World Food Prize
Porter Novelli, DCDr. Walter Plowright was awarded the World Food Frize for developing one of the most important animal health victories of the modern age.
Dr. Walter Plowright was awarded the World Food Frize for developing one of the most important animal health victories of the modern age.
The University of Michigan will receive $5 million from the Warner-Lambert Company to help establish a new Program in Bioinformatics.
Seven dermatologists from across the United States were appointed today to the National Psoriasis Foundation's Medical Advisory Board.
Dr. Margaret Kripke of The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center has been honored by two professional societies for her research in skin cancer.
GeneMachines, a California-based genomics instrumentation company, has entered into a research agreement with the University of Georgia and the Georgia Research Alliance to test and develop protocols on its most advanced instrumentation.
With a commitment of $1 million annually from the state of Indiana, Purdue and Indiana universities are cooperating to advance paralysis research and speed the process of bringing new developments to human trials.
University of Arkansas research professor Ken Vickers spent years as an engineering manager at Texas Instruments wishing his new college graduate employees had received a broader selection of courses in their graduate degree programs. Now Prof. Vickers heads a university program that offers exactly the type of training he sought in graduate students.
The largest construction project ever proposed by Sandia ó the $300 million Microsystems and Engineering Sciences Application (MESA) facility ó received DOE approval for the Laboratories to produce a conceptual design for weapons, business and university applications.
A $5 million, 5-year program project grant to simulate brain function has been awarded to the UT-Houston Medical School Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Strokes.
HHS Secretary Donna E. Shalala today announced the award of $3.9 million in planning grants to 79 public and private organizations to bolster HIV/AIDS care to African Americans and individuals in rural and underserved areas.
The US Department of Education has awarded a 5-year, $3.5 million grant to Boston University center that will devise better ways to evaluate the quality and effectiveness of treatment methods for such ailments as strokes, hip fractures, joint replacements, and traumatic spinal cord injury.
Chaired by integrative medicine pioneer Andrew Weil, M.D., a committee has selected four physicians as new fellows in the University of Arizona's Program in Integrative Medicine, the first and only such fellowship in the nation.
United Airlines has donated a second commercial aircraft to Purdue University's aviation technology department.
The National Institutes of Health has awarded researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas a four-year, $1.8 million grant to study lipodystrophy syndrome, a fat distribution disorder that more and more HIV-infected patients are developing.
Temple University will officially commemorate the naming of its School of Business and Management for Richard J. Fox, chairman of the University's Board of Trustees.
The National Science Foundation has awarded Cornell University $1.5 million for a new facility for research on multiscale problems in materials science and molecular biology.
The National Center for Research Resources of the National Institutes of Health has awarded $400,000 to Wake Forest University School of Medicine for a new type of positron emission tomography (PET) scanner.
Scientists at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have won a five-year federal grant totaling more than $12 million to develop a safe and effective vaccine against HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
The Center for a Livable Future at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health today announced a new project to study and evaluate the effects of breeding large numbers of food animals in concentrated lots.
A University of Iowa professor and space physicist has won a $4 million NASA contract in collaboration with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory to develop and use radar in a search for underground water on Mars.
UCSD Department of Reproductive Medicine recently received a $4 million National Institutes of Health grant to advance its research in women's reproductive health.
Simon School announces ten new faculty appointments that enhance the school's teaching and research capabilities.
Robert C. McNair, the Houston entrepreneur who built Cogen Technologies and his wife, Janice, have made one of the largest gifts ever by individuals to Rice University--$17.5 million to the Jesse H. Jones Graduate School of Management.
The National Science Foundation this week awarded $50 million in grants for broad-based research in knowledge and distributed intelligence.
Thanks to a recent grant of nearly $1 million from Packard Foundation, Boston University scientists will apply advanced theories in quantum physics to observe what occurs at brain synapses - the sites of communication between neurons.
Speaking at a "Next Millennium" Domestic Violence Conference in Chicago, HHS Secretary Donna E. Shalala announced more than $1.25 million in grants to help communities address domestic violence.
The American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine has announced a call for entries for its year 2000 ACOEM Corporate Health Achievement Award competition.
Laurene West, a nurse and expert in medical information systems who also is a medication- and treatment-dependent patient, has relocated to Washington to ensure that health care, maintenance drugs and controlled substances are available without interruption to all whose lives depend on them.
Implementation of a kidney/pancreas transplant program at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles and guiding the development of programs in partial liver transplantation for both adults and children are top priorities for Christopher R. Shackleton, M.D.
The American Cancer Society, the nation's leading voluntary health organization and the preeminent source of cancer information and service, has announced that Daniel E. Smith has been named its new national vice president of federal and state government affairs.
The Foundation Fighting Blindness, Inc. has awarded researchers from the Cleveland Clinic's Cole Eye Institute and Lerner Research Institute $1.5 million over five years for the study of retinal degeneration.
While colleges around the country announce plans for future e-commerce degrees, Marlboro College in Vermont will hold its second commencement for graduates obtaining their Master of Science in Internet Strategy Management. Another class of k-12 teachers will obtain the country's only Teaching with Internet Technologies graduate degree.
States and managed care organizations are faced with a troubling problem: how to balance increasingly complex, often process-oriented contracts designed to protect access and quality of care with risk-based payment systems that reward underutilization.
Rosalinde Snijders, Ph.D., a pioneer in first-trimester prenatal studies and a consultant to the National Institutes of Health in the development of the "BUN" study, has became a research scholar in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Cedars-Sinai.
Scientists at Wake Forest University School of Medicine are beginning a five-year study to determine which ingredients in soybeans are the active ones in protecting against heart disease, stroke, cancer and osteoporosis.
A race to the edge of the solar system and into interstellar space could come out of a contract awarded recently by NASA for the University of Washington to develop an innovative space propulsion concept.
WIU has been awarded $250,000 from Ameritech to extend the WIU TechKnowledgy Project to address the needs of Illinois teachers who will be required to meet the new teaching technology standards mandated for Illinois recertification.
Walter W. Shervington, the National Medical Association's 99th President, was sworn into office last night during the Association's 1999 Annual Convention and Scientific Assembly held in Las Vegas, Nev.
The American Public Health Association is still accepting entries for the 29th annual Ray Bruner Science Writing Award. Deadline for entries is Aug. 31.
Cardiology: Today and Tomorrow, an award-winning distance education program, will present its first live cybersession on Aug. 21 from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. CDT at www.cvtt.org.
Creighton University is offering a new master of science (MS) degree in electronic commerce.
Two years ago this month, the National Cancer Institute and Vice President Al Gore publicly launched a historic initiative to compile on the Internet the first comprehensive record, or index, of genes involved in human cancer.
The George Washington University was granted final approval by the District of Columbia Board of Zoning Adjustment for the construction of a $96 million, 400,000 square foot replacement hospital.
United States Surgeon General and Assistant Secretary for Health David Satcher, M.D. today received the Bayer Institute Distinguished Physician Communicator Award.
In an initiative prompted by German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, Purdue University's Krannert Graduate School of Management this month will launch a private business school in Hanover, Germany.
A consortium of more than 60 neuroscientists at Emory University, Georgia State University, Georgia Institute of Technology and Atlanta University Center has been approved to become one of five new Science and Technology Centers nationwide by NSF.
The National Health Care Purchasing Institute, a five-year, $7.7 million initiative of The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF), has named Margaret Thomas Trinity as deputy director. Trinity joined the team in July at its Washington, D.C.-based Alpha Center national program office.
A Science@NASA writer shares notes from a science writing workshop, where writers honed their skills at turning scientific facts into readable prose.
The Boston University School of Management has appointed Jennifer Lawrence, a faculty member and former vice president of Marketing at Reebok International, to the new position of Assistant Dean for Career Services. Her appointment is effective August 2, 1999.
The University of Arkansas has won a $2 million grant from the NSF to train graduate students in high-technology fields through an innovative blend of course and field work.