Thursday, July 20, 2017

A Profile of James Dunford, MD, Recipient of the 2017 James O. Page/JEMS Leadership Award

Newsroom: InTheNews

Publication Date: 7/10/2017
ByLine: Journal of Emergency Services
URL Link: http://www.jems.com/articles/print/volume-42/issue-7/features/a-profile-of-james-dunford-md-recipient-of-the-2017-james-o-page-jems-leadership-award.html
Page Content: ​Features James Dunford, MD (Emeritus)
News Type: National
News_Release_Date: July 14, 2017
NewsTags: Emergency/Trauma; Corporate - Quality, Awards, Diversity, Leadership

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President Harreld: Faculty research, scholarship key to student achievement

Iowa Now - Research

Bruce HarreldIt’s hard to believe, but the fall semester is only a month away. Already, I can picture the hustle and bustle of move-in and new Hawkeyes finding their way to their classes for the first time, settling into the swing of college life. And I’m thinking of all of the new experiences they will have, the exciting trails they will blaze for themselves at the University of Iowa. There are countless ways to navigate a university experience. That’s quite possibly the most important thing the UI provides—the opportunity for students to find their own path, to set their own milestones on the road of life. And what allows them to do that is the work of our outstanding faculty who will help our students on their journey.

It’s clear to me that faculty research and scholarship are the keys to our students’ success. When UI faculty pursue their academic interests, they not only expand our knowledge about everything from Iowa’s watershed to Bronze Age archaeology but also inspire students to follow their own passions. Critical to the educational process is a faculty that has been out there in the thick of it, that has dealt with and overcome the challenges of difficult and worthwhile research. These seasoned scholars teach students not just what they have discovered but how they have discovered it. That “how” isn’t limited to the research process itself; Iowa faculty advise their students about academics, but they also teach them about building a fulfilling life.

That process often hinges on collaboration between scholars and students. When faculty researchers and undergraduates work together, they’re able to get to know one another. Collaboration like this is where students can truly see the spark of their mentor’s interest in a subject, their passion for the work. And in order to ...

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PRESS-ENTERPRISE: Top-10 List—The Best Highlights From UC Riverside Players In Major League Baseball

gohighlanders.com


Riverside—The UC Riverside baseball program has produced 18 players who have made it to The Show. The list ranges from potential Hall of Famer Troy Percival to World Series winners to goofy-at-heart Joe Kelly, who once noted on his bio that he was related to gangster Machine Gun Kelly.Kelly is one of four former Highlanders who have played in the majors this season, along with Chris Smith, Marc Rzepczynski and Matt Andriese.There a plenty of highlights to go around, but we've narrowed it down. Here's a list of the Top-10 MLB highlights for former UC Riverside players.To read the rest of the article, please visit the Press-Enterprise website.


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Downtown Beats Summer Concert Series

UMass Amherst: Events Calendar

The Downtown Beats Summer Concert Series brings live music to the park in downtown Amherst. Featuring award-winning and local musicians on Thursday evenings in late July and early August. July 20: Mister G with In the Nick of TimeJuly 27: Colorway with Court EtiquetteAugust 3: Old Flame and Mamma's MarmaladeAugust 10: Shokazoba and The Alchemystics


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A Robot That Grows

All News @ UCSB

At first glance, robots would appear to have exactly nothing in common with sweet peas or other climbing vines. Yet thanks to some innovative scientists, they now share at least one trait: the ability to extend their reach.Inspired by the growing action of plants and other living things, researchers at UC Santa Barbara and Stanford University have developed a tubular robot that — much like a sweet pea — navigates its environment by extending its tip and controlling its growing direction based on what it senses externally. Such a machine lends itself well to a variety of purposes in constrained environments, from clearing arterial blockages to tunneling through rubble for search and rescue operations.
“When you think about robots today, the majority of them are in the world of factories,” said UCSB mechanical engineer Elliot Hawkes. “But there’s a big push right now to see if we can create robots that could actually live and help out in the human world.” Robots, known for their precision and consistent, repeatable action in highly controlled spaces, are now being explored for their potential to work under variable circumstances. For instance, said Hawkes, these so-called “soft” robots may adapt their actions to the presence of obstacles (including humans) or change shape to interact in a variety of spaces. Research on this project, titled “A soft robot that navigates its environment through growth,” appears in the journal Science Robotics.
While much research has been done on robot locomotion, from rolling to flying and even animal-inspired walking, a robot that elongates and extends is a fairly new challenge for mechanical engineers. The design of this particular soft robot was inspired by nature, specifically by trailing vines and fungal hyphae, and even by nerve cells, all of which grow from their tips.
“In the cases where nature uses this type of movement to go somewhere, it’ ...

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Event to make hand surgeries possible for uninsured people

Vanderbilt News



by Tom Wilemon | Thursday, Jul. 20, 2017, 9:31 AM






Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) employees are making it possible for uninsured people suffering from carpal tunnel syndrome and other hand disorders to receive surgical treatment.
About 30 employees are giving up a Saturday to volunteer during Vanderbilt Orthopaedic Outreach Day on Aug. 5. The Shade Tree Clinic, a free health clinic staffed by Vanderbilt University School of Medicine students, is referring the patients.
The event is part of the Touching Hands Project, an initiative of the American Society for Hand Surgery.
“The Society for Hand Surgery is our national organization,” said Donald Lee, M.D., professor of Orthopaedic Surgery and Rehabilitation. “They have an international outreach program where they go to international areas to volunteer their services. They are also trying to develop a national program. They did one project about a year ago in Atlanta. This will be their second program.”
Lee and Mihir Desai, M.D., assistant professor of Orthopaedic Surgery and Rehabilitation, will be performing the procedures at the Vanderbilt Outpatient Surgery Center. The surgeries will be for carpal tunnel, trigger finger, ganglion cysts and other hand disorders.
Nurses, administrative staff, anesthesiologists, parking valets and employees from other departments will also be volunteering.
“This is a good team-building exercise for the people who are working at the Outpatient Surgery Center,” Lee said. “I think they take a lot of pride in being able to help the people in the Middle Tennessee area.”




Media Inquiries: Tom Wilemon, (615) 322-4747 tom.wilemon@vanderbilt.edu





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University of Missouri announces leadership appointments

University of Missouri System

June 26, 2017
Several joint appointments will contribute to efficiency, campus alignment

COLUMBIA, Mo. – Today, University of Missouri System President Mun Choi and MU Interim Chancellor Garnett Stokes announced four leadership appointments effective July 1. Several leaders will have joint appointments designed to unify and consolidate efforts at the system and campus level.

“The University of Missouri System and our four campuses are at a historic, transformative time,” Choi said. “Since joining the University in March, I have worked diligently to ensure we have the right people at the leadership table as we face unprecedented challenges and opportunities. I am proud of the team we have built, and these appointments will ensure that the University moves forward with the intention, coordination and nimbleness required of us.”

The following individuals have new or extended appointments:

Jonathan Curtright will serve as both chief executive officer and chief operating officer for MU Health Care, consolidating two executive positions. He will report to the UM System president and the MU chancellor. Curtright, who joined MU Health Care in 2016, previously served as COO and interim CEO.

Prior to his appointment at MU Health Care, Curtright served as COO at Indiana University Health; as chief operations officer for ambulatory services at UK HealthCare in Lexington, Kentucky; and as an administrator of various departments at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.

Additionally, Patrick Delafontaine, dean of the MU School of Medicine, will now have a split reporting relationship with the UM System president; MU chancellor regarding clinical affairs; and MU provost on matters relating to academic affairs.

Ryan D. Rapp, previously interim vice president for finance and chief financial officer, has been appointed vice president for finance for the UM System.

A native of Missouri, Rapp has worked for the University since 2010 and is a certified public accountant. Previously, he worked at PricewaterhouseCoopers. He graduated from MU Trulaske College of ...

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Shield Yourself Sun Safety Event

Events at UCF

Got Spots? Get ready to save your own skin with a special sun safety event!Look for the Student Health Services tent OUTSIDE at the bottom of the stairs in front of the Recreation and Wellness Center.
Stop by for:Free Skin Cancer screening by licensed DermatologistsAnswers to any and all of your skin related questionsGiveawaysPrizesand MORE!

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Library receives Recordings at Risk grant to preserve Cabrillo Festival tapes

Student News

UC Santa Cruz is the recipient of a Recordings at Risk grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR). The award is designed to support the preservation of rare and unique audio content of high scholarly value.
The University Library’s Special Collections will use the grant to digitize 69 open-reel audiotapes of live music performances from the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music.These recordings were originally made by KPFA, a Berkeley community radio station. They were later transferred to the Bay Area music non-profit organization, Other Minds, which last year donated its archives to UC Santa Cruz.
The recordings will be included in the Library catalog and made available on demand to patrons both on-site and via remote access. They provide insights into the early creative processes of composers and artists who are recognized influencers of American new music and will be of great interest to musicologists, historians, composers, programmers, students, and others interested in experimental and avant-garde music.
“The CLIR grant officially starts this November, and wraps up in April of 2018,” said archivist Kate Dundon of Special Collections & Archives.
”For this grant, we based our selections on (Other Minds Executive Director) Charles Amirkhanian's curatorial priorities. These particular recordings include several world premiers of European composers.”

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UW Daily – July 19, 2017

UW Daily

UW System / Top Stories
On Campus
EAU: Workshop focuses on nature and design to improve health, La Crosse Tribune, July 18
EAU: Students paint owls at Chippewa Falls park (activity part of the Summer Institute: Eau Claire through UW-Eau Claire), WEAU 13 News, July 18
GRB: Mosquito capable of transmitting Zika virus found in Wisconsin, UWGB’s Michael Draney gives expert opinion, wearegreenbay.com, July 18
GRB: Experts gather at UW-Green Bay to discuss plan to improve Bay of Green Bay, WHBY-TV, July 18
GRB: UW-Green Bay ‘snaps’ at its students, Green Bay Press Gazette, July 18
GRB: Green Bay’s Ninja Warriors advance to Denver finals (including UW-Green Bay’s Luke Chambers) Green Bay Press-Gazette, July 18
EXT: 2017 Farm Technology Days, growing better in Kewaunee County, Wisconsin State Farmer, July 16
EXT: Summer Beef Meeting Planned in Arlington, Wisconsin Ag Connection, July 18
EXT: Broadband committee, UW Extension hold Internet Fair, Daily Globe, July 19
EXT: Sun Prairie Community Schools to expand programming for low income families through new grant, Wisconsin State Journal, July 18
EXT: FaB Wisconsin accepting applications for second accelerator class, On Milwaukee, July 18
EXT: Lincoln County fair provides opportunity to learn through 4-H projects, Wausau Daily Herald, July 19
EXT: 5 University of Wisconsin Campuses Are Accepting Applications to Online Degree in Applied Computing, PR Newswire, July 19
MAD: Controversial bill blocking abortion training at UW brings heated debate, WISC-TV 3, July 18
MAD: Medical Groups: Wisconsin Abortion Bill Would Jeopardize Doctor Training, Wisconsin Public Radio, July 18
MAD: Protect Healthcare and the UW System, Column, Urban Milwaukee, July 18
MAD: Scammer using spoofed police phone numbers to demand UW students pay up or else, Wisconsin State Journal, July 18
MAD: UWPD warns of phone scam targeting students, WISC-TV 3, July 18
MAD: Mosquito capable of spreading Zika found in Dane County, NBC-15, July 18
MAD: UW students crucial to creating new museum exhibit in Mount Horeb, NBC-15, July 18
MAD: UW adopts clear bag policy at Camp ...

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In Frogs, Early Activity of Gut Microbiome Shapes Later Health

UConn Today


Biologists at the University of Connecticut and University of South Florida have found that a crucial window in the development of tadpoles may influence a frog’s ability to fight infectious diseases as an adult.
The scientists showed that an early-life disruption of the gut and skin bacterial communities of tadpoles later affects the adult frogs’ ability to fight off parasitic gut worms. Led by Sarah Knutie of UConn, the team published its findings in the July 20 edition of Nature Communications.
The abundance of certain bacteria in juveniles was linked to parasite resistance in adulthood.
“Our study found that a disruption of bacteria in tadpoles has enduring negative effects on how adult frogs deal with their parasites,” Knutie said. “These results suggest that preventing early-life disruptions of bacteria by factors such as nutrition, antibiotics, and pollution, might confer protection against diseases later in life.”
The project is significant not only for the insight it provides in threats to the health of the world’s frogs, but in its potential applicability to understanding the immune systems of mammals and even humans.
The impact of a healthy bacterial community in the gut is an increasing focus of scientists looking to understand a wide range of ailments in many species, including humans. Previous research has found that an early-life disruption of the gut microbiota in mammals can result in a hyper-reactive immune system that may increase the subsequent risk of immune-related health issues, such as allergies and autoimmune diseases.
Testing the effects of early-life disruption of the microbiota on later-life resistance to infections. (Photos by Mark Yokoyama)In their experiments, the scientific team manipulated the bacterial communities of Cuban tree frog tadpoles and then exposed them to parasites later in life. The tadpoles were either raised in natural pond water or one of three other treatments to manipulate the bacterial communities: sterile pond ...

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New wireless guest network at UAA debuts July 30

Green & Gold News


Beginning July 30, UAA IT Services will be introducing a new wireless guest network on the Anchorage campus. The “UAA WiFi – Guest” wireless network directs users to create a one-day user account to be used for internet access. This new network will be replacing the UAA WiFi – Public network in certain locations on campus and provides users a better browsing or streaming experience due to its increased speed in comparison to the old WiFi – Public network. If you have any questions regarding this new service, please contact the IT Call Center at (907) 786-4646.

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156 SF State student-athletes named to Spring 2017 AD Honor Roll

SF State Athletics





SAN FRANCISCO — For Spring 2017, 156 San Francisco State student-athletes were named to the Athletics Director's Honor Roll. All 11 varsity teams were represented on the list, which honors student-athletes who have earned a 3.0 or higher grade point average."Congratulations to our student-athletes who achieved a 3.0 or higher grade point average this spring," said Associate Director of Athletics Apryl Guisasola. "We are proud to honor our student-athletes who continue to perform at a high level in the classroom!"Following is a list of the SF State Athletics Director Honor Roll recipients:BaseballJordan Abernathy, Ryan Bohnet, Bryce Brooks, Robbie Carling, Brett Elgin, Connor Fidone, Myles Franklin, Marco Gonzales, Jack Harris, Chris Hayman, Johnny Juarez, Jackson Kritsch, Brent Montgomery, Zac Neumann, Chris Nicholson, Tyler Peters, Sam Schmidt, Kyle Smith, Sam Terry, Grant Vogenthaler, Cy Vojak, Matt WheelerSoftballMegan Asher, Lindsey Cassidy, Delanie Chrismas, Mallory Cleveland, Madison Collins, Aryn Guzman, Sara Higa, Alexis Konstantino, Savannah Ozuna, Gabby Reta, Katie Rohrer, Jessica Solorio, Angelica Terrel, Daniella Toschi, Kasie Trezona  Men's Cross CountryJonathan Estrada, Carlos Mario Gonzalez, Austin Magin, Nicholas Noel, Rene Siqueiros, Kenny Trejo   Women's Cross CountryMagali Arsiniega, Adriana Calva, Emily Cross, Jordan Linsky, Sarah Martinez, Farley Moore, Carmen Paisano, Taylor Pennington, Liliana Vicente, Beverlee WoodMen's SoccerKJ Ahlo, Brandt Dixon, Sam Gebremiche, Ruben Gomez Jr., Kyle Harmina, Daniel Herrera, Emmanuel Jimenez, Richard Leon, Bardia Ohadi, Uzoma Onuoma, Nolan Parker, Brandon Sands, Emmanuel Serrano, Nigus Solomon, Jonny Villeda, Ashley Watson, Jordan Wusstig   
 Women's SoccerKayleen Belda, Elizabeth Borders, Kelsie Bozart, Chelsea Frostick, Hanna Ghamari, Natasha Gosiaco, Taylor Halstenson, Andrea Hill, Christina Holguin, Vanessa Koontz, Kimber Lohman, Bianca Lowe, Ileana Mercado, Brittany Oldham, Valentina Riveros, Haley Rivers, Malissa Shadle, Laura Shea, Sydney Stout, Kelsey Wetzstein, Paige Yeider    Men's BasketballColey Apsay, Chiefy Ugbaja, Jase Wickliffe, Ryne Williams  Women's Basketball
Lauren Catching, Kaitlin DaDalt, Aneta Garaventa, Donae Moguel, Erika Nilsen, Jarecxy Privado, Imani Smith, Felicia Villarruel, Kayla Watterson  Women's Track and FieldMagali Arsiniega, ...

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W. Cross Country. 51 Spartans Receive MW Scholar-Athlete Recognition

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

Eight student-athletes received the honor each of their four years at San José State.




July 18, 2017
Colorado Springs, Colo.— A school-record 51 San José State University student-athletes have received a 2016-17 Mountain West Scholar-Athlete Award for their performance in the classroom during their athletic career.The MW Scholar-Athlete Award is one of the highest academic honors bestowed by the conference.  To be eligible for the award, student-athletes must have completed two semesters at the institution, have a 3.5 or better grade point average and have participated in a competition in a Mountain West-sponsored sport.The Spartan student-athletes represent 13 sports, led by women’s swimming and diving with 13 honorees and followed by women’s track and field with seven.Eight San José State student-athletes have earned an award each of their four years – Jack Veasey (BASE); Karina Nunes (WXC/T&F); Tim Crawley (FB); Chelsea Jenner and Katelyn Linford (SB); Taylor Solorio (WSW); and Marie Klocker and Gaelle Rey (WTN).“Our student-athletes continue to make us proud by showing us that academic excellence is indeed achievable. I am impressed that we continue to set records each year with the number of student-athletes recognized by the Mountain West.  Our coaches and academic team work diligently to ensure that every Spartan is successful in the classroom,” said Eileen Daley, senior associate athletics director for academics and student services.The Spartan Scholar-Athletes helped the Mountain West to a new league-record 756 student-athletes recognized.2016-17 San José State University MW Scholar-Athletes# # #

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Sip, Shop and Support: Executive Women of Goizueta Annual Scholarship Fundraiser

_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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KU researchers determining health care access barriers facing migrant farmworkers across country

KU News Headlines

LAWRENCE — Millions of migrant and seasonal farmworkers are critical to getting food from farms to our tables, yet they often struggle to meet their own basic needs. They face health risks, barriers to care and poor health outcomes. Because they make vital labor contributions, it is important for both economic and humanitarian reasons to understand the health care obstacles and challenges that farmworkers face.

Researchers at the University of Kansas are partnering with the Migrant Farmworkers Assistance Fund and others in multiple states to shape a research agenda that can guide researchers, funders, providers and policymakers. The agenda will be developed by hearing directly from migrant and seasonal farmworkers about what their health goals and challenges are and learning more from those who work with them.

KU researchers received funding from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute Engagement Awards program to better understand an underserved and under-researched population that works in nearly every U.S. state. The funding will enable researchers to interact directly with workers in different Midwestern states, conducting engagement sessions and surveys in Spanish and English so that the workers' voices and perspectives guide the researchers toward the most pressing concerns.

“We’ll discover the kind of future research needed to understand the barriers to health care that migrant and seasonal farmworkers face, as well as which health care outcomes are important to them,” said Cheryl Holmes, research associate in the School of Social Welfare and KU project lead. “We also want to know what might lead them to reach out for care.”

The research team will focus on crop- and orchard-based migrant and seasonal farmworkers in the Midwest. They hope to build a knowledge base for future research about barriers to health care, including:

Lack of understanding of the medical system
Lack of insurance
Health care costs
Lack of time off to see health professionals.
Researchers also ...

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SBU Campus Residences Supports Haitian Orphanage

University News


Members of the Stony Brook University Division of Campus Residences have raised $10,000 to go toward assisting children at the Maison Fortuné Orphanage in Haiti. Pictured from left to right are: Dr. Laura Valente, Dean for Residential Education and Director of Residential Programs; Tamica Shilletto, Residence Hall Director; John Vatalaro, Assistant Financial Services Administrator; Wolfie, holding the check; Christine Noonan, Weekend Activities Coordinator; Rhonda Nelson, Undergraduate Housing Coordinator; Marlynn Chetkof, H-Quad Secretary; and Myra Polite, Purchasing Assistant. Not pictured: Natalie Munoz, former Residence Hall Director; Miriam Rios, H-Quad Director; and Kimberly Stokely, Assistant Director for Fraternity and Sorority Life.


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E-Health Network Of Long Island To Host President And CEO Of The Massachusetts E-Health Collaborative

Medical Center & Health Care



E-Health Network Of Long Island To Host President And CEO Of The Massachusetts E-Health Collaborative
E-HNLI brings industry leader, Micky Tripathi, to provide national perspective and insight about Health Information Exchange initiatives

STONY BROOK, N.Y
., January 24, 2011—On Wednesday, January 26, 
E-Health Network of Long Island
 welcomes Micky Tripathi, PhD, MPP, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Massachusetts eHealth Collaborative (MAeHC), a non-profit collaboration of 34 leading non-profit healthcare organizations based in Massachusetts (
http://maehc.blogspot.com/)
. Dr. Tripathi will visit Stony Brook University Medical Center to provide his perspective on the national landscape of health information exchange. The lecture will be held in the Health Sciences Center; Lecture Hall 5, Level 3, from 10:30 am to noon.  
In addition to his role with MAeHC, Dr. Tripathi is Chair of the Health Information Exchange Workgroup of the Federal Health IT Policy Committee, which is charged with making recommendations about health information exchange to the Office of the National Coordinator (ONC) for Health Information Technology in the US Department of Health and Human Services. He is also the Co-Chair of the statewide Ad Hoc Regional Extension Center/EHR Workgroup, which has been created by the State of Massachusetts to provide guidance on accelerating adoption of electronic health records statewide. Additionally, Dr. Tripathi is a member of the Board of Directors of the eHealth Initiative, a national organization promoting the improvement of health care through information and information technology.
Prior to joining MAeHC, Dr. Tripathi was a Manager of the Boston Consulting Group, a leading strategy and management consulting firm. While at BCG, he served as the founding President and CEO of the Indiana Health Information Exchange, an Indianapolis-based non-profit company partnered with the Regenstrief Institute to create a state-wide health information infrastructure in the state of Indiana. Additionally, he served a variety of US and international clients in the non-profit sector as well as in ...

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Lone Star College System Trustees to hold regular meeting May 7

Lone Star College System News

Published on: May 04, 2015
The Lone Star College System Board of Trustees will hold its workshop and regular meeting Thursday, May 7, 2015, at 6 p.m. in the board room of the Lone Star College Training and Development Center, 5000 Research Forest Drive, The Woodlands, TX  77381.
The link for the board agenda is available online at LoneStar.edu/board the Monday prior to the meeting. For more information, contact Jed Young, Executive Director of Communications, at 832.813.6521.
Lone Star College has been opening doors to a better community for more than 40 years. Founded in 1973, LSC remains steadfast in its commitment to student success and credential completion. Today, with almost 83,000 students in credit classes, and a total enrollment of more than 95,000, Lone Star College is the largest institution of higher education in the Houston area and one of the fastest-growing community colleges in the nation. Stephen C. Head, Ph.D., is the chancellor of LSC, which consists of six colleges including LSC-CyFair, LSC-Kingwood, LSC-Montgomery, LSC-North Harris, LSC-Tomball and LSC-University Park, seven centers, LSC-University Center at Montgomery, LSC-University Center at University Park, Lone Star Corporate College, and LSC-Online.
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LSC-Kingwood Hosts Job Fair

Lone Star College Kingwood News

Published on: February 03, 2015
Community members and students whose New Years resolution is to find a job or better employment can make that happen at Lone Star College-Kingwood.
The colleges Career Services department will host Career Connections on Thursday, Feb. 19 from 12-2 p.m. in the Student Conference Center (SCC). This is a job fair that showcases local employment opportunities. The department hosts this free event quarterly.
This is a great forum for job seekers to connect with local businesses that are currently hiring, said Kim Hammond, with Career Services.
Companies recruiting include BBVA Compass Bank, Chick-fil-A, Home Depot, Houston Airport Marriott, La Petite Academy, Lake Houston Family YMCA, LSC-Kingwood, Memorial Hermann Northeast, NAPA Auto Parts, Pier 1 Imports, Randalls, RBD / Sales Makers Inc., Silverado Memory Care, State Farm, and UPS.
Past job fairs have been very successful in connecting local businesses with conscientious, motivated employees, Hammond said.
For more information on Career Connections, call 281-312-1624 or email Kingwood.CareerServices@Lonestar.edu.
Register now for credit classes online through myLoneStar. Classes are offered days, evenings, or weekends in traditional, Internet, video, TV and independent study formats. For more information on how to register online, visit www.lonestar.edu/registration.
For general information about Lone Star College-Kingwood, call 281.312.1600 or visit http://lonestar.edu/kingwood.htm.
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 credential completion. Today, with 78,000 students in credit classes, and a total enrollment of more than 90,000, Lone Star College System is the largest institution of higher education in the Houston area and the fastest-growing community college system in the nation. Dr. Stephen C. Head is the chancellor of LSCS, which consists of six colleges including LSC-CyFair, LSC-Kingwood, LSC-Montgomery, LSC-North Harris, LSC-Tomball and LSC-University Park, five centers, LSC-University Center at Montgomery, LSC-University Center ...

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Assistance League® of Montgomery County Offers Scholarship Money to Local Students

Lone Star College Montgomery News

Published on: April 07, 2015
CONROE (April 7, 2015) Lone Star College-Montgomery studentsespecially those returning to college after a major life or career changehave a unique scholarship opportunity available to them thanks to Assistance League® of Montgomery County.
Several $750 Non-Traditional scholarships will be awarded to worthy students who are entering or already attending LSC-Montgomery or LSC-Conroe Center in pursuit of a career.  Over 20 non-traditional scholarships have been awarded to LSC-Montgomery students thanks to Assistance League®.
Helping a person gain academic or workforce training credentials to pursue a job or even enter a new career path because of a life changing event is an important helping hand we can offer Montgomery County residents, said Jane Gehring, a volunteer with Assistance League®. We are dedicated to helping individuals who find themselves in such circumstances and are trying to better themselves.
The scholarship applications and instructions for submission can be found online at assistanceleaguemont-co.org, or through the LSC-Montgomery financial aid office, which is located in the Student Services Center (Building C).
Completed application packets are due to the Assistance League by July 15, 2015.  Applications can be mailed or hand delivered to:  Assistance League® Scholarship Committee, Attention: Ann Subtelny, 126 North San Jacinto, Conroe, Texas, 77301.
Assistance League® of Montgomery County is an all volunteer group that has turned over $3 million from its thrift shop sales to Montgomery County over the past 30 years. Of its 10 philanthropic programs, the scholarship program is second on to Operation School Bell.
For more information about the scholarship or Assistance League®, call (936) 760-1151.
LSC-Montgomery is located at 3200 College Park Drive, one-half mile west of Interstate 45, between Conroe and The Woodlands. For more information about the college, call (936) 273-7000, or visit www.LoneStar.edu/montgomery.

 

Lone Star College System has been opening doors to a better community for more than 40 years. Founded in 1973, LSCS remains steadfast in its commitment to student success and credential completion.  Today, ...

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5 LSC-Tomball Students Present Research at the Great Plains Honors Council Conference

Lone Star College Tomball News

Published on: July 05, 2017 TOMBALL, Texas Music has always played an enormous role in LSC-Tomball Honors Student Hannah Savoies life, but she never thought that her interest in music would one day give her an opportunity to present research in front of hundreds of people at this years Great Plains Honors Council (GPHC) conference at Lamar University.

Students are chosen to submit abstracts for these conferences based on their Honors Day research presentations, said Professor Ava Veselis, director of The Honors College at LSC-Tomball. Once accepted to present at these conferences, they spend a good deal of time refining their research, and the final product is one that is academically impressive. I am proud to have these students represent The Honors Collegetheir research is substantive and sophisticated.

Savoie, along with four other students, Miranda Willborg, Jacob Files, Cheyenne Stokes, and Mary Kouns, presented their fall semesters research at the conference.

I love how songs reveal a more explicit meaning once there is a visual representation of those musical stories coming to life in front of the audience through cinematography, Savoie stressed, before adding, I chose to do my research over the 2012 rendition of Les Miserables because I simply love musicals. I was a huge fan of the musical, and an even bigger fan of the most recent version of the film that had come out, so I figured I would never get tired of researching this topic. That is when I decided that this was the film I wanted to analyze because I wouldnt mind watching it a million times for my research.

The GPHC is a regional section of the National Collegiate Honors Council, which provides guidelines for all of the honors colleges and programs in the United States. More than 440 participants from 45 different educational institutions across six states, Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Texas, attended this years event. ...

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GW Cancer Center Receives $100,000 from Avon Foundation for Patient Navigator

News RSS

WASHINGTON (July 19, 2017) — The George Washington University (GW) Cancer Center received  a $100,000 check from the Avon Foundation for Women at the 15th annual Avon 39 The Walk to End Breast Cancer closing ceremony on Sunday, May 7. Accepting the check on behalf of the GW Cancer Center was Mandi Pratt-Chapman, M.A., associate center director for patient-centered initiatives and health equity.The money will be used to fund a patient navigator who will break down barriers and provide resources to help 300 breast cancer patients in the D.C. area. The program will also include a new Spanish-speaking support group for women living with breast cancer.
“Avon’s continued support of our patient navigators provide help for so many women in the area,” said Pratt-Chapman. “Patient navigators are crucial resources for women, especially in a fragmented health care system, as they begin and continue their fight against breast cancer.”
The Avon Foundation presented grants to several organizations in the D.C., Maryland, and Virginia region. The Avon 39 walk drew 1,700 participants from 43 states; 284 of those participants were breast cancer survivors themselves. Over the course of two days, participants walked 39.3 miles throughout the D.C. area. The event is D.C. was second of seven events that will be held up through October. The Avon Foundation raised $4 million at the D.C. walk.
Media: For more information or to interview Ms. Pratt-Chapman, please contact Ashley Rizzardo at amrizz713@gwu.edu or 202-994-8679.
###
About the GW Cancer Center
The GW Cancer Center (GWCC), housed within the GW School of Medicine and Health Sciences, takes a comprehensive approach to a complex disease. Working together with the GW Hospital and GW Medical Faculty Associates, the GW Cancer Center brings multidisciplinary clinical, research, education and outreach programs together in a comprehensive approach to cancer prevention, diagnosis, treatment and survivorship. The mission of the Institute for Patient-Centered Initiatives & Health Equity ...

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Award-winning WVU artist’s work to be on display at Evansdale Library

Stories | WVU Today | West Virginia University

Inspired
by the realism and symmetry of the Renaissance and other times, award-winning West Virginia University senior Patrick Bayly’s
paintings are in a style that is uniquely American. Bayly’s work “New American
Paintings” will be on display at Evansdale Library in August.

Many
of Bayly’s painting subjects are his friends, professors and local
acquaintances. Bayly’s paintings will be complemented by books from the WVU
Libraries’
Myers Collection for context into his style, research, inspiration and process.

A
proactive artist, Bayly started “The Bench” Morgantown artists collective, and
co-founded The Diamond Shop Art Gallery in downtown Morgantown to promote his
peer and local artists, and also to host artists-in-residents. His work is
currently on view in the 2017 Best of West Virginia Open Juried Exhibition,
presented by the Tamarack Artisan Foundation and TAMARCK: The Best of West
Virginia. He was awarded funding through the WVU Summer
Undergraduate Research Experience Program, which allowed him to
paint and research throughout the summer.

“Patrick’s
self-motivation propels him to challenge himself with each new painting,” said Alison
Helm, director of the College of Creative
Arts School of Art and Design. “Patrick possesses the tenacity,
discipline and talent that it takes to be a successful painter.” 

As part of WVU Libraries’ Art in the Libraries
initiative, Bayly’s paintings will be on view on the first
floor of Evansdale Library August 8-30

The Charleston native currently lives in
Morgantown while pursuing his bachelor’s of fine arts degree. His artwork has
been exhibited widely and is held in private collections in Charleston, Atlanta
and Lincoln, Nebraska. He has received several awards including a WVU College
of Creative Arts Scholarship, 2016-2017, and the Director’s Choice Award, 2016
WVU Juried Student Exhibition. 

-WVU-

mm/07/18/17

Follow @WVUToday on Twitter.


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UTA biologist wins NSF CAREER grant to study effects of predators on the evolution of Daphnia water fleas

The University of Texas at Arlington News Releases



Matthew Walsh, an assistant professor of biology, has been awarded a five-year, $600,000 grant from the NSF’s Faculty Early Career Development Program.

A biologist at The University of Texas at Arlington who studies ecology and evolutionary biology is the recipient of a prestigious career development grant from the National Science Foundation.
Matthew Walsh, an assistant professor of biology, has been awarded a five-year, $600,000 grant from the NSF’s Faculty Early Career Development Program. His project is titled “CAREER: Does behavioral plasticity promote or constrain adaptation? A test using resurrection,” and will address a long-standing question in evolutionary biology.
“We have known for at least 100 years that organisms are sensitive to changes in environmental conditions and that they will often alter the expression of their traits when conditions change,” he said. “Scientists have long speculated that this ‘plasticity’ plays a key role in ultimate evolutionary responses, but how it does so is not clear. The challenge in answering this question is that you need to observe evolutionary changes as they occur.”
The project will help answer the question by taking advantage of a unique feature of zooplankton biology, Walsh explained. Many species of zooplankton produce resting eggs when conditions deteriorate. A resting egg is an egg that undergoes a period of dormancy during which it is resistant to adverse conditions. These resting eggs sink to the bottom of lakes and accumulate. More importantly, they remain viable for decades or even longer.
Walsh’s research will focus on a system that experienced a recent change in environmental conditions. Lakes in Wisconsin were recently invaded by a dominant invertebrate predator, the spiny water flea or Bythotrephes longimanus. Bythotrephes has decimated populations of Daphnia, a tiny, shrimp-like crustacean also known as the water flea, as its diet consists mostly of Daphnia zooplankton. In previous research, Walsh provided evidence that Bythotrephes drives evolution in Daphnia.
...

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Oklahoma State University Native American sorority nabs national honors

Oklahoma State University - News and Communications

Gamma Chapter at Oklahoma State University was named the 2016-2017 Undergraduate Chapter of the Year during Alpha Pi Omega’s national award ceremony July 15 in Oklahoma City.To be considered for the award, the chapter submitted a portfolio, highlighting its members’ campus involvement, individual awards and commitment to academics and community service. In addition to volunteering at the Stillwater Humane Society and the annual Remember The 10 run, chapter members regularly co-hosted social stickball and other events for the benefit of the OSU community.
With its members averaging more than five hours of community service per month each, the chapter also earned the Busy Bees of the Year award. 
“Gamma Chapter is honored to receive not one, but two awards,” Gamma Chapter President Marly Fixico-Hardison said. “We are thankful for the recognition from our sisters and the Grand Keepers of the Circle. We have put in a fair amount of work this past year to get Gamma Chapter to where it is today. Our success comes from love and determination, not only from us, but from our sisters.”
Fixico-Hardison was also named Honeycomb of the Year, presented to the most outstanding new member nationally. A citizen of the Seminole Nation and a graduate of Seminole High School, Fixico-Hardison is majoring in chemical engineering with an option in biochemistry.
Choctaw Nation citizen Twauna Williams was named PI of the Year. A resident of Durant, Oklahoma, Williams is president of the Delta Pi Chapter, serves on the sorority’s national board and was named to the 2016 NextGen Under 30 Oklahoma list. She is also on the board of directors for the Oklahoma State University Alumni Association’s American Indian Alumni Society.
With more than 100 tribes represented nationwide, Alpha Pi Omega Sorority, Inc., is the country’s largest and oldest Native American Greek-letter organization. Founded on Sept. 1, 1994 at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, the ...

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NAU’s Science and Health building deemed Gold LEED certified

NAU NewsNAU News

Northern Arizona University’s Science and Health building, one of the newest additions to the Flagstaff campus, has been deemed a Gold Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certified building—bringing the total number of LEED certified buildings on campus to 14.The impressive five-story building is located off the main pedway on north campus and features 54 faculty offices, nine interaction rooms, 10 interaction spaces, 18 research labs, eight instructional labs, five classrooms and three lecture halls with a total capacity of 440 seats.
With mazes of angular staircases, walls of windows providing picturesque views of the peaks and an abundance of natural light, it’s obvious this building was not solely intended to add to NAU’s green building movement.
“Achieving LEED Gold is no simple feat,” said Megan Burke, sustainable building coordinator. “It requires a strong commitment to sustainability and continuous collaboration from all members of the design, construction and operations teams. The Science and Health Building is special because it beautifully illustrates that environmental stewardship can be achieved in a fiscally responsible way, while also keeping building occupant health and well-being as the top priority.”
A view of the weaving staircases inside the Science and Health Building.
NAU’s commitment to continue increasing the number of LEED-certified building on campus does not stop with this recognition—the south dining hall renovation project and the upcoming recital hall expansion are pursuing LEED certifications. Cline Library also is pursuing LEED certification through the existing buildings rating system.
“NAU’s planning, design and construction project managers look for opportunities to include sustainable considerations into even our small-scale projects,” Burke said. “NAU’s Complete Design Guidelines and Technical Standards encourage the exploration of sustainable, energy-efficient pathways even when projects are not pursuing LEED certification.”



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Q&A WITH HEAD COACH JODY SEARS AT BIG SKY KICKOFF

Athletics News




PARK CITY, Utah — Head coach Jody Sears sat down with Hornetsports.com during the final day of the Big Sky Kickoff for a Q&A regarding Sacramento State football.

With just two weeks remaining before the team reports, what are you hoping to see in the first few weeks of camp?
I'm looking forward to competition at each position. We had good competition in the spring and I hope that carries over. In those first couple weeks of camp you get a good idea on what freshmen can help you. However, we will always be evaluating during the season and might be able to get some of the young players to step up and make an impact during the season.

The NCAA has eliminated two-a-day practices. How will that change the way you prepare?
Those two-a-days developed chemistry and mental toughness through the trials of camp. You have to come at it from a different angle. The teachings and reps will still happen but you have to lengthen the time that you have. We will still get 25 or 26 practices we start the season.

You have some changes to the coaching staff with the addition of Luke Huard, John Therrell and CJ Cox. How is that working out and what can we expect from the offense with Huard and Paul Wulff calling plays?
Adding Luke, John and CJ have been nice additions and they have fit in extremely well. They are like minded and Luke brings in a lot of experience. CJ and John bring energy and are quality good young coaches. Luke will call the plays but Paul will be the leader. The offense does not belong to one person — it's not Paul Wulff's offense or Luke Huard's offense. We've decided that it's really hard to be an O-line coach and call plays at the same time and that will allow Paul to focus up front and Luke to call the plays. Luke has had success calling plays at his previous stops and comes from a football family."

Big plays were costly last season on defense and you made that a priority during the spring. What are some of the things that need to happen to eliminate the big play?
It comes down to knowing and understanding your roles and responsibilities. I don't ever question our kids' heart but we have to be a little less eager to make the play which has put us out of position. The safeties and linebackers need to understand the phillosophy, stop being ready-fire-aim, and we need to play more as a team.

What are the advantages of returning all five starters on the offensive line?
The heart of your football team starts up front no matter where you are. That's where your leadership comes from and where the mentality of your football team is established. Those guys returning does not guarantee anything. Hopefully they are a little bigger and stronger and the chemistry improves.

Quarterback is one of the few spots where you don't have an obvious starter. Who's involved in the battle for the position and how do you evaluate the players during practice?
Coming in to camp Kevin Thomson, Wyatt Clapper, a healthy Kolney Cassel and Roman Ale will all get a chance to prove what they can do. It comes down to consistency, getting the ball to the right people at the right time and making plays. We will evaluate on the field and also by watching the film from practices. Ideally, one person pulls away and establishes themselves as a clear cut starter but we will need all of them to be ready to play and help the team.

NOTES
North Dakota was picked to finish first in both the coaches and media preseason polls. In fact, the top eight teams in both polls were picked in the same order. Sacramento State was selcted to finish 12th in both polls.







































































2017 BIG SKY CONFERENCE PRESEASON POLLS
Coaches Poll Media Poll
1. North Dakota (6)
130 1. North Dakota (15)
298
2. Eastern Washington (2)
124 2. Eastern Washington (5)
271
3. Northern Arizona (2)
119 3. Northern Arizona (3)
236
4. Cal Poly (1)
108 4. Cal Poly
224
5. Weber State (1)
103 5. Weber State
209
6. Montana (1)
83 6. Montana (1)
204
7. Southern Utah
80 7. Southern Utah175
8. Montana State69 8. Montana State156
9. Portland State
62 9. Northern Colorado
135
10. Northern Colorado60 10. Portland State
104
11. UC Davis
35 11. UC Davis
62
12. Sacramento State
26 12. Sacramento State
61
13. Idaho State
15 13. Idaho State44


The Big Sky also announced a deal with Eleven Sports which will air a football and men's basketball game of the week. The network will also broadcast the quarterfinals and semifinals of the men's basketball championship as well as the women's basketball semifinals and championship game. The conference's women's soccer, volleyball and softball semifinals and championship games will also be televised on Eleven Sports.














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PCC names new vice presidents to district leadership team

News

PCC / News / July 19, 2017 /


PCC names new vice presidents to district leadership team

Photos and Story by James Hill |

Portland Community College has bolstered its leadership.
Katy Ho has been named the new vice president for academic affairs, while Robert Steinmetz has been chosen as the next vice president of student affairs. Ho began her duties in July and Steinmetz starts in August.
Katy Ho.
Ho returns to PCC from Honolulu Community College (HonCC) where she has served as vice chancellor of academic affairs since 2014 after working as the college’s dean of students. In this role, she was the chief academic officer and accreditation liaison for the college and oversaw student services, academic support, curriculum, and technology services. During that time, HonCC met and exceeded system performance outcomes in overall degree and certificate attainment, as well as STEM and native Hawaiian degree completion.
Ho worked at PCC from 2002 to 2012 in a number of capacities before moving to Hawaii. She started as an academic advisor and finished as the Sylvania Campus division dean of student support services. Recently, she was one of 39 community-college leaders chosen as Aspen Presidential Fellows for 2017-18 by the Aspen Institute, which cultivates leaders who can transform community colleges to achieve higher levels of success and access. Additionally, she brings a wealth of experience implementing Achieving the Dream at HonCC. This is a comprehensive national movement for equitable student success that PCC has recently joined and will implement.
Ho holds a master’s degree in Student Services Administration and a doctorate in Community College Leadership from Oregon State University.
“Katy’s commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion, and her special attention to equitable student success, is especially impressive,” said Executive Vice President Sylvia Kelley, who led the hiring committee for the position. “Katy has demonstrated a deep knowledge and commitment to the unique needs and concerns of ...

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Top Vote-Getter Merriman Advances to Finals of Elite 90 Fan Favorite Contest – Finals Voting Today!

Case Western Reserve Athletic News


Jul 19, 2017





After receiving more votes than any of the other semifinalists in the contest, Case Western Reserve University junior Sam Merriman advanced to the final round of the NCAA Elite 90 Fan Favorite Contest.  Finals voting will begin at 10:00 a.m. on Wednesday, July 19th, and continue through 8:00 p.m. on Thursday, July 20th.Fans can vote for Merriman at athletics.case.edu/voteforsam or at on.ncaa.com/Elite90.Of the over 9,000 votes cast in the semifinals, Merriman received 1,161, 76 more than the next closest competitor, Maryann Gong of MIT.  The top-10 vote-getters from the semifinals advance to the finals, with vote totals resetting.Merriman won the NCAA's Elite 90 Award during the cross country season, after entering the NCAA Division III Championships with the highest grade point average among competitors at the event.  The junior and Engineering Physics major entered the meet a perfect 4.0 grade point average, and went on to place 21st and earn All-America honors.  Merriman, who was also named to the CoSIDA Academic All-America First Team later in the year, claimed All-UAA First Team and All-Region honors during the 2016 cross country campaign as well, and was the top Division III finisher at the All-Ohio Championships.
During the indoor track season, Merriman added an All-Region honor in the 3,000-meter run and claimed an All-UAA honor with a third-place finish in the 5,000-meter run.  He went on to earn an All-Region honor in the 5,000-meter run during the outdoor season, breaking the school-record in the event with a time of 14:29.93, and winning the 5,000-meter title at the 2017 UAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships.








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Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Crazy Smart Summer: Girls Build Robots To Help People

Michigan Tech 'Latest News'


Some middle schoolers spend their summers lounging poolside or visiting grandma. Others spend part of vacation building robots.During the Women in Robotics Summer Youth Program at Michigan Technological University this week, 23 girls going into sixth, seventh, eighth or ninth grades will learn to program, wire, troubleshoot and construct two robots, the GUPPIE and the Neu-pulator.
The purpose of the camp is to teach participants how robots can assist humans in exploring the environment and can otherwise benefit us and improve quality of life.
“These concepts are to motivate students,” says Nina Mahmoudian, associate professor in the mechanical engineering-engineering mechanics department and director of the Nonlinear and Autonomous Systems Lab. “We want them to see robotics as something useful in their lives. They learn there is a lot to be done in the future. We want to ignite their curiosity, what they can do in the future. We can motivate them, engage them and they can go on and stay engaged.”
The camp, which is a collaborative effort with Mo Rastgaar, an associate professor in the mechanical engineering-engineering mechanics department and director of Human-Interactive Robotics Lab, is funded in part by grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF), which allows girls who applied to attend the competitive program at a reduced rate. 
Invent with Open-Source Software
The girls will begin the week learning how to program an Arduino open-source board, how to model different parts with Autodesk Inventor software, and to understand the engineering process to solve problems. Students practice these skills in the first two days of the camp by completing small projects.
But the approach to learning isn’t the typical classroom environment.
“Everything that we do is learn and play so students internalize what they learn,” Mahmoudian says. “They take the games seriously because they are implementing their concepts. At the end, they put all the components ...

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Jewish Music Series

SSU News

The third annual Jewish Music Series at Sonoma State University features artists hailing from New York City to the Bay Area, including folksinger-songwriter Sharon Goldman and the unique collaboration between Sonoma State Music Department Chair Brian S. Wilson and Jeremiah Lockwood of The Sway Machinery. All seven concerts are free, taking place on Thursday evenings in Schroeder Hall at the Green Music Center.The series is part of the course Survey of Jewish Musics led by Joshua Horowitz, director of the ensemble Budowitz. Horowitz, who plays chromatic button accordion, cimbalom and piano, is a founding member of Veretski Pass and has performed and recorded with Itzhak Perlman, the Vienna Chamber Orchestra, Theodore Bikel, Ben Goldberg, Rubin and Horowitz, Brave Old World, Adrienne Cooper and Ruth Yaakov. For the third consecutive year Veretski Pass, will perform.
Admission is free, performances begin at 6:30 p.m. in Schroeder Hall unless otherwise noted. Parking on campus is $5-$8. The series is jointly presented by the Department of Music and the Jewish Studies Program. For more information, call 664-2324 or visit Sonoma.edu/music.
August 31
Kugelplex
Kugelplex is a California klezmer and old-world party music band. Formed in 2001, the group plays wild, soulful dance music at weddings, concerts and festivals throughout the San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles and beyond. The group has performed with Joan Baez, the Oakland Symphony, the Oakland Interfaith Gospel Choir and Frank London (founder of the Klezmatics), among many others.
September 14
Sharon Goldman
Goldman is a singer-songwriter who specializes in intense, insightful and vivid storytelling. Over several well-received albums, she has combined heartfelt portraits and memorable lyrics with unforgettable melodies and pure, precise, expressive vocals taking a folk/pop sensibility to new artistic heights. She performs regularly at house concerts, folk coffeehouses, festivals, arts and cultural venues and community centers.
September 28
Rebbe Soul
October 19
Cantor Roz Barak
Cantor Roslyn Jhunever ...

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CSU Trustees approve next phase of University Glen on CSUCI campus

CSU Chanel Islands News

July 19, 2017 — The CSU Board of Trustees has given final approval to the next phase of the CI 2025 Vision Plan during the CSU Board of Trustees meeting held this week, giving a green light to development of 32 acres of the University Glen residential community on the CSU Channel Islands (CSUCI) campus.“This is another step in an effort to expand the campus to accommodate our enrollment growth over the coming years,” said Assistant Vice President for Facilities Services John Gormley. “We are completing the final phase of residential development in University Glen that has been sitting idle for nine years because of the economic downturn.”The development will include 54 detached single-family homes and 66 townhomes for sale, as well as 310 market rate apartments. There will also be 170 senior living apartments for people who are 55-years old and above and who meet a specific median income level. The senior apartments will be rentals.“This housing mix is consistent with the built portion of the community and the residents are supportive, especially of the senior housing piece, and will benefit everyone,” Gormley said. “It encourages senior tenants to become more connected with the University and provide more stability.”Because the land is leased to the CSUCI Site Authority by the CSU, the development will be able to offer housing to potential faculty and staff with financial incentives to make it more affordable to purchase a home. “This will create housing opportunities in an expensive housing market,” Gormley said. “Faculty and staff who choose to relocate here and work on campus will have an opportunity to purchase a home.”This development also provides much-needed revenue for the University to support the anticipated rapid growth. CSUCI’s student population is expected to continue to increase and the generated revenue will support the construction of much needed academic facilities.CSUCI’s Vice President for Business & Financial Affairs ...

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Fire Extinguisher Training

PolyCentric


Laura Martinez from the College of the Extended University puts out a fire during fire extinguisher training for Building Marshals and Floor Captains at Cal Poly Pomona.


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CSUSB Prison Arts Collective to host its second major art exhibition in Los Angeles

CSUSB News

The Cal State San Bernardino Prison Arts Collective has organized its second major exhibition at CB1 Gallery in Los Angeles, featuring original artwork from incarcerated artists at six state prisons.This year’s exhibition, called “Beyond the Blue,” will run from July 22 through Sept. 2, and will include an accompanying series of panel sessions called “Art and Restorative Justice.” The opening events on Saturday, July 22, will include the panel discussion “What’s in a Name” at 3 p.m., and a reception from 4-7 p.m.
The 2017 exhibition follows the program’s well-received 2016 exhibition and accompanying book “Through the Wall: Prison Arts Collective.”
Dozens of paintings, drawings and handmade objects created by participants in the CSUSB Community-based Art (CBA) Prison Arts Collective project will be on display. The art focuses on five themes: Alternative Materiality; Collaboration and Partnerships; Line as Language; Dreams, Imagination and the Surreal; and the Experience of Incarceration.
“Beyond the Blue” seeks to dismantle the stigma of outsider art through the serious consideration of work being produced by CBA participants within correctional facilities.
The exhibition will highlight artwork by those participating at all levels, including participants in advanced classes and those just emerging in their artistic experience.
A majority of works featured have been donated by the artists with the goal of sharing their work with a wider audience and raising funds to support ongoing CBA programming in prisons and in the community. Viewers are invited to participate through a written or visual reflection in a collaborative response book, an informal tour with a teaching artist and/or by purchasing a work of art with all proceeds going directly to support ongoing CBA Prison Arts Collective classes.
All artworks are made by CBA participants in the Prison Arts Collective projects at six state prisons including the California Institution for Men and the California Institution for Women in Chino; the ...

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Lomba Kebersihan Wujudkan UPI Kampus Beriman

Kabar UPI


Bandung, UPI
Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia (UPI) gelar lomba kebersihan dengan tema “UPI Kampus Beriman”. Kegiatan ini berlaku bagi seluruh unit kerja di lingkungan Kampus UPI Jalan Dr. Setiabudhi Nomor 229 Bandung.
“Ikatan Ibu-Ibu Keluarga (IIK) UPI dititipi program kerja dari universitas untuk menggelar lomba kebersihan dengan tema UPI Kampus Beriman. Tujuannya agar tercipta kampus yang bersih, indah dan nyaman, sehingga tercipta suasana belajar yang kondusif. Lomba ini berlaku bagi seluruh unit kerja baik di UPI Kampus Bumi Siliwangi maupun UPI Kampus Daerah, demikian juga dengan Sekolah Laboratorium,” demikian ungkap Ketua Umum IIK UPI Dra. Hj. Nina Asep Kadarohman usai melakukan Serah Terima Jabatan Ketua Umum IIK UPI di Kantor IIK UPI, Selasa (11/7/2017).
Inginnya sih diadakan setiap tahun agar menjadi habit atau kebiasaan untuk memanusiakan manusia, jelasnya. Perlu diketahui, UPI merupakan perguruan tinggi yang menghasilkan calon pendidik, maka diupayakan untuk  menciptakan suasana akademik yang kondusif, dan diharapkan kebersihan ini menjadi karakter mahasiswa UPI serta seluruh sivitas akademikanya, walaupun untuk merubahnya tidaklah mudah, tapi kita terus mengupayakannya.
Lebih lanjut dikatakan,”Penilaiannya menyentuh hal-hal yang mendasar dan sederhana, seperti contohnya pemeliharaan aset. Lebih sederhana memelihara dari pada harus memperbaiki, sehingga tercipyanya keselarasan hidup. Adapun lokasi yang dinilai diantaranya kantor, kelas, . koridor, mushola/mesjid, toilet, halaman/tempat parkir/taman, dan laboratorium.”
Ketika disinggung mengenai serah terima jabatan Ketua Umum IIK UPI, Dra. Hj. Nina mengatakan bahwa dirinya dan ketua bidang lainnya akan melanjutkan program kerja yg sudah berjalan. Ditegaskannya,”Kita hanya melanjutkan apa-apa yang sudah dirancang oleh Ibu Hj. Nunung Forqon, M.Pd., termasuk di semua bidang. IIK adalah supporting system baik di rumah maupun di kantor, karena landasan IIK adalah silaturahim. Ketua umum itu hanya sebagai pelaksana untuk mengimplementasikan cita-cita ibu-ibu IIK, saya yang memfasilitasi dan mewujudkannya. Diharapkan, saya dapat melaksanakan amanah ini. Ini merupakan jalan kebaikan untuk semua.”
Sementara dalam kesempatan yang sama, Rektor UPI Prof. Dr. H. R. Asep Kadarohman, M.Si.,  ...

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UW team develops fast, cheap method to make supercapacitor electrodes for electric cars, high-powered lasers

UW News » Science


Engineering  |  News releases  |  Research  |  Science

July 17, 2017







Supercapacitors are an aptly named type of device that can store and deliver energy faster than conventional batteries. They are in high demand for applications including electric cars, wireless telecommunications and high-powered lasers.
But to realize these applications, supercapacitors need better electrodes, which connect the supercapacitor to the devices that depend on their energy. These electrodes need to be both quicker and cheaper to make on a large scale and also able to charge and discharge their electrical load faster. A team of engineers at the University of Washington thinks they’ve come up with a process for manufacturing supercapacitor electrode materials that will meet these stringent industrial and usage demands.
The researchers, led by UW assistant professor of materials science and engineering Peter Pauzauskie, published a paper on July 17 in the journal Nature Microsystems and Nanoengineering describing their supercapacitor electrode and the fast, inexpensive way they made it. Their novel method starts with carbon-rich materials that have been dried into a low-density matrix called an aerogel. This aerogel on its own can act as a crude electrode, but Pauzauskie’s team more than doubled its capacitance, which is its ability to store electric charge.
These inexpensive starting materials, coupled with a streamlined synthesis process, minimize two common barriers to industrial application: cost and speed.
“In industrial applications, time is money,” said Pauzauskie. “We can make the starting materials for these electrodes in hours, rather than weeks. And that can significantly drive down the synthesis cost for making high-performance supercapacitor electrodes.”

Full x-ray reconstruction of a coin cell supercapacitor.

Effective supercapacitor electrodes are synthesized from carbon-rich materials that also have a high surface area. The latter requirement is critical because of the unique way supercapacitors store electric charge. While a conventional battery stores electric charges via the chemical reactions occurring within it, a supercapacitor ...

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Men's Golf Honored with GCAA's President's Special Recognition Award

College of William & Mary


7/19/2017 2:21:00 PM


NORMAN, Okla. – The William & Mary men's golf team was honored with President's Special Recognition award by the Golf Coaches Association of America for posting a team GPA of 3.5, or better, announced on Wednesday afternoon. 
The men's golf team posted the athletic department's best GPA for the 2016-17 school year at 3.53, and had over a 3.5 GPA during both semesters. W&M was one of 19 Division I programs to receive the accolade and the lone program in the CAA to claim the honor. Additionally, the Tribe earned the GCAA's All-Academic Team citation for boasting better than a 3.0 GPA. To be eligible for GCAA All-Academic Team honors a college or university must submit the GPAs for each player on its official squad list for the academic year. For all information on the Tribe's men's golf program stay tuned to TribeAthletics.com. Print Friendly Version


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Jay Carlisle

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Jay Carlisle
Research Director
Intermountain Bird Observatory






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Alaska Promotes Assistant Lance West to Head Coach

College Hockey News from CHN


July 20, 2017
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CHN Staff Report






Related ArticlesAlaska



FAIRBANKS, Alaska — Forced to find a new head coach relatively late in the offseason, Alaska promoted assistant Lance West to the position.

West replaces Dallas Ferguson, who left last week to become the head coach of Calgary in in the WHL. West was Ferguson's assistant coach during the latter's entire tenure, starting in 2008.

"I am very pleased Lance West has accepted our offer to become the next head coach of the Alaska Nanooks hockey team," Alaska athletic director Gary Gray said Wednesday. "I am equally confident his many years of experience as one of our assistant coaches, along with his outstanding recruiting skills over those past several years, will serve us well as he takes on his new leadership responsibilities. Lance will work hard to advance Nanook hockey within the WCHA."

A four-year letter winner as a forward at Alabama-Huntsville, West originally came to Alaska as a volunteer assistant coach and video coordinator in the 2007-08 season, while also working full-time at the University of Alaska Fairbanks' Student Recreation Center as the Facility Manager. Under Ferguson and West, Alaska made its only trip to the NCAAs in 2010.

Prior to moving to Fairbanks, West served as an assistant coach to his alma mater for seven seasons (2000-07), helping the Chargers to win two College Hockey America regular-season championships, four conference tournament appearances and one NCAA tournament appearance (2006-07). West had previously served as the volunteer assistant coach for UAH from 1995-98, helping the Chargers capture two NCAA Division II National Championships in 1996 and 1998.
As a player, West was considered an offensive-minded centerma; he had 43 goals and 65 assists for 108 points in 106 career games.






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