlisted. Their spouses and children are similarly affected.
Last spring, UT enrolled 475 veterans, military members, and more than 375 military spouses and dependents.
Of those, 25 were paying out-of-state tuition. The new law allowed 18 of those student veterans and dependents switch to in-state tuition.
UT has received several distinctions for being a veteran-friendly university.
The university ranks 31st among all public universities in the U.S. News and World Report’s 2017 list of Best Colleges for Veterans. In 2014, the Military Order of the Purple Heart designated UT a Purple Heart University. It was the first school in Tennessee to receive this designation.


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Pittsburgh-Paris Partnership: Pitt Medicine to Collaborate with French Research Institutes



Pitt School of Medicine Signs Collaborative Agreement with World-Renowned French Research Institutions

The agreement will enable researchers of all four institutions to cooperate on fundamental research, development of novel therapeutics, and clinical trials, with an initial focus on ophthalmology, vision and neuroscience. Along with joint research, the agreement also emphasizes exchange of academic personnel, joint academic conferences, and exchange of scientific, educational and scholarly materials.

The agreement, signed on July 12 at the French Embassy in Washington, D.C., highlights an important partnership between Pitt and the French institutions that was spurred by the recent recruitment of José-Alain Sahel, M.D., one of the world’s top experts in retinal diseases, as the chair of the Department of Ophthalmology at Pitt’s School of Medicine, director of the UPMC Eye Center, and the Eye and Ear Foundation Chair of Ophthalmology. Sahel retained his connections to Paris as the founder and director of the Institut de la Vision in Paris and as a professor at the Université Pierre-et-Marie-Curie of the Sorbonne Universités (which co-incidentally also is referred to by the acronym UPMC), a top ranked medical school and the largest scientific and medical complex in France.

Inserm, the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research, is the only public research institution solely focused on human health and medical research in France and a leading medical research agency worldwide; and CNRS, the French National Center for Scientific Research is the largest governmental research organization in France and the largest fundamental science agency in Europe.

“This agreement will further strengthen the robust scientific and educational partnerships between Pittsburgh and Paris, bringing to bear our outstanding intellectual capacities to address some of the most significant diseases that lead to blindness and vision impairment through basic and translational research,” said Sahel

“Taking on an immense challenge like the quest to cure blindness requires that we ...

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Els crustacis de l’ordre Tanaidacea tenien cura de les cries fa més de 105 milions d’anys

Universitat de Barcelona - Notícies



































Experts de la Facultat de Ciències de la Terra, l’Institut de Recerca de la Biodiversitat de la Universitat de Barcelona i l’Institut Geològic i Miner d’Espanya descobreixen les primeres evidències de cura parental en els crustacis de l’ordre Tanaidacea.




























Fa més de 105 milions d’anys, les femelles d’aquests crustacis de petites dimensions ja tenien una estructura corporal —el marsupi— destinada a la cura de la prole durant el seu desenvolupament.




























L'espècimen de Alavatanais carabe preservat en peces d’ambre dels jaciments de Peñacerrada (Àlaba, Espanya). Foto: IGME




























Reconstrucció d'una femella adulta de l'espècie Alavatanais margulisae.




























Una nova espècie cuidadora de la prole, la Daenerytanais maieuticus, deu el nom al personatge de ficció Daenerys Targaryen, la Mare de Dracs, la khaleesi de la sèrie Joc de Trons.











13/07/2017






Recerca






Un equip científic ha descobert les primeres evidències de cura parental en els crustacis de l’ordre Tanaidacea fa més de 105 milions d’anys, segons revela un article publicat a la revista Scientific Reports, del grup Nature. Aquest nou descobriment es basa en l’estudi de tres petits crustacis d’espècies diferents del Cretaci —Alavatanais carabe, Alavatanais margulisae i Daenerytanais maieuticus— que s’han preservat en peces d’ambre dels jaciments de Peñacerrada (Àlaba, Espanya) i La Buzinie (Charente, França), referents europeus en l’estudi del registre fòssil de l’ambre amb bioinclusions del Mesozoic.








Són autors del treball els investigadors Alba Sánchez i Xavier Delclòs, de la Facultat de Ciències de la Terra i de l’Institut de Recerca de la Biodiversitat (IRBio) de la Universitat de Barcelona; Enrique Peñalver, de l’Institut Geològic i Miner d’Espanya; Michael S. Engel, de la Universitat de Kansas (Estats Units); Graham Bird (Nova Zelanda), i Vincent Perrichot, de la Universitat de Rennes 1 (Franç ...

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Missouri S&T earns eighth at solar car race

News and Events

The solar car in action in Texas. Photo by Bob Phelan, Missouri S&T.
Missouri University of Science and Technology’s Solar Car Design Team placed eighth in the Formula Sun Grand Prix. The race challenges collegiate teams to design and build solar-powered vehicles.
The competition, held July 4-8, took place at the Circuit of the Americas Formula 1 track in Austin, Texas.
Before racing began, teams had to pass scrutineering to ensure that all safety measures were in place. After technical and safety inspections, teams then moved on to the track for three days of racing. Teams raced to complete as many laps as possible on the track in an 8-hour timeframe. None of the laps involved head-to-head racing. Eighteen teams competed at the event, including teams from Canada and Puerto Rico.
Missouri S&T’s team started strong on the track on the first day, completing 14 laps and moving to third on the leaderboard before the car’s motor began to have technical issues. Regenerative braking caused the motor to overheat, which tripped the motor’s controller and damaged the car’s battery box. The heat also disrupted the motor’s timing. Team members repaired the damage and on the second day the car completed 20 laps. On the third day, the car completed 54 laps. The team was assessed penalties for using third-wheel braking, but still finished with 69 total laps, which earned the team eighth place.
Missouri S&T’s car is an all-carbon-fiber composite vehicle with solar panels on the top. The entire car, including its electrical components, was designed and constructed by undergraduate students at Missouri S&T.
“This race sets us up for an even more successful season next year, when the team returns to the cross-country American Solar Challenge race,” says team president Conner Kostelac, a senior in engineering management from Platte City, Missouri. “The course ...

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Eye on UMSL: Rainbow sunset

UMSL Daily


Campus is a kaleidoscope of color as sprinklers water the lawn at sunset in front of the Millennium Student Center and the Recreation and Wellness Center.
This photograph was taken by UMSL photographer August Jennewein and is the latest to be featured in Eye on UMSL.

Short URL: http://blogs.umsl.edu/news/?p=69253


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Tiny Cellular Antennae Key to Fat Formation in Muscle

UCSF - Latest News Feed

Like it or not, as we age, our muscle cells are slowly exchanged, one by one, for fat cells. This process quickens when we injure a muscle, and an extreme form of this process is also seen in muscle-wasting diseases such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Now, scientists at UC San Francisco have shown that cellular antennae called cilia, found on fat-forming cells interspersed in muscle, play a key role in this muscle-to-fat transformation.

The findings, revealed in experiments with mice, and published July 13, 2017 in Cell, suggest a previously unsuspected connection between cilia and tissue renewal. This fresh molecular understanding could open up new prospects for regenerative medicine, and one day enable researchers to improve muscle renewal during aging and disease.

High levels of intramuscular fat have long been associated with a loss of strength and impaired mobility, as well as more falls in elderly or obese individuals, and in patients with DMD. “The frailty of age is a huge biomedical problem,” said Jeremy Reiter, MD, PhD, a professor of biochemistry and biophysics at UCSF and senior author of the new paper. “This study helps pave the way to learn how muscles normally age, and provides a new way to possibly improve muscle repair.”

Reiter has a long-standing research interest in tiny cellular appendages called primary cilia, which look a bit like the cellular tentacles that paramecia and other single-celled critters use to move and gather food. But unlike those motile cilia, primary cilia don’t move at all. Instead, they stand stiff and solitary on the surface of nearly all of our cells, including neurons, skin cells, bone cells and certain stem cells.

For centuries, these little attachments were largely ignored, and considered a vestigial structure with no known function. But “there has been a renaissance over the past decade in figuring out what these cilia do,” Reiter said, ...

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Op-ed: Should We Limit Spending on Lifesaving Drugs?

Health – UConn Today


“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times” is a familiar quote from the opening of Charles Dickens’ “A Tale of Two Cities,” but the phrase is also applicable to the specialty drug market in the United States today.
Specialty drugs, usually complex biologic products created by genetic alterations of living tissues or organisms, have revolutionized patient care by creating human proteins, enzymes, and antibodies that can treat diseases much more specifically than previously. These breakthroughs have come through a collective national choice to let drugmakers set prices and reap the profits with limited oversight – as opposed to many other countries with strict controls.
However, this choice has come at a steep price: Health care costs are soaring at an unsustainable pace, putting the finances of states, the federal government, companies, and millions of Americans at risk.
Every American – especially our lawmakers preparing to remold our health care system for the second time in eight years – needs to understand the choice we have made and grapple with where to go from here. In the end, it comes down to one difficult question: What value should we place on a human life?
Drug costs are crippling us financially
Between premiums, deductibles, and co-pays, a typical family of four will directly pay U.S. $11,000 of the estimated $27,000 it is expected to spend on health care in 2017, up 22 percent since 2013. That’s quite a lot, especially considering the average American worker made only $46,120 in 2015.
But it will be impossible to control these spiraling costs without getting a handle on prescription drug spending, which is growing at a rate at least three times faster than every other major medical category.
What many people don’t know is that spending on traditional drugs such as statins, acid controllers, and antibiotics hasn’t changed much. It’s specialty and biologic drugs that ...

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FIU's Gabrielle Rains Sets Record While Taking Canadian U20 Title

FIU Athletics

MIAMI (July 12, 2017) – It may be the summer time for the traditional college student, but there is no offseason for FIU track and field standout Gabrielle Rains when it comes to perfecting her craft in the discus. Rains, a rising sophomore for the Panthers, shows no signs of slowing down following a record-setting freshman campaign. On July 6, the Sherwood Park, Alberta, native won the Canadian U20 Track and Field Championship discus title at the Terry Fox Athletic Facility in Ottawa, Ontario. Rains set a new championships U20 record with her toss of 51.60m en route to the gold medal.Click here to read a piece on Rains and her Olympic aspirations in the Ottawa Citizen.
 
Rains will now compete on the international stage as she travels to Trujillo, Peru for the Pan-Am U20 Track and Field Championships, July 21-23, as one of 54 athletes that will represent Canada.
 
Before returning to Miami, Rains will take part in the 2017 Canada Summer Games at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg, August 3-4.
 
During her freshman season at FIU Rains enjoyed a banner season. She took second-place at the Conference USA Championships in El Paso, Texas, with a throw of 50.95m, and advanced to the NCAA Division I East Region Prelims in Lexington, Kentucky, where her throw of 49.45m was 25th.
 
It was, however, her first collegiate meet at the University of Miami that set the standard for Rains for the remainder of the season. During the Hurricane Invitational on March 18, Rains let loose on a throw of 53.10m which set a new school record and held up all season as the second-best throw in C-USA and the 42nd best in the nation. Also, Rains' 53.10m is the 17th-best U20 throw in the world this year and broke a 31-year-old Canadian record.Fans are encouraged to follow the team on Facebook (Facebook.com/FIUTrackXC) for ...

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Key, Toliver, Clapp Named to Watch Lists

LSUsports.net
Headline News





Brandon BerrioAssistant Communications Director



BATON ROUGE – LSU junior center Will Clapp has been named to the Outland Trophy Watch List, while junior linebacker Arden Key and junior cornerback Kevin Toliver II have been named to the Bronko Nagurski Watch List, The Maxwell Football Club announced Thursday.
The Outland Trophy, in its 72nd year, is awarded to the top interior lineman in the nation. Clapp, who is expected to take over at center for Tigers, is one of 19 centers on the watch list that features 81 total interior linemen.
Clapp was a part of an offense that broke multiple school records in 2016, including the single-game individual rushing records by Leonard Fournette and Derrius Guice along with the school record for total offense in an SEC game with 634 yards against Missouri.
The Bronko Nagurski Trophy is awarded to the National Defensive Player of the Year. Key, who was also named to the Maxwell and Bednarik watch lists earlier this week, set the single-season sacks record a year ago with 12. The Atlanta, Georgia, native totaled three PBUs and recovered three fumbles in 2017.
Toliver is expected to continue his impressive play that was seen in all 12 games of the Jacksonville, Florida, native’s freshman year and seven games in 2016 before suffering an injury. In seven games a year ago, Toliver recorded 21 tackles, including 12 solo. Toliver was also named to the Bednarik Award Watch List earlier this week.
The winner of the 72nd Outland Trophy – named after the late John Outland, an All-America lineman at Penn at the turn of the 20th century, will be announced live on ESPN at The Home Depot College Football Awards on Thursday, Dec. 7.
The annual Bronko Nagurski Trophy Banquet, presented by ACN, will be held on Monday, Dec. 4 at the Charlotte Convention Center.


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Dateline Rice for July 12, 2017

Rice University News & Media



NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL
Understanding Sectarianism in the Middle EastUssama Makdisi, the Arab-American Educational Foundation Professor of Arab Studies in History and professor of history, authored an op-ed.Cairo Review of Global Affairshttp://bit.ly/2t4dtOQ
Woody Harrelson gets insanely candid on sex, drugs, ‘Apes’ and those Han Solo firings In an interview, actor Woody Harrelson mentions that his mother attended Rice.Hollywood Reporterhttp://bit.ly/2uiMHSZ
JUMPSTART 2017 will be held on 4 and 5 August 2017 at the India International Centre, New DelhiRice is mentioned.MenaFNhttp://bit.ly/2t4dJ0g
HOUSTON/TEXAS
Good news, bad news for electricity deregulationResidential electricity rates in competitive areas in Texas have declined relative to wholesale electricity prices, which suggests that Texas electricity providers are minimizing costs to meet market demands, according to a new paper from Rice’s Baker Institute for Public Policy.Houston Chronicle (Subscription required. This article appeared on the front of the Business section in the July 12 print edition with a different headline, “Twist emerges on power prices.”)http://bit.ly/2vcTBWgReport finds ‘mixed results’ from electric market deregulationHouston Public Mediahttp://bit.ly/2tIIyX5KUT-FMhttp://bit.ly/2uRbDOi (Click on the audio button to listen to the broadcast.) 
Rice top Texas school on latest ‘Best Colleges for Your Money’ listRice is No. 12 on Money’s list of “Best Colleges for Your Money.”Houston Business Journalhttp://bit.ly/2u9mg1r3 Texas schools make top 50 ‘Best Colleges for Your Money’WBAPhttp://bit.ly/2uj1kWjUT, Texas A&M make top 40 ‘Best Colleges for Your Money’Fort Worth Star-Telegramhttp://bit.ly/2vdfPrg25 best US colleges and universities for your money: Princeton, Baruch, UMich, Berkeley and UCLA top 2017 listCEO World Magazinehttp://bit.ly/2sQkvSS
Criticism of Trump is piling up. But what has he done right?Mark Jones, the Joseph D. Jamail Chair in Latin American Studies, professor of political science, fellow in political science at ...

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La UPC escala posicions i se situa entre les 25 millors universitats joves del món

Actualitat UPC


L’edició 2017-2018 del rànquing ‘QS Top 50 under 50’ publicada avui, 13 de juliol, posiciona les universitats segons el seu resultat a la darrera edició del rànquing general, el QS World University Ranking (QS WUR) i classifica les 150 primeres institucions al món amb menys de 50 anys de vida. Les variables analitzades es poden consultar a l’apartat 'Indicadors'.En l’àmbit mundial, la UPC ha passat de la posició 32 a la 25, escalant 7 posicions respecte l’edició de 2017. A Europa, la Universitat escala al vuitè lloc i puja dues posicions respecte l’edició passada del rànquing mentre que, si considerem el sistema universitari espanyol, la UPC passa de la cinquena a la tercera posició. Pel que fa a les politècniques estatals, la UPC manté la seva posició de lideratge en aquest rànquing.

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US Army Surgeon General Visits UCMC and C-STARS

UC Health News

US Army Surgeon General Lt. Gen. Nadja West visited UCMC Thursday, July 6,
2017. She was given a series of presentations on C-STARS and visited the sim
lab.

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Celebrate the Season at Dec. 5 Holiday Concert

Lone Star College CyFair News

Published on: November 05, 2015

Bring the family to celebrate the season with an afternoon holiday concert Dec. 5 at Lone Star College-CyFair.
Dont miss this joyous musical celebration performance of Robert Rays The Gospel Mass and other multicultural works featuring our Carnegie Hall-invited Concert Choir and the internationally acclaimed Houston Festival Choir, said Alex Qian, LSC-CyFairs artistic director of vocal activities.
The 3 p.m. concert will be held in the Main Stage Theatre, which is located in the Center for the Arts building on the Barker Cypress campus at 9191 Barker Cypress.
Visit LoneStar.edu/BoxOffice for ticket pricing, online purchasing and a complete season schedule. Contact 281.290.5201 or CFC.BoxOffice@LoneStar.edufor other information.







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Lone Star College-North Harris student delegation travels to China as part of exchange program

Lone Star College North Harris News

Published on: July 02, 2014 A select group of Lone Star College-North Harris students will be taking the trip of a lifetime this summer. As part of the China U.S. Exchange Foundation, 18 students from LSC-North Harris will visit China August 2-16.
During this two-week trip, the students will be traveling to Beijing, Hangzhou and Shanghai, learning about Chinas educational and economic systems, and culture.
Our students have an opportunity to expand their education in a global context, said Dr. Wei Li, LSC-North Harris professor of English and developmental studies, and faculty representative participating in the trip. I see great potential for these students to become friendship ambassadors between the United States and China, successful diplomats and business people, and citizens and peace makers of the global village.
The group will also be visiting various Chinese universities, meeting the students and faculty, and attending lectures and presentations on Chinese culture. In addition, they will also visit new energy source factories and learn about international business.
U.S. Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, representing Texas 18th Congressional District, was instrumental in making this opportunity available to Lone Star College students.
This trip fulfills a commitment made by the Peoples Republic of China, and I am pleased that they will make sure these Lone Star College students will take part in this groundbreaking program which hopefully will serve as a catalyst for future delegations for students across this great nation, said Congresswoman Jackson Lee.
The main goals for this program are to reach out to qualified and motivated students and provide them with international exposure to different cultures, and provide future educational and business opportunities. 
The program is designed to provide a diverse group of young Americans living or attending school in Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) Member districts with the opportunity to experience Chinese culture and gain exposure to broad career opportunities in an era ...

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Autism still gets dismissed by some doctors, family learns in yearlong challenge

Newsroom: InTheNews

Publication Date: 7/4/2017
ByLine: San Diego Union Tribune
URL Link: http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/business/biotech/sd-me-samo-autism-20170704-story.html
Page Content: ​Features UC San Diego Autism Center of Excellence and Robert Naviaux, MD, PhD
News Type: Regional
News_Release_Date: July 07, 2017
NewsTags: Autism; Neurology; Pediatrics; Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences

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What can bird brains teach us about human cognition? Plenty

Iowa Now - Research

PAGE 54


PAGE 58

KEEPING
DEMENTIA
AT BAY

Psychologists’
research on
cognitive
reserve is
uncovering
ways to
prevent
decline

PAGE 46

GST# R127612802

A PUBLICATION OF THE AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION • JULY/AUGUST 2017

psychology monitor on



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Cross Discusses State of American Science

Science and Technology

Campus and Community Science and Technology

Cross Discusses State of American Science


Georgia Tech’s executive vice president for research meets with national media to discuss federal funding and scientific research.




By
Laura Diamond | July 12, 2017
• Atlanta, GA








Click image to enlarge

Steve Cross, Georgia Tech’s executive vice president for research, was one of 11 panelists for a media roundtable discussion about “The State of American Science.”  The event was organized by the Association of American Universities and The Science Coalition.





As political leaders discuss funding priorities and the role of higher education, Georgia Tech joined other top universities to discuss with national media the importance of scientific research on college campuses.

Steve Cross, Georgia Tech’s executive vice president for research, was one of 11 panelists for Wednesday’s roundtable discussion about “The State of American Science.” The event, organized by the Association of American Universities and The Science Coalition, covered funding, university research and related public policy issues.

“Scientific and technological discovery has been the driving force of American innovation for more than a century, and has resulted in critical advancements in public health, economic growth and national security,” Cross said. “Many of those breakthroughs were realized in the laboratories of the country’s best research universities and made possible because of federal investment and industry collaboration.”  

In 2016, Georgia Tech conducted $791 million in research. The Institute also helped launch more than 100 new startups last year. During the 2016 fiscal year, Georgia Tech received 72 patents and 657 industry contracts.

“Georgia Tech is proud to participate with our peer institutions in this discussion, and we believe it is imperative our institution and others continue the valuable research happening on our respective campuses,” Cross said.

The other panelists included senior research officers from: Florida State University, Iowa State University, Johns Hopkins University, Marquette University, Purdue University, State University of New York, University of California – San ...

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Highlanders Offseason Punctuated By New Hires, Promotions

gohighlanders.com


Riverside—UC Riverside's 2017-18 athletics season doesn't begin for another six weeks, but that doesn't mean things are quiet in the Inland Empire. Director of Intercollegiate Athletics Tamica Smith Jones announced a number of recent hires and promotions for the department, today."It is important for us to continue to evaluate ourselves as a competitive Division I program," said Smith Jones. "With that, we seek to make essential adjustments that will afford staff the opportunity to be more impactful and focus on responsibilities that will serve the best interests of our department's growth."We are fortunate to recruit and retain staff who are committed to ensuring our student athletes have the very best collegiate experience and talented coaches striving to prepare them for the highest level of success on and off the playing fields.  "I am very excited about these internal moves, new hires and other personnel additions still to come, as we strive for competitiveness atop the Big West Conference and continue to raise our profile nationally."NEWCOMERS
Camelia Trahan joins the Highlanders as the assistant athletics director for marketing and external relations. She comes to UC Riverside after two years as the assistant athletics director for marketing at the University of the Incarnate Word. She also spent time at the West Coast Conference managing the conference's marketing, brand management and promotional efforts; and for the Great Lakes Valley Conference as an assistant commissioner working extensively with championships and marketing.Byron Rimm rounds out the Men's Basketball coaching staff joining the Highlanders as an assistant. He is best known for his time as the head coach of the Prairie View A&M Panthers from 2006-16. Last season, he served as the director of basketball operations at Texas A&M-Corpus Christi. Rimm played collegiately at Ventura College and Cal State Los Angeles.The athletics business office added three new members ...

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NASA's Juno Spacecraft Spots Jupiter's Great Red Spot

Caltech News tagged with "astronomy + exoplanets + JPL + planetary_science"


Images of Jupiter's Great Red Spot reveal a tangle of dark, veinous clouds weaving their way through a massive crimson oval. The JunoCam imager aboard NASA's Juno mission snapped pics of the most iconic feature of the solar system's largest planetary inhabitant during its Monday (July 10) flyby. The images of the Great Red Spot were downlinked from the spacecraft's memory on Tuesday and placed on the mission's JunoCam website Wednesday morning."For hundreds of years scientists have been observing, wondering and theorizing about Jupiter's Great Red Spot," said Scott Bolton, Juno principal investigator from the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. "Now we have the best pictures ever of this iconic storm. It will take us some time to analyze all the data from not only JunoCam, but Juno's eight science instruments, to shed some new light on the past, present and future of the Great Red Spot."As planned by the Juno team, citizen scientists took the raw images of the flyby from the JunoCam site and processed them, providing a higher level of detail than available in their raw form. The citizen-scientist images, as well as the raw images they used for image processing, can be found at: https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/junocam/processing"I have been following the Juno mission since it launched," said Jason Major, a JunoCam citizen scientist and a graphic designer from Warwick, Rhode Island. "It is always exciting to see these new raw images of Jupiter as they arrive. But it is even more thrilling to take the raw images and turn them into something that people can appreciate. That is what I live for."Measuring in at 10,159 miles (16,350 kilometers) in width (as of April 3, 2017) Jupiter's Great Red Spot is 1.3 times as wide as Earth. The storm has been monitored since 1830 and has possibly existed for more than 350 years. In modern times, ...

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Jazz in July All Star Faculty Performance - Week One

UMass Amherst: Events Calendar

VIEW EVENTS BY CATEGORY


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Animal care program receives continued full accreditation

Vanderbilt News



Thursday, Jul. 13, 2017, 9:31 AM






by Printha McCallum
Vanderbilt University Medical Center’s (VUMC) Animal Care and Use Program has received continued full accreditation from the Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care (AAALAC International).
In reviewing VUMC’s program, the AAALAC Council on Accreditation’s report acknowledged strong institutional support, the provision of administrative and financial support for the maintenance and update of facilities, including the purchase of new equipment, the new ARIES protocol management system and the proactive measures taken to ensure a smooth transition of the VUMC and Vanderbilt University (VU) reorganization.
The council also cited the program’s excellence for employee personal risk assessment by Vanderbilt Occupational Health and Wellness and Vanderbilt Environmental Health and Safety; dedicated and qualified animal care personnel; the robust and effective post-approval monitoring program; the well managed and documented veterinary care program; and state-of-the-art surgical and pathology facilities.
“The outcome validates the hard work and dedication to responsible research and the humane care and use of laboratory animals of everyone involved in animal research at both VUMC and VU,” said Jeanne Wallace, DVM, Vice President for Animal Care.
The assessment and accreditation process, which takes place every three years, includes a thorough inspection of animal research facilities, active protocols, training and safety programs and supporting documentation. By participating in these voluntary inspections VUMC demonstrates its commitment to maintaining the highest standards of animal care while pursuing groundbreaking biomedical research.
AAALAC International is a private, nonprofit organization that promotes the humane treatment of animals in science through voluntary accreditation and assessment programs.







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Tom Scott Memorial Fund Established

SDSU College of Sciences


The fund will assist SDSU students planning to study abroad.

By Coleen L. Geraghty


The family of retired San Diego State University dean and vice president Thomas R. Scott has created a memorial fund to support student scholarships for international experiences.Scott served SDSU as dean of the College of Sciences, vice president for research, dean of the Graduate Division and chief executive officer of the SDSU Research Foundation before retiring in 2014. He passed away on May 15.Scott and his wife, Bonnie, who retired as chair of the Department of Women’s Studies, were avid travelers. Donations to the fund can be mailed to The Campanile Foundation, Attn: Gift Processing, 5500 Campanile Drive, San Diego, CA 92182-1968 or made online. A memorial service for Scott is planned for 11 a.m. on Sunday, July 9, at Inspiration Point in Balboa Park, located behind the Parks and Recreation Administration Building.






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On the Front Lines of Animal Heart Care

Tufts Now All Stories

Kristen Antoon, a veterinary technician at Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine’s Foster Hospital for Small Animals, a year ago became the 20th certified veterinary technician specialist in cardiology in the United States. Her responsibilities include working with clients and their pets and conducting baseline evaluations such as electrocardiograms (ECGs), which can reveal any irregularities in heartbeats, as well as assisting with and performing echocardiograms and non-invasive blood pressure and cardiac catheter procedures.A graduate of the University of Connecticut with a degree in animal science, she joined the ICU team at Tufts in 2007, after working as an ICU and cardiology veterinary technician at Angell Animal Medical Center in Springfield, Massachusetts. While working in the ICU, she developed a passion for cardiology, and joined the Tufts cardiology team in 2012. In 2015, she started the application process to become a veterinary technician specialist in cardiology, a specialty recognized by the Academy of Internal Medicine for Veterinary Technicians.  
Emily Tompkins Karlin, V08, a resident in cardiology, praised Antoon as someone who pays “remarkable attention to patient care,” she said. “She is so dedicated to the health and overall well-being of our patients, and consistently goes above and beyond for them.”
Recently, Antoon talked with Tufts Now about her work and how she’s inspiring other veterinary technicians to also aim high.
Tufts Now: What kind of work did you do when you first came?
Kristen Antoon: I was in intensive care, but when a job opened up in the cardiology department, I applied. The heart is a very complicated organ to understand, but I wanted a challenge. While the ICU is an environment of hustle and bustle, in cardiology we have a chance to get to know the client and the patient—to establish a relationship. I like being able to talk to the owners and be a resource for them. I have ...

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How to Start Your Business

Events at UCF

This NO COST seminar is designed to help entrepreneurs understand what it takes to start a business, including:
An introduction to business plans and the importance of preparing one.
Exploring business entities - sole proprietorship, partnership, corporation, and Limited Liability Corporation.
Determining the local, state, or federal licensing requirements.
This workshop will help take the mystery out of starting a business and give you the confidence to become a business owner.
Register: 
North Lake:1/12/20174/6/20177/13/201710/5/2017
South Lake:1/19/20174/13/20177/20/201710/12/2017

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RIT to provide process expertise for health screening project for 3-year-olds

RIT News Releases - Top Stories







Increasing access to GROW Rochester health and developmental screenings could help improve early childhood learning





June 19, 2017 by Michelle Cometa Follow Michelle Cometa on TwitterFollow RITNEWS on TwitterRebecca Ziebarth and Margi Ochs

Rochester Institute of Technology and GROW Rochester have teamed up on a citywide project to help increase the number of 3-year-olds in the city receiving timely and necessary health and preventive services. Early screening to assess health issues and providing suitable interventions could increase the likelihood of children being well-prepared for, and doing well, in school.

Identifying 3-year-olds in the city for health assessment screenings has been a challenge, with only about a third of the children readily accessible in early preschool programs or other formal and easily identified organizations. For the remaining children, GROW Rochester is intent on finding multiple ways to increase parental and community awareness of and access to screening, assessment and follow up services.

RIT’s John D. Hromi Center for Quality and Applied Statistics (CQAS) is participating with GROW Rochester and the Children’s Institute providing process support on this major health and developmental screening project with the goal of engaging a much higher percentage of families with 3-year-olds. The team intends to increase access from 1,000 children and families to 3,000.

Generally, by the time children are 3 they have completed well-child visits. GROW Rochester will complement existing care by “going to where the children are” and provide screenings for vision, hearing, speech, dental, social-emotional, cognitive, motor and other developmental needs that could impact learning if not checked prior to beginning school, said Rebecca Ziebarth, CQAS project manager.

“The partnership between the GROW Rochester and RIT will benefit Rochester’s children today and in the future,” said Ziebarth. She and Margi Ochs, director of Business Development and Lean Six Sigma Master Black Belt, are leading the RIT portion of the project. “If we can catch health ...

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RIT/NTID names Student Life Team director

University News - Diversity







Marvin “Tim” Albert has experience in school counseling and leadership





July 12, 2017 by Vienna McGrain Follow Vienna McGrain on TwitterFollow RITNEWS on TwitterTim Albert

Rochester Institute of Technology’s National Technical Institute for the Deaf has named Marvin “Tim” Albert of Columbus, Ohio, as director of the college’s Student Life Team.

Albert has more than 11 years of experience in the K-12 education field as a peer/school counselor, supervisor, student life coordinator and dean of students. He earned a diploma in applied computer technology and an Associate in Applied Science degree in imaging technology from RIT/NTID, and went on to earn both bachelor’s and master’s degrees in social work from Gallaudet University.

As president of National Black Deaf Advocates and board member of the Conference of Educational Administrators of Schools and Programs for the Deaf, Albert worked to make improvements to educational programs and schools for deaf and hard-of-hearing students.

“I’m pleased to welcome Tim back to the RIT/NTID community,” said Gerry Buckley, NTID president and RIT vice president and dean. “His national leadership experience along with his love for the college and our students will usher in a time of renewed vitality to the Student Life Team.”

In his role as Student Life Team director, Albert will supervise and oversee co-curricular events including clubs and Greek life for RIT/NTID’s 1,200 deaf and hard-of-hearing students.




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UW Daily – July 12, 2017

UW Daily

UW System / Top Stories
On Campus
COL: Our Views: U-Rock dorm lacks broad appeal, Editorial, Janesville Gazette, July 11
COL: Gannett Foundation gives 4 grants to Fond du Lac nonprofits, Fond du Lac Reporter, July 11
EXT: Internet Fair In Mercer Updates Public On Broadband, WXPR, July 11
EXT: Deerfield teens attend 4-H leadership conference,com, July 10
EXT: Hail adds to tough year for Manitowoc County farmers, Manitowoc Herald Times Reporter, July 10
EXT: Polish Center hosting garden tours July 16, South Now, July 11
EAU: Kids dream big at UW-Eau Claire entrepreneurship camp, WEAU 13 News, July 11
LAX: Program at Northside hopes to help students deal with trauma, stress, NewsTalk 1410AM 92.3FM, July 10
LAX: Northside Elementary raising funds for trauma-informed school program, La Crosse Tribune, July 11
LAX: Student, housing fees to increase slightly at UW-La Crosse, WXOW.com, July 12
MAD: UW, Morgridge scientists’ breakthrough in engineered arteries could be used to treat heart disease, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, July 11
MAD: Wisconsin researchers awarded grant to fix algorithmic bias, AP, July 11
MAD: Library Mall fountain restarted after 6 years — a wonder to some, underwhelming to others, Wisconsin State Journal, July 12
MAD: Paul Fanlund: Announcing the Cap Times Idea Fest, a new way to reach a better state, Capital Times, July 12
MAD: Sub-Zero Group opens UW Health clinic on site for employees, Capital Times, July 11
MAD: Video game by UW-Madison group is up for national award, Capital Times, July 11
MIL: UWM prof collaborates on app for adolescent and young adult cancer patients, allnurses.com, July 10
MIL: Peck alum uses web series to teach kids cooking and nutrition skills, Twin Cities Arts Reader, July 11
PKS: Rummage with a cause, My KenoshaCounty.com, July 11
PKS: A cappella music camp is pitch perfect, Kenosha News, July 11
PLT: UW-Platteville Students Studying Effects of Drought with Trees, Wisconsin Ag Connection, July 11
WHT: Overture Offers Kennedy Center Seminar with UWW and Monona Terrace, Broadway World, July 11
National
...

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