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Released: 13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
One Rare Achievement in Mathematics
University of Maryland, College Park

On December 21 at the University of Maryland, Tasha Inniss, Kimberly Weems and Sherry Scott will do something few other African American women have done -- receive Ph.D.s in mathematics.

Released: 13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Playing Santa to Someone with Arthritis?
Missouri Arthritis Rehabilitation, Research, and Training Center

Given the fact that America is aging - and 43 million Americans have arthritis -- most people have a gift list that includes someone with arthritis or another strength or mobility limitation.

Released: 13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Nature Press Conference on Plant Genetics Milestone
National Science Foundation (NSF)

The National Science Foundation will webcast a press conference hosted by the journal Nature at the National Press Club in Washington, DC on December 13. The event is to announce an important milestone in plant genetics research.

Released: 13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Researchers Examine Animal Well-Being Ethics And Practices
Purdue University

Food animal well-being has become a mainstream issue with consumers and businesses as well. Researchers at Purdue University also are asking questions about farm animal well-being and supplying some of the scientific support for sound livestock handling practices.

Released: 13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
TB Research Foundation Announces First Vaccine Grants
Sequella Global Tuberculosis Foundation

The Sequella Global TB Foundation announced the first recipients of the inaugural series of VIP grants designed to fund high risk/high reward research that could lead to successful new vaccines against tuberculosis.

Released: 13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
A Gift of Poison: Moths and Safe Sex
Wake Forest University

Safe sex for scarlet-bodied wasp moths means avoiding being eaten by predators while mating. So, the male moth, in order to protect his intended during courtship, covers her with a bridal veil of poison, according to a Wake Forest University researcher. (Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, 12-12-00)

Released: 13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Carnegie Mellon and NASA Establish Consortium With Industry
Carnegie Mellon University

Carnegie Mellon University and NASA have formed a High Dependability Computing Consortium whose mission is to eliminate failures in computing systems critical to the welfare of society.

   
Released: 13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Animal Well-Being Experts
Purdue University

A list of 15 Purdue University experts who can discuss various aspects of animal and livestock well-being, ethics and animals, livestock management and the human-animal bond.

Released: 13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Cosmic Christmas Present: A Partial Solar Eclipse
Sky & Telescope Magazine

On Christmas Day, weather permitting, people across virtually all of North America will be able to watch the Moon partially cover the Sun. The editors of SKY & TELESCOPE magazine have created a complete guide for where/when to see this solar eclipse and how to view it safely.

Released: 13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
News about Science, Technology and Engineering
Iowa State University

Iowa State's December science tips include: 1- Separating microbes in the manner of molecules; 2- Learning the detail of materials; 3- "Fast-talking" computer clusters

Released: 13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
More Study Needed on Creatine Use Among Athletes
Mayo Clinic

Based on their recently completed survey of high school athletes, Mayo Clinic doctors are recommending a large-scale study on the use and long-term effects of creatine, a supplement used by athletes who believe it enhances athletic performance. (Mayo Clinic Proceedings, 12-00)

Released: 13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Doctoral Student Develops Cement That Cures Below Freezing
Purdue University

Purdue doctoral student has led a team developing a new type of cement that cures in below-freezing temperatures, an innovation with implications for the construction industry, which spends hundreds of millions of dollars annually to heat construction sites.

Released: 13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Who Says Only the Ruthless Succeed in Business?
Business Ethics Magazine

Responsible business practices are successful business practices.

13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Untreated Depression and Hopelessness and Death Wish
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Understanding why a terminally-ill patient wishes to die has become a focus for improving end of life care as well as a crucial part of the physician-assisted suicide debate.

13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Team-managed Home Care Boosts Satisfaction
Veterans Affairs (VA) Research Communications

New research appearing in the December 13 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, finds that an innovative model for home health care used at U.S. Department Veterans Affairs medical centers yields more satisfaction for patients and family caregivers, than private-sector home care.

13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Benefits of Innovative VA Home Care Model
University of Illinois Chicago

An innovative Veteran's Affair's home health care model provides patients and their caregivers with higher health-related quality of life and satisfaction with care than does private-sector home care, according to a study jointly conducted by researchers from the UIC, the VA and Northwestern University.

Released: 12-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Researchers Finding Better Christmas Trees
Washington State University

Vacuuming dry pine needles off the carpet is an inevitable part of having a live Christmas tree--or is it? Washington State University Plant Pathologist Gary Chastagner and geneticist Ulrik Nielsen have been working to develop better-quality Christmas trees that wonít dry up and shed their needles.

Released: 12-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Huge New Hydrothermal Vent System Found On Seafloor
National Science Foundation (NSF)

A new hydrothermal vent field, which scientists have dubbed "The Lost City," was discovered December 5th on an undersea mountain in the Atlantic Ocean.

Released: 12-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Tracking a Moral Panic
University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

Moral panics occur when the public voice of a society calls out to condemn a certain influence or activity in the community. An Arkansas anthropologist traces the trajectory of one moral panic in Egypt and gives insight into how such panics happen in the U.S.

Released: 12-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Ecologist Wins International Award
University of Georgia Savannah River Ecology Laboratory

Dr. Justin Congdon, a senior research ecologist with the Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, has been awarded the 2000 Longevity Prize by the Fondation IPSEN, a French organization that supports work in the field of longevity.

Released: 12-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Study Yields New Insight Into HIV-Associated Dementia
University of Alabama at Birmingham

A new study by researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) provides new information about how HIV-associated dementia develops in patients infected with HIV. (Journal of Virology, 10-00)

Released: 12-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
U.S. to See Christmas Eclipse
Williams College

A partial solar eclipse will be visible from the entire continental U.S. on Christmas Day, Monday, Dec. 25. It is important, though, to observe it safely.

Released: 12-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
E-Business Is a Boon for Entrepreneurs
Saint Joseph's University

While the digital economy poses serious threats to established brick-and-mortar firms, e-business represents a significant opportunity for entrepreneurs, conclude two Saint Joseph's University researchers in a new study. (New England Journal of Entrepreneurship)

Released: 12-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Link Between Antibiotic Dosing in Livestock, Antibiotic Resistance in Humans
University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

A University of Arkansas law professor and a graduate student in biochemistry call for regulation of the use of millions of tons of antibiotics in livestock, citing their contribution to the growing problem of antibiotic resistant infections that plague humans. (Boston College Environmental Affairs Law Review)

13-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
An Internal Cannabinoid-Signaling System Regulates Human Sperm
University at Buffalo

A cellular signaling system that responds to THC, the active substance in marijuana, as well as to anandamide, a cannabinoid-like molecule normally produced in the body, may regulate sperm functions required for fertilization in humans, a study headed by scientists from the University at Buffalo has found.

12-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Heart Benefit from Boosting Nutrients to Lower Homocysteine
University of Michigan

People at risk for heart disease shouldn't wait for results from big clinical trials of homocysteine-lowering nutrients before having their levels tested and taking more folic acid and vitamin B12 to cut homocysteine levels and heart risk, a new cost-benefit study finds. (Archives of Internal Medicine, 12-11-00)

12-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Safe Diving Poses No Risk of Brain Injury
American Academy of Neurology (AAN)

Scuba diving has no long-term effects on the brain, according to a study in the December 12 issue of Neurology, the scientific journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

12-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Mouse Allergy Contributes to Inner-City Asthma Crisis
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Mouse allergen, in the form of mouse urine or dander, is widely distributed in the inner city and may be a significant contributing factor to the childhood asthma epidemic in urban areas, according to two studies by Johns Hopkins researchers. (Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 12-00)

12-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Newer Drugs More Helpful in First-Time Schizophrenia
University of North Carolina Health Care System

People diagnosed with first-episode schizophrenia may fare much better when treated with newer anti-psychotic drugs than with traditional medications that were first introduced over forty years ago.

Released: 9-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Baffling Geminid Meteor Shower
NASA Marshall Space Flight Center

Most meteor showers are caused by comets, but the Geminid meteor shower, which peaks next Wednesday morning, seems to come from a curious near-Earth asteroid.

Released: 9-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Project To Save Yuchi Language
University of Tulsa

A research professor of anthropology at The University of Tulsa will direct a $297,300 project for last-ditch efforts to preserve the Yuchi language, which is spoken fluently now by only five elderly tribal members.

Released: 9-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
How Animals Communicate Using Vibration
University of Tulsa

Ten scientists and engineers from the United States and Austria will meet in Chicago on Jan. 4 for the first scientific gathering of its kind convened to discuss research on vibration signals used by animals.

Released: 9-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Temple U Tip Sheet for 12-8-00
Temple University

1) Employer flexibility enhances holiday productivity. 2) New president is likely to face a divided house on the hill. 3) Temple psychologist suggests celebrating life to combat holiday blues. 4) Exercise caution when decorating.

Released: 9-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Legal Website Will Show Laws through Time
Cornell University

People will be able to retrieve the law as it stood at any point in time, thanks to a $100,000 grant to Cornell's Legal Information Institute from the Red Hat Center, a nonprofit foundation in North Carolina that seeks to make shared information freely available to the public.

Released: 9-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Andromeda Unveiled: Workshop
University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

Outer space will come to earth today with the formal opening of the Arkansas-Oklahoma Center for Space and Planetary Sciences on the University of Arkansas campus with facilities that will allow scientists to simulate conditions found on other planets and in space.

Released: 9-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
New Transistor Could Keep Computer Evolution on Track
Purdue University

Engineers have new information contradicting the most dire predictions about the imminent demise of Moore's Law, a general rule that is central to the evolution and success of the computer industry. Research findings to be presented in December show how the rule might be kept in force for another 25 years or longer.

Released: 9-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Florida Politicians May Face Difficult Future
University of Alabama at Birmingham

No matter who ultimately wins the presidency, says a University of Alabama at Birmingham political scientist, voters in Florida are going to hold their politicians' feet to the fire in upcoming local and statewide races.

Released: 9-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Corporate Citizenship, Central Business Issue
Conference Board

Globalization, competition and shareholder activism are increasing corporate citizenship programs around the world, according to a report from The Conference Board.

Released: 9-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
NSF Grantees Featured At ASCB Meeting
National Science Foundation (NSF)

National Science Foundation grantees will contribute a wide range of insights and research findings at the annual meeting of the American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB).

Released: 9-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Prof. Writes First Book on Archaea
Bowdoin College

A professor has written the first book about the organisms that make up the third category of life. Archaea, now a star of modern biology, weren't even discovered until the 1970s, and Bowdoin College's John Howland is hoping to make more people aware of this group of microorganisms with amazing abilities.

Released: 8-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Nanosystems Institute Awarded Funding
University of California Los Angeles (UCLA)

The California NanoSystems Institute - a wide-ranging research enterprise poised to make a major impact in areas ranging from information technology and household lighting to medical treatment - was named as one of the three research efforts statewide to receive $100M in state support to help propel the future of the state's economy.

Released: 8-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
God in Cinema-New Book Explores the Imagery
University of Arizona

Jessica Lange as angel? Sure, but Clint Eastwood? Audrey Hepburn as God? How about locations shots of Hell in Punxsutawney, Penn.? Who says God isn't a force in the cinema?

Released: 8-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Institute Focused On Fundamental Research
Johns Hopkins Medicine

The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine announced the formation of the Institute for Basic Biomedical Sciences. Uniting eight departments, several hundred scientists and initiating a $125 million funding campaign.

Released: 8-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
$300M Research Initiative
University of California San Diego

Governor Gray Davis announced that the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology, led by UC San Diego in partnership with UC Irvine, has been selected as one of three California Institutes for Science and Innovation.

Released: 8-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Coastal Urban Sprawl Projected to Consume 5.8 Million Acres
National Sea Grant College Program

Urban sprawl will consume by the year 2025 about 5.8 million acres of coastal land that today is either agricultural land or open space according to an Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant researcher at the University of Chicago's Great Cities Institute.

Released: 8-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Behavioral Research with Tarantulas
Hiram College

Hiram College Professor Conducts Behavioral Research with the help of undergraduate students.

Released: 8-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Seniors Can Reap Weighty Gains From Strength Training
Purdue University

"Our research, and that of others, has shown that strength training can have a remarkable impact on the lives of seniors," says a Purdue professor. "There are documented cases of individuals who required a cane or a walker to get around, but after strength training they no longer needed those items for mobility."

Released: 8-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Recognizing and Treating Sinus Problems
Mayo Clinic

An estimated 35 million Americans are plagued with sinusitis every year. Sinusitis, an inflammation or infection of the sinuses, can start out like a cold, with a scratchy throat, stuffy nose and cough, but it may last longer and be impervious to over-the-counter remedies.

Released: 8-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Students Set their Sites on Winning $5,000 Internet Olympiad
Purdue University

Students are racing against time in a high-tech showdown to create new, commercially viable internet technology in Purdue's first annual Internet Olympiad. "The goal of the Internet Olympiad," said associate head of Computer Sciences, "is to get students to develop a prototype of an Internet application.

Released: 8-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
High Levels of Nuclear Contamination in the Russian Arctic
University of Rhode Island

A team of scientists has found some of the highest levels of radioactive plutonium ever measured in the marine environment in the sediments of Chernaya Bay. Investigations into how radioactivity is transported through waterways reveal dangerously high levels of radioactive elements that could affect the waters off of North America.



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