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    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 12:30 PM EST
    Daniel Goodman Receives 2024 Raymond Sidney Volunteer Leadership Award
    The Fannie and John Hertz Foundation

    Hertz Fellow Daniel Goodman, senior director of advanced technology at ASMPT-NEXX Inc., was named recipient of the 2024 Raymond Sidney Volunteer Leadership Award in recognition of his contributions to the Hertz Community — and there are many.

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    Newswise: CB3 team launching study to explore beef's impact on brain health
    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 12:25 PM EST
    CB3 team launching study to explore beef's impact on brain health
    University of Nebraska-Lincoln

    A team from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s Center for Brain, Biology and Behavior is launching a first-of-its-kind study to explore potential links between beef consumption and brain health.Utilizing brain imaging, blood biomarkers and surveys over a 12-week study, researchers led by Aron Barbey, the center's director, will explore how beef consumption impacts brain health in young adults.

    UNREVIEWED

    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 12:25 PM EST
    Presidents of Loyola University Medical Center and MacNeal Hospital included in Crain’s Chicago Business’ Lists of Notable Leaders
    Loyola Medicine

    Loyola University Medical Center President Tad Gomez was recognized by Crain's Chicago Business as a Notable Latino Leader for 2024. In addition, MacNeal Hospital President Pierre Monice was named one of Crain’s Notable Black Leaders.

    UNREVIEWED

    Newswise: An event where future STEM stars are born?
    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 12:20 PM EST
    An event where future STEM stars are born?
    Argonne National Laboratory

    Throughout its history, the Argonne Hispanic/Latino Employee Resource Group has regularly partnered with local schools in underserved communities, inviting students to visit the lab and inspiring them to build a sustained interest in their STEM studies.

    UNREVIEWED

    Newswise: Loyola Medicine Dedicates the Nancy W. Knowles Orthopaedic Institute
    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 12:15 PM EST
    Loyola Medicine Dedicates the Nancy W. Knowles Orthopaedic Institute
    Loyola Medicine

    On November 14, Loyola Medicine dedicated the Nancy W. Knowles Orthopaedic Institute honoring an eight-figure gift from the late Nancy W. Knowles to support orthopaedic care, research and education. Mrs. Knowles had a 40-year relationship with Loyola Medicine, which she entrusted with her care. She was also a member of the Loyola University Medical Center Board of Directors.

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    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 12:10 PM EST
    2024 DÍA MUNDIAL DEL SIDA: Se necesita una acción colectiva para acabar con el VIH/SIDA, un terreno común para una nación dividida
    Johns Hopkins School of Nursing

    Este domingo 1 de diciembre, Día Mundial del SIDA, el Centro para la Salud del Adolescente Latino y la Familia (CLAFH) junto con el Instituto para Soluciones Políticas (IPS) de la Escuela de Enfermería Johns Hopkins está llamando a todos los sectores a actuar.

    UNREVIEWED

    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 12:10 PM EST
    2024 WORLD AIDS DAY: Collective Action Needed to End HIV/AIDS, Common Ground for Divided Nation
    Johns Hopkins School of Nursing

    This World AIDS Day Sunday, December 1, the Center for Latino Adolescent and Family Health (CLAFH) along with the Institute for Policy Solutions (IPS) at Johns Hopkins School of Nursing is calling all sectors to act.

    UNREVIEWED

    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 12:00 PM EST
    Expert Available: Trump Promises Tariffs on Canadian, Mexican and Chinese Goods on Day One
    George Washington University

    President-elect Donald Trump announced he plans to impose a 25% tariff on Mexican and Canadian goods and 10 percent on Chinese merchandise as one of his first acts on Inauguration Day. ...

    UNREVIEWED

    Newswise:Video Embedded msu-engineers-help-spartan-football-team-tune-out-the-noise
    VIDEO
    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 11:50 AM EST
    MSU Engineers Help Spartan Football Team Tune Out the Noise
    Michigan State University

    Up until the 2024 college football season, a quarterback might be looking to the sidelines and relying on a sound, a sequence of hand motions, or a large sign with logos and symbols on it to get play information. This year, the rules have changed. Players no longer need to rely on these cues to decide which plays come next thanks to the NCAA’s approval of coach-to-player communication for FBS, or football bowl subdivision, college football teams.

    UNREVIEWED

       
    Newswise: Brain research team launching study to explore beef's impact on brain health
    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 11:40 AM EST
    Brain research team launching study to explore beef's impact on brain health
    University of Nebraska-Lincoln

    A team from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s Center for Brain, Biology and Behavior is launching a first-of-its-kind study to explore potential links between beef consumption and brain health. Utilizing brain imaging, blood biomarkers and surveys over a 12-week study, researchers led by Aron Barbey, the center's director, will explore how beef consumption impacts brain health in young adults.

    UNREVIEWED

    Newswise: New tool makes quick health, environmental monitoring possible
    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 11:40 AM EST
    New tool makes quick health, environmental monitoring possible
    University of Wisconsin–Madison

    University of Wisconsin–Madison biochemists have developed a new, efficient method that may give first responders, environmental monitoring groups, or even you, the ability to quickly detect harmful and health-relevant substances in our bodies and environments.Small molecules that interact with proteins can initiate, enhance, and inhibit vital biological processes.

    UNREVIEWED

    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 11:30 AM EST
    Unraveling the Mysteries of Cerebral/Cortical Visual Impairment
    Children's Hospital Los Angeles

    Brain-based vision loss, known as cerebral/cortical visual impairment (CVI) is a leading cause of blindness and visual impairment in children in the United States and other industrialized countries. However, our understanding of CVI is limited. Physicians don’t even agree on how to characterize it. Researchers at CHLA intend to change that and help guide how this disorder is diagnosed as well.

    UNREVIEWED

    Newswise: Researcher Targets DNA Repair Vulnerabilities in Female Reproductive Cancers
    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 11:15 AM EST
    Researcher Targets DNA Repair Vulnerabilities in Female Reproductive Cancers
    Tufts University

    Endometrial/uterine and ovarian cancers have few effective treatment options outside of surgery. Now, researchers have identified a set of DNA repair proteins that may become a target for the treatment of these cancers

    UNREVIEWED

    Newswise: Researchers develop a simple lab-free test to detect bacteria in fluids from water to urine
    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 11:00 AM EST
    Researchers develop a simple lab-free test to detect bacteria in fluids from water to urine
    McMaster University

    Engineers and biochemists at McMaster university have brought their skills together to make it possible for untrained users to confirm contamination in fluids using a biogel test that changes colour in the presence of such bacteria as E. coli, listeria and other frequent testing targets.

    UNREVIEWED

    Newswise: 1920_black-patient-pancreatic-cancer-cedars-sinai.jpg?10000
    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 11:00 AM EST
    Using AI To Intercept Pancreatic Cancer in Black Patients
    Cedars-Sinai

    Cedars-Sinai investigators who previously developed an imaging tool that used artificial intelligence (AI) to predict pancreatic cancer are now working to adapt that tool specifically for Black patients, who have disproportionately high rates of the disease.

    UNREVIEWED

    Newswise: Can We Avert the Looming Food Crisis of Climate Change?
    21-Nov-2024 9:20 AM EST
    Can We Avert the Looming Food Crisis of Climate Change?
    American Institute of Physics (AIP)

    In Chaos, researchers share a mathematical model created to capture the nonlinear relationships between CO2, temperature, human population, and crop growth. Increasing evidence of chaotic and complex dynamics within ecological systems led them to use both autonomous and nonautonomous models to gain a deeper understanding of seasonal variations and potential mitigation strategies, such as developing temperature-tolerant crops.

    Newswise: Research to treat placenta could improve human pregnancies
    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 10:50 AM EST
    Research to treat placenta could improve human pregnancies
    University of Wisconsin–Madison

    A gene therapy approach to boosting the placenta is safe in monkeys, according to a new, short-term study, bringing the potential treatment closer to improving birthweights of human babies and sparing them the complications of an early birth and developmental difficulties later in life.In humans, placental insufficiency restricts the growth of developing fetuses and typically leads to premature delivery and extended stays in the neonatal intensive care unit.

    UNREVIEWED

    Newswise: Improved catalyst turns harmful greenhouse gases into cleaner fuels, chemical feedstocks
    Release date: 26-Nov-2024 10:40 AM EST
    Improved catalyst turns harmful greenhouse gases into cleaner fuels, chemical feedstocks
    Oak Ridge National Laboratory

    A chemical reaction can convert two polluting greenhouse gases into valuable building blocks for cleaner fuels and feedstocks, but the high temperature required for the reaction also deactivates the catalyst. An Oak Ridge National Laboratory team has found a way to thwart deactivation.

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