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Highlights

A collection of news and information related to University of Washington published by this site and its partners.

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    May 24, 2013 |Story| Aberdeen News
  1. USDA funds studies of weather and climatic variability impact on cattle

    MADISON, Wis. - On May 7, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) awarded $19.5 million to support research, education and Extension activities associated with climate solutions in agriculture aimed at the impacts of climate variability and change on...

    Tags: Oklahoma State University-Stillwater , Global Change, Consumer Goods Industries, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Environmental Issues

  2. May 23, 2013 |Story| Reuters
  3. Sugar water injections may help ease knee pain

    Reuters
    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Knee pain appears to decrease up to one year after "prolotherapy," a series of sugar water injections at the site of the pain, according to a new study. Previous research on the therapy that suggested positive effects was...

    Tags: Health and Safety at School, Salt, Placebo, Drugs and Medicines, Physical Fitness and Exercise

  4. May 21, 2013 |Story| Daily American
  5. St. Francis professor going to leadership academy

    St. Francis University chemistry professor Pedro Muino was selected by the Council of Independent Colleges and the American Academic Leadership Institute to participate in a year-long Senior Leadership Academy. The 26 mid-level administrators chosen for...

    Tags: Chemistry, Science and Technology, Education, Colleges and Universities

  6. May 17, 2013 |Story| Aberdeen News
  7. Use gypsum to build soils and buffer weather

    Chicago - Ohio farmer Les Seiler has applied gypsum to his fields for the past five years. His farm is based in Fulton County, Ohio, 40 miles west of Toledo and near the Michigan border where Seiler says cold and wet spring weather is “guaranteed.”...

    Tags: Weather Reports, Energy Resources, Agricultural Research and Technology, Conservation, Weather

  8. May 11, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  9. The world through a newborn's senses

    Newborns arrive in this world somewhat half-baked or, in the more measured words of evolutionary anthropologist Wanda Trevathan of the University of New Mexico, "a little unfinished, if you will."
    Newborns arrive in this world somewhat half-baked or, in the more measured words of evolutionary anthropologist Wanda Trevathan of the University of New Mexico, "a little unfinished, if you will." Parents declare them beautiful, these wailing bundles of...

    Tags: University of New Mexico, Science and Technology, Science, American Academy of Pediatrics

  10. May 13, 2013 |Story| Hartford Courant
  11. UConn's Herbst: 13th On Highest Paid List

    An annual survey of compensation at public colleges reveals that the University of Connecticut, while not yet in the top tier of public universities, ranks quite well when it comes to paying its president. UConn weighs in at #13 on the list prepared by...

    Tags: Virginia Tech, University of Michigan, University of Connecticut, University of Florida, Graham Spanier

  12. May 9, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. Herbert Blau dies at 87; theater director helped shape CalArts

    Herbert Blau, an influential theater director, theorist and scholar who helped shape CalArts during its early years, died at his home in Seattle on May 3, his 87th birthday. He had cancer, according to the Seattle Times. The Brooklyn, N.Y.-born...

    Tags: Stanford University, Brooklyn (New York City), New York University, Teachers, Arts and Culture

  14. May 2, 2013 |Story| Burbank Leader
  15. Bell-Jeff names Fauria new football coach, athletic director

    The Bellarmine-Jefferson High administration was looking for a new football coach and athletic director with expertise, experience and a vision to help build the school's sports programs. The school seems to have found all those attributes in Lance...

    Tags: Washington Huskies, Christianity, Football, Roman Catholicism, Sports

  16. Apr 30, 2013 |Story| Reuters
  17. FACTBOX-Paul Allen's investment hits and misses

    Reuters
    SEATTLE, April 30(Reuters) - Microsoft Corp co-founder Paul Allen has constructed a $15 billion portfolio of tech, sports, real estate and energy investments, while giving to a wide range of philanthropic causes. Not all his bets have been a success....

    Tags: Telecommunication Service, AOL LLC, Alzheimer's Disease, DreamWorks Animation SKG Incorporated, Microsoft Corporation

  18. Apr 24, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. Spending teenage years in the 'stroke belt' seems to increase risk

    Spending adolescence in the “stroke belt” of the southeastern United States could make people more vulnerable to stroke later in life – even if they eventually move elsewhere, a study published Wednesday suggests.
    Spending adolescence in the “stroke belt” of the southeastern United States could make people more vulnerable to stroke later in life – even if they eventually move elsewhere, a study published Wednesday suggests. What researchers call...

    Tags: University of Alabama, Environmental Pollution, Science and Technology, Environmental Issues, Physical Conditions

  20. Apr 25, 2013 |Story| Daily American
  21. Missionaries coming to Boswell church

    Dr. Andrew and Judy Bennett will hold a missionary service at the New Life Church of the Nazarene, Boswell, Saturday. There will be a barbecue fellowship meal at 5 p.m. with the service immediately following the meal. Andrew and Judy Bennett are...

    Tags: Drugs and Medicines, Education, Colleges and Universities

  22. Apr 24, 2013 |Story| Reuters
  23. Race and geography may influence late-stage kidney care

    Reuters
    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - At the end of life, black kidney disease patients are more likely than white patients to continue intensive dialysis instead of choosing hospice care, according to a new study. Researchers also found that racial differences in...

    Tags: Health and Safety at School, Kidney Disease, Medicare, Government Health Care, Dialysis

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