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Released: 25-Jun-2019 3:00 PM EDT
Designing better products for off-grid, backcountry situations
Iowa State University

A group of Iowa State University industrial design students recently spent two weeks “off grid” in the American Southwest — an experience that has sparked a slew of ideas for new products the students are now designing for backcountry adventures.

Released: 24-Jun-2019 12:05 PM EDT
WashU Expert: First Native American U.S. poet laureate will inspire the nation
Washington University in St. Louis

Joy Harjo, a member of the Muscogee Creek Nation, has been selected as the 23rd U.S. poet laureate, a move that will inspire Native American people throughout the country, says Kellie Thompson, director of the Kathryn M. Buder Center for American Indian Studies at Washington University in St. Louis.“Her selection will inspire us in expected ways — maybe to become poets and artists — but also in unexpected ways, like speaking our truth in spaces where it typically has not been heard, as Native American people and as women,” said Thompson, a member of the Seneca Nation of Indians.

20-Jun-2019 4:50 PM EDT
Music Students Score Better in Math, Science, English Than Non-Musical Peers
American Psychological Association (APA)

High schoolers who take music courses score significantly better on exams in certain other subjects, including math and science, than their non-musical peers, according to a study published by the American Psychological Association.

Released: 20-Jun-2019 3:05 PM EDT
Rutgers Film Highlights the Importance of Community Living for Individuals with Intellectual/Developmental Disabilities (I/DD)
Rutgers School of Public Health

The Rutgers Community Living Education Project (CLEP) premiered A Day in the Life of… Burton, Neva, and John at Rutgers Cinema on Monday, June 17.

Released: 17-Jun-2019 2:05 PM EDT
Smithsonian’s Sidedoor Podcast Returns for Season Four
Smithsonian Institution

The Smithsonian’s Sidedoor has returned with new episodes and a new host. Now in its fourth season, the podcast invites listeners to step behind the curtain into a fascinating world of Smithsonian stories.

   
Released: 17-Jun-2019 11:25 AM EDT
NYU Receives $1.5 Million Mellon Foundation Grant to Launch Public Humanities in Doctoral Education
New York University

NYU has received a $1.5 million grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to launch a Public Humanities program in doctoral education in its Graduate School of Arts and Science.

Released: 17-Jun-2019 11:05 AM EDT
Emily Ruskovich Wins 2019 International Dublin Literary Award
Boise State University

Writer Emily Ruskovich, an assistant professor in the Department of Theatre, Film and Creative Writing, has won the 2019 International Dublin Literary Award for her novel “Idaho.”

Released: 14-Jun-2019 2:05 PM EDT
@umich expert: Rushing the desert, storming a mountain, women in US and Europe fought for their place in soccer
University of Michigan

Andrei Markovits, a professor of political science and German studies at the University of Michigan, has written extensively on how culture, sports and politics converge. His most recent book is "Women in American soccer and European football. Different Roads to Shared Glory," in which he discusses the challenges women had to overcome to find a place in the soccer world.

Released: 14-Jun-2019 1:05 PM EDT
Celebrate Summer With the Smithsonian’s “Solstice Saturday”
Smithsonian Institution

The Smithsonian will celebrate the first Saturday of summer—“Solstice Saturday”—with free parties, programs and performances June 22. In addition to programs for adults and children throughout the day, most Smithsonian museums will be open until midnight. Visitors who stay late can hear live music, enjoy dance parties and explore museum exhibitions.

Released: 13-Jun-2019 1:05 PM EDT
Bird of Prey: Evocative Film Reveals World’s Rarest Eagle and a New Chapter of Hope
Cornell University

The Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s debut film, the award-winning documentary Bird of Prey, is now available on iTunes, Amazon, and Vimeo. With fewer than 800 Great Philippine Eagles remaining on Earth, the film tells the moving tale of a small but devoted group of people who are determined to save these magnificent birds from extinction.

   
Released: 12-Jun-2019 11:05 AM EDT
Computer Scientist Wins Fulbright Award to Bring Irish Language Online
Saint Louis University

Kevin Scannell, Ph.D., a professor of computer science, was named a 2019-2020 Fulbright Scholar. He will spend the first six months of 2020 in Ireland, doing research and developing computing resources for the Irish language.

Released: 12-Jun-2019 8:05 AM EDT
Riverview Medical Center Foundation Brings Fireworks Back to the Navesink River on July 3
Hackensack Meridian Health

The Hackensack Meridian Health Riverview Medical Center Foundation Board of Trustees is pleased to announce the Seventh Annual Family Fireworks on the Navesink to support Riverview Medical Center Foundation. This annual event will again be held at the DiPiero home on the picturesque Navesink River, on Wednesday, July 3 at 6:30 p.m.

Released: 11-Jun-2019 1:05 PM EDT
UCI computer scientists breathe life into Venice Biennale installations
University of California, Irvine

Computer scientists from the University of California, Irvine are making a splash in the art world this year through their participation in Italy’s Venice Biennale, one of the oldest and most prestigious cultural festivals. The team – led by Alexandru Nicolau, UCI Distinguished Professor and chair of computer science, and Alexander Veidenbaum, UCI professor of computer science – collaborated with Israeli-Romanian artist Belu-Simion Fainaru to create three art installations for the event.

Released: 4-Jun-2019 12:05 PM EDT
Creating mascots to entertain fans
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Brittany Jacob, an alum of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee's Washington County campus, leads a team that is behind a number of well-known corporate and sports mascots.

Released: 3-Jun-2019 3:45 PM EDT
From there to here: 2019 InterPlanetary Festival connects frontiers of space to terrestrial challenges
Santa Fe Institute

Leading scientists and sci-fi authors convene in Santa Fe, NM to discuss how to sustain human civilization, on and beyond Earth. Select panel discussions will stream live from the June 14-16 festival.

   
Released: 3-Jun-2019 10:00 AM EDT
ISU students design proposals for new educational center in Iowa Judicial Building
Iowa State University

As the Iowa Judicial Branch Building shifts from physical to digital files, Iowa State University students have designed proposals to turn the soon-to-be-vacant space into an experiential learning center for the public.

Released: 31-May-2019 2:05 PM EDT
Keeping the memories alive
West Virginia University - Eberly College of Arts and Sciences

Researchers from West Virginia University are preserving the memories of a coal community through oral history and photography.

Released: 31-May-2019 1:05 PM EDT
The ‘Heaven 11’: Baylor Gospel Music Expert Lists 11 Most Influential Black Gospel Songs
Baylor University

To celebrate African American Music Appreciation Month in June, Robert Darden, former gospel music editor for Billboard Magazine and founder/director of Baylor University’s Black Gospel Music Restoration Project, compiled the “Heaven 11,” a list of the 11 most influential black gospel songs.

Released: 30-May-2019 11:05 AM EDT
Philosopher Nancy Cartwright Honored for Lifetime Scholarly Achievement
University of California San Diego

UC San Diego Distinguished Professor of Philosophy Nancy Cartwright is the recipient of the Carl Gustav Hempel Award, recognizing lifetime achievement in the philosophy of science as well as scholarly excellence. Given bi-annually by the Philosophy of Science Association, the Hempel Award was established in 2012. Cartwright is the fourth recipient, and first woman.

Released: 29-May-2019 11:05 PM EDT
NUS opens Singapore History Prize to global nomination of non-fiction and fiction works
National University of Singapore (NUS)

The Department of History at the National University of Singapore (NUS) Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences today announced the opening of the second round of the NUS Singapore History Prize.

Released: 29-May-2019 1:05 PM EDT
New Wind Instrument Philosophy Introduces Novel Possibilities for Musical Performance
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

After eight years of work, Jonas Braasch, professor of architecture and arts at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, has figured out how to play a soprano saxophone as a brass instrument, a flute, a double-reed instrument, and a single-reed instrument.

Released: 28-May-2019 3:15 PM EDT
APA Highlights Books for LGBTQ+ Children and Families for Pride Month
American Psychological Association (APA)

In honor of Pride Month, the American Psychological Association is highlighting books from its children’s book imprint, Magination Press, that are for LGBTQ+ children, young adults, families and allies. Magination Press books use psychological science and the takeaways it can offer to create helpful, engaging, informative and beautiful books for children and young adults.

Released: 28-May-2019 1:05 PM EDT
Smithsonian Regents Name Lonnie Bunch 14th Smithsonian Secretary
Smithsonian Institution

The Smithsonian Institution’s Board of Regents announced today it elected Lonnie G. Bunch III, director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture, as the 14th Secretary of the Smithsonian, effective June 16. Bunch is the founding director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture, which opened in September 2016. Bunch’s election is unprecedented for the Smithsonian: He will be the first African American to lead the Smithsonian, and the first historian elected Secretary.

Released: 24-May-2019 12:05 PM EDT
How Game of Thrones embraced the Platonic Ideal
University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Aaron Duncan, professor of communication studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, discusses how Game of Thrones' characters and plots embodied the ideals of Plato.

Released: 22-May-2019 11:20 AM EDT
The New Jersey International Film Festival Summer 2019 Lineup Announced
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

The Rutgers Film Co-op/New Jersey Media Arts Center, in association with the Rutgers University Program in Cinema Studies, is proud to present the 24th annual New Jersey International Film Festival Summer 2019. Showcasing new international films, American independent features, animation, experimental and short subjects, and cutting-edge documentaries, the New Jersey International Film Festival Summer 2019 will feature 20 film screenings. The Festival screenings will take place on Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings between June 1-9, 2019 with 5PM and/or 7PM start times in Voorhees Hall #105/Rutgers University, 71 Hamilton Street, New Brunswick, New Jersey.

Released: 22-May-2019 8:15 AM EDT
Donald Lawrence Selected as a 2019 CUR-Arts and Humanities Faculty Mentor Awardee
Council on Undergraduate Research (CUR)

Donald Lawrence, professor of visual arts at Thompson Rivers University (TRU) in Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada, has been selected as a 2019 CUR-Arts and Humanities Faculty Mentor Awardee.

Released: 22-May-2019 8:00 AM EDT
Neel Smith Selected as a 2019 CUR-Arts and Humanities Faculty Mentor Awardee
Council on Undergraduate Research (CUR)

Neel Smith, professor and chair of the Department of Classics at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, MA, has been selected as a 2019 CUR-Arts and Humanities Faculty Mentor Awardee.

Released: 21-May-2019 12:05 PM EDT
URI history professor Joëlle Rollo-Koster is an expert on the papacy, French culture, medieval history, Game of Thrones
University of Rhode Island

Rollo-Koster is the author of eight books on the papacy. She was interviewed by a number of media outlets following the fire at the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris and was featured in a Time.com story in the spring of 2019 about Game of Thrones.

Released: 20-May-2019 5:05 PM EDT
Stewart named next South Dakota Poet Laureate
South Dakota State University

Poetry helped Christine Stewart deal with her sister’s death—and started a career that has led to her becoming South Dakota Poet Laureate.

Released: 20-May-2019 10:05 AM EDT
Phase Transitions: The Math Behind the Music
Case Western Reserve University

Why is music composed according to so many rules? Why do we organize sounds in this way to create music? To address that question, a Cleveland, Ohio, physics professor borrows methods from a related question: ‘How do atoms in a random gas or liquid come together to form a particular crystal?” Professor Jesse Berezovsky at Case Western Reserve University contends that “phase transitions” in physics--and music--come about because of a balance between order and disorder, or entropy.

Released: 17-May-2019 8:05 AM EDT
Olivia Reyes Selected as Inaugural CUR Trimmer Travel Fund Awardee
Council on Undergraduate Research (CUR)

Olivia Reyes, a 2018 graduate of the University of Central Oklahoma, has been selected as the recipient of the first Trimmer Travel Award of the Council on Undergraduate Research (CUR)

Released: 17-May-2019 6:00 AM EDT
Cedars-Sinai Volunteers Turn Music Into Medicine
Cedars-Sinai

Just hours before Rebecca Woolf's 44-year-old husband died of pancreatic cancer, the melodic tones of a harp wafted into his hospital room. Rebecca describes the music as a gift. Cedars-Sinai’s long-running Music for Healing program dispatches musicians and singers to perform for patients and their loved ones. Most perform in patients’ rooms, but others play the piano in the Plaza Level Lobby.

   
Released: 16-May-2019 1:05 PM EDT
New Brooklyn monument to honor first African American Congresswoman
Cornell University

A monument honoring political icon Shirley Chisholm — the first African American woman elected to Congress — will soon rise in Brooklyn’s Prospect Park. It will be the first of five monuments designed to honor women who have made significant contributions to New York City.

Released: 16-May-2019 10:15 AM EDT
Henry Ford Health System's Artsy Investment
Henry Ford Health

Henry Ford Health System’s newest investment in the city of Detroit features just about every color on the color wheel. The artwork on the walls is splashy and spirited and the floor is the original – scruffy and worn – from days of a bygone era.

   
Released: 16-May-2019 10:05 AM EDT
West Virginia University becomes first in U.S. to offer technical art history degree
West Virginia University

Students interested in the science behind art and its conservation will now be able to study at West Virginia University in the Bachelor of Arts in Technical Art History program, the first degree of its kind in the nation.

Released: 15-May-2019 2:05 PM EDT
From Dragons to Marital Power Moves, How “Game of Thrones” Blends Elements from Varying Cultures, Time Periods
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

The final season of Game of Thrones is wrapping up, and Rutgers University Medievalist Larry Scanlon is available to discuss the medieval traditions, genres and motifs that have influenced the TV phenomena based on George R. R. Martin’s Song of Ice and Fire novels.

Released: 15-May-2019 10:05 AM EDT
OMA/KOO win UIC’s Center for the Arts design competition
University of Illinois Chicago

OMA/KOO win UIC’s Center for the Arts design competition

Released: 14-May-2019 2:05 PM EDT
Enter the “Funky Nests in Funky Places” Contest
Cornell University

What prompts birds to build nests where they do? Some of their real estate choices are real head-scratchers. That’s where the Funky Nests in Funky Places challenge comes in. Anyone who finds a bird nest in a creative, quirky location can participate. Entries can be photos, poems, stories, or artwork. Past participants have found nests built on statues, barbecue grills, traffic lights, wind chimes, golf shoes, and–pretty much anywhere. The contest is run by the Celebrate Urban Birds citizen-science project at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. The entry deadline is June 30. Submit entries at funkynests.org.

9-May-2019 10:00 AM EDT
How Nigerian Music Can Help You Choose a Ripe Watermelon
Acoustical Society of America (ASA)

The quickest way to decide if a watermelon is ripe or not is by tapping on it. And if you’re having trouble detecting the subtleties of the sound, listen to some Nigerian traditional music to get your ears attuned. Nigerian researcher Stephen Onwubiko has found a link between the sounds of drumming in traditional Nigerian music and the sound of fingers drumming on watermelons in the markets. His team will present the findings at the 177th ASA Meeting, May 13-17.



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