| The Professor of Commodities: Interview with James Doran HardAssetsInvestor.com anchor Mike Norman interviews FSU finance Professor James Doran, who specializes in commodities and commodity derivatives. |
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| SeekingAlpha.com | October 2, 2008 (Part I) | ||
| SeekingAlpha.com | October 2, 2008 (Part II) | ||
| From cloudy to clear: FSU professor's book explores birth of modern meteorology For much of the first half of the 20th century, meteorology was more art than science, relying heavily on an individual forecaster's lifetime of local experience. Now, FSU's Kristine Harper, an assistant professor of history, has written a book that tells the story of the field's transformation from a "guessing science" into a sophisticated scientific discipline based on physics and mathematics. |
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| FirstScience.com | October 2, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | October 2, 2008 | ||
| Study identifies gene in young men with delinquent peers Birds of a feather flock together, according to the adage, and adolescent males who possess a certain type of variation in a specific gene are more likely to flock to delinquent peers, according to a landmark study led by FSU criminologist Kevin M. Beaver. |
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| Post Chronicle | October 2, 2008 | ||
| Science Daily | October 2, 2008 | ||
| United Press International | October 2, 2008 | ||
| Reason.com | October 1, 2008 | ||
| Medical News Today | October 1, 2008 | ||
| PhysOrg.com | October 1, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | October 1, 2008 | ||
| FSU study says climate change will affect Florida coast, economy A just-released FSU report finds that climate change will cause significant impacts on Florida's coastlines and economy due to increased sea level rise. "The impacts will be substantial, persistent and long-term, even under our conservative estimates," said Julie Harrington, FSU's director of the Center for Economic Forecasting and Analysis. |
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| The Money Times | October 1, 2008 | ||
| Science Daily | October 1, 2008 | ||
| United Press International | September 30, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | September 24, 2008 | ||
| Latino Buying Power Is a Growing Economic Force When it comes to saving money, Latinos are generally not as conscientious as whites but are a little more conscientious than blacks. That's the conclusion of the U.S. Federal Reserve, reflected in its report, "Currents and Undercurrents: Changes in the Distribution of Wealth, 1989-2004." Felipe Korzenny, founder and director of FSU's Center for Hispanic Marketing Communication, comments. |
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| Diversity Inc. | September 29, 2008 | ||
| Balanchine's Muse, Preserving Her Master In a grainy black-and-white photograph from 1968, Suzanne Farrell, gently supported by Arthur Mitchell, arches her back in a perfectly curved arabesque. This haunting image and a barely decipherable videotape were all that remained of Balanchine's "Pithoprakta," until financial support from the Balanchine Preservation Initiative allowed Farrell, an FSU dance professor, to reconstruct it for her troupe, the Suzanne Farrell Ballet, which performed the ballet for the first time at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., last year. |
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| New York Sun | September 22, 2008 | ||
| Robert Olen Butler: Writing by Instinct There are authors who spend whole careers mining a single theme. And then there are those who live in the moment, relying on serendipity to be their muse. FSU's Robert Olen Butler is one of the latter. When his sixth novel, The Deuce, got respectful reviews yet sold only 1,068 copies, he did a most inadvisable thing: he published a quirky collection of short stories set in Vietnam called A Good Scent From a Strange Mountain. It won the 1993 Pulitzer Prize. |
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| The Washington Post | September 21, 2008 | ||
| Rising cost of living puts the squeeze on degrees With the cost of higher education in the United States soaring, a small but growing number of students are trying to save money by completing the traditional four-year degree in three years. One of a number of universities helping students speed through their studies, Florida State University has begun "Degree in Three," for students hoping to cut costs. Linda Mahler, associate dean of undergraduate studies, is quoted. |
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| Times Higher Education | September 18, 2008 | ||
| Nerves Tangle, and Back Pain Becomes a Toothache When people have a heart attack, a classic symptom is shooting pain down the left arm, what doctors call referred pain, or pain in an area of the body other than where it originates. Now, in trying to discover the patterns and causes of the phenomenon, researchers say they are gaining a greater understanding of how the nervous system works and how its signals can go awry. FSU Professor Karen J. Berkley is quoted. |
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| International Herald Tribune | September 16, 2008 | ||
| The New York Times | September 15, 2008 | ||
| After Ike, much of Gulf shoreline may heal naturally Hurricane Ike is likely to leave lasting changes to miles of beaches between Galveston, Texas, and the western coast of Louisiana, but the damage from Ike's waves to dunes and beaches around the rest of the Gulf of Mexico may, in many places, be reversed naturally within a matter of months. FSU's Todd Walton, director of the Beaches and Shores Resource Center, weighs in. |
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| Detroit News | September 18, 2008 | ||
| Scripps Howard News Service | September 16, 2008 | ||
| "My Husband's Sweethearts" This novel by Bridget Asher, a nom de plume of FSU Professor Julianna Baggott, tells the story of a wife who leaves, then returns to care for a gravely ill, philandering husband. The story of how she invites his former lovers to his bedside "is rendered with humor and heart," according to the reviewer. |
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| People Magazine | September 8, 2008 | ||
| Southern California's dual citizens see little conflict As international business, travel and communications explode, a growing number of nations are allowing dual citizenship, and more immigrants are claiming it. But the trend is also stirring some unease. A person cannot be loyal to two countries, critics say. Both sides in the dual-citizen debate see validation for their arguments in recent studies by FSU political science professors Jeffrey K. Staton and Robert A. Jackson. |
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| San Francisco Chronicle | September 21, 2008 | ||
| Los Angeles Times | September 11, 2008 | ||
| Computational biochemist uncovers a molecular clue to evolution FSU researcher Wei Yang, who uses high-powered computers to map the workings of proteins, has uncovered a mechanism that gives scientists a better understanding of how evolution occurs at the molecular level. |
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| United Press International | September 11, 2008 | ||
| Nanotechwire.com | September 11, 2008 | ||
| Scientist Live | September 11, 2008 | ||
| Science Daily | September 11, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | September 11, 2008 | ||
| Florida Tourism Hall of Fame honors Florida State's Mark Bonn An FSU scholar already recognized as one of the world's top tourism researchers, Mark Bonn, the Robert H. Dedman Professor in Hospitality Administration in FSU's College of Business, has been inducted into the Florida Tourism Hall of Fame by the Florida Commission on Tourism, becoming the first educator ever selected for this honor. |
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| CBS News | September 9, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | August 25, 2008 | ||
| Females prefer 'a low a deep groan' A recent study led by FSU Professor Frank Marlowe and colleagues found men that who have lower-pitched voices have more children than do men with high-pitched, squeakier voices. |
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| Telegraph | September 9, 2008 | ||
| Warmer seas linked to strengthening hurricanes: FSU study fuels global warming debate The theory that global warming may be contributing to stronger hurricanes in the Atlantic over the past 30 years is bolstered by a new study led by FSU geography Professor James B. Elsner and coauthored by FSU postdoctoral researcher Thomas H. Jagger. The study was published in the Sept. 4 edition of the journal Nature. |
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| Time | September 8, 2008 | ||
| UPI | September 8, 2008 | ||
| The Wall Street Journal | September 4, 2008 | ||
| Houston Chronicle | September 4, 2008 | ||
| Kansas City Star | September 4, 2008 | ||
| The Christian Science Monitor | September 4, 2008 | ||
| International Herald Tribune | September 4, 2008 | ||
| Times of India | September 4, 2008 | ||
| The News & Observer | September 3, 2008 | ||
| U.S. News & World Report | September 3, 2008 | ||
| BBC News | September 3, 2008 | ||
| ...and numerous other outlets | ||
| FSU News Release | September 4, 2008 | ||
| ALA Report: Computer Demand Still Increases While the number of public access Internet computers grew for the first time in six years, nearly 20 percent of public libraries say demand for computers exceeds supply all the time, while 63 percent say that occurs some of the time. Such increased demands on libraries are documented in new report conducted by the American Library Association (ALA) and FSU's Information Use Management and Policy Institute, with funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. |
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| Library Journal | September 3, 2008 | ||
| Florida State's rank rises among America's top universities Florida State University is one of the top 50 public universities in the country, according to U.S. News and World Report's "America's Best Colleges 2009" edition. |
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| U.S. News & World Report | August 26, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | August 26, 2008 | ||
| Joe Biden's Catholic faith Barack Obama's chosen running mate, U.S. Sen. Joe Biden, is a Roman Catholic who would become, if elected, the first Catholic vice-president of the U.S. His selection is likely to rekindle the debate over whether Catholic politicians who support abortion rights should receive Communion. Monsignor William Kerr, executive director of FSU's Claude Pepper Center, is quoted. |
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| Boston Globe | August 23, 2008 | ||
| Growth brings stormier summers to metro Atlanta Call it "the revenge of sprawl." Data from the National Lightning Detection Network from 1992 to 2003 showed "the northeast side of Atlanta is the hot spot for urban-enhanced lightning," said Tony Stallins, associate professor of geography at Florida State University. |
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| Atlanta Journal-Constitution | August 22, 2008 | ||
| Major acquisition makes FSU a leader in study of Asian religions With the purchase of a massive 25,000-volume collection of books and other materials related to religion and culture in Asia, Florida State University has vaulted into the front ranks of universities that offer Asian studies in the southeastern United States. |
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| The Hindu | August 22, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | August 21, 2008 | ||
| E-Government at Florida Libraries: More Support, Coordination Needed Librarians in the past few years have begun to recognize how much libraries contribute to e-government, given that federal and state agencies increasingly offer access to services only online, and for many citizens libraries are the only gateway to the Internet. Information Institute staff at Florida State University recently completed a study on the matter. |
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| LibraryJournal.com | August 22, 2008 | ||
| Like the Taste of Chalk? You're in Luck--Humans May Be Able to Taste Calcium Mice, and most likely humans, have the ability to taste calcium-and most do not like it, according to new research presented at the American Chemical Society's semiannual national meeting, held recently in Philadelphia. Scientists say the findings could explain why 80 percent of Americans do not get enough calcium. FSU Professor Debi Fadool comments. |
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| Scientific American | August 20, 2008 | ||
| How to Pick a Sport Management Program The sports industry in the U.S. is a $200-billion-plus powerhouse, with superstar athletes, lucrative endorsement deals, and all the free press an ego can handle. But if you're not the rare athlete who can hit a 93-mph fastball or sink a 15-foot jumper, how are you supposed to cash in on such a lucrative business? FSU Professor Michael Mondello is quoted. |
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| Business Week | August 18, 2008 | ||
| How To Protect Your Health In A Hurricane Not prepared for the 2008 hurricane season? That's not a huge surprise. After all, it's been a few years since the Atlantic endured its most active hurricane season in history - thanks to the deadly Katrina and Rita - and only one hurricane made landfall in the U.S. last year. As time passes, we tend to become complacent about the threat of stormy weather and the health risks that come with it. FSU Professor Jay Baker comments. |
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| Forbes.com | August 14, 2008 | ||
| Ottawa plans GPS tracking for 'high-risk' parolees The Conservative government, facing the prospect of a fall election, hit the road to aggressively promote its law-and-order agenda, including a new plan to track federal parolees by electronic monitoring, which has been used extensively in the United States for years. FSU criminologist William Bales, who conducted a broad study of GPS monitoring, is quoted. |
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| National Post | August 11, 2008 | ||
| Could Lieberman be McCain's most potent VP pick? Connecticut Sen. Joseph Lieberman, who won re-election in 2006 as an independent, is one of Republican John McCain's more potent political weapons, maybe even potent enough to make another run at vice president, this time as a Republican. FSU Professor Lance deHaven-Smith comments. |
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| St. Louis Post-Dispatch | August 10, 2008 | ||
| The Houston Chronicle | August 9, 2008 | ||
| McClatchy Newspapers | August 7, 2008 | ||
| Romantic thoughts could keep love alive Thinking passionate thoughts about the one you love makes you less likely to stray, shows a new study led by FSU psychology Professor Jon Maner, because you find others less attractive. |
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| The New York Times | August 18, 2008 | ||
| Telegraph | August 6, 2008 | ||
| Evening Times | August 6, 2008 | ||
| Magnet Lab produces, markets critical petroleum data As gas prices soar, Alan G. Marshall, a giant in the field of chemical analysis, and his colleagues at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory at FSU are marketing research that will enable petroleum companies to locate, analyze and process crude oil much faster and more accurately and cheaply, solidifying Florida State's reputation as a world leader in "petroleomics." |
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| FirstScience.com | July 31, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | July 31, 2008 | ||
| Tennessee church attack spotlights scapegoat mentality Attacks on the innocent - especially those in churches - may seem irrational and horrific to all but the attacker. But beneath the details can be a deep sense of victimization and scapegoating that may be tied to something as specific as hate based on race or sexual orientation or as broad as economic hard times. FSU criminologist Cecil Greek comments. |
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| The Christian Science Monitor | July 30, 2008 | ||
| Library pioneers strove for a place in history One's name is imprinted on history. The other's is not. After all, almost everyone has heard of the Dewey Decimal System. But who can say that he or she has ever heard of the Cutter Expansive Classification System? FSU Professor Wayne A. Wiegand, author of "Irrepressible Reformer: A Biography of Melvil Dewey," comments. |
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| The Republican | July 28, 2008 | ||
| Contemplating the impact on N. Carolina of offshore drilling If offshore drilling were approved sometime in the future, North Carolina's coastal landscape, one of the East Coast's longest and most undeveloped -- strung with 300 miles of barrier island beaches; home to a national park; and cushioned by sensitive marshlands -- would almost certainly change. FSU oceanographer Wilton Sturges weighs in. |
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| Raleigh News & Observer | July 28, 2008 | ||
| Rising prices distracting work force, survey finds The increasing cost of almost everything is leaving this country's work force distracted and tense, and preoccupied with the economy instead of their jobs, according to more than 800 full-time workers surveyed by FSU management professor Wayne Hochwarter. |
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| The Oklahoman | July 27, 2008 | ||
| FSU President Joins Ranks of Older Adults Planning for the Future FSU President T.K. Wetherell leads the charge for tens of thousands of students looking to the future with their education and careers. Wetherell is now integral in helping another generation set the course for their future planning by joining the growing number of adults, age 62 and better, looking at Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRCs). |
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| Fox Business | July 22, 2008 | ||
| Earth Times | July 22, 2008 | ||
| With NIH grant, FSU becomes one of world's top imaging centers At Florida State University, the collective strength of biomedical research and the scientists who lead it has earned a $2 million High-End Instrumentation (HEI) grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The one-year award will help FSU buy a state-of-the-art robotic electron microscope to advance cutting-edge studies of HIV/AIDS, heart disease, hypertension and cancer. |
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| Nanotechwire.com | July 21, 2008 | ||
| Medical News Today | July 21, 2008 | ||
| Information Week | July 16, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | July 16, 2008 | ||
| Democracies with separation of powers less likely to end torture A system of checks and balances in government is usually regarded as a good thing, except when it comes to the probability that a nation will stop its use of government-sanctioned torture, according to a study by FSU political science Professor Will Moore and graduate student Courtenay Ryals. |
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| Huliq.com | July 17, 2008 | ||
| Seattle Post-Intelligencer | July 16, 2008 | ||
| PhysOrg.com | July 16, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | July 16, 2008 | ||
| Analysis: Presidents face crises with optimistic 'confidence' As food and gas prices soar and stock prices sink and companies such as General Motors struggle to survive, President Bush held his first full news conference in 77 days to say times are tough but he's on the case. FSU Professor Davis Houck, author of "Rhetoric as Currency: Hoover, Roosevelt and the Great Depression," is quoted. |
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| USA Today | July 15, 2008 | ||
| Is buying a gun a suicidal act? Americans often buy guns for self-defense, a purpose that now has Supreme Court validation. But according to advocates of gun control, those purchasers overlook the people who pose the greatest threat: themselves. Anyone who acquires a firearm, we are told, is inviting a bloody death by suicide. As it turns out, the claims about guns and suicide don't stand up well to scrutiny. FSU Professor Gary Kleck is quoted. |
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| The Baltimore Sun | July 17, 2008 | ||
| The Daily Herald | July 15, 2008 | ||
| Chicago Tribune | July 13, 2008 | ||
| The Post Chronicle | July 13, 2008 | ||
| The National Ledger | July 13, 2008 | ||
| ...and numerous other outlets | ||
| Gates Foundation gives library grants in 11 states The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation recently announced plans to give $8.1 million in grants to keep library computers up to date in 11 states. Four out of five libraries say they don't have enough computers to meet community needs, and 60 percent say they don't have the money or space to add more public computers in the next year, according to a report based on a 2007 national survey by the Florida State University College of Information and the American Library Association. |
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| Business Week | July 15, 2008 | ||
| Forbes | July 15, 2008 | ||
| The Philadelphia Enquirer | July 15, 2008 | ||
| The Boston Globe | July 15, 2008 | ||
| ...and numerous other outlets | ||
| The joys and challenges of being married to the cloth Marriage sometimes comes with challenges. Marriage to a cleric almost always comes with challenges. "Clergy spouses are swept up into a world that they don't have much choice in," says FSU Professor Charles Figley, who has made a career of studying the pressures that pull and tug at people living out their lives in front of the public - celebrities, politicians and members of the clergy. |
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| Atlanta Journal-Constitution | July 11, 2008 | ||
| Love really is blind, or at least blinkered Love is blind, said Shakespeare. Now it seems there may be some truth in the bard's words. FSU researcher Jon Maner has found that people who are in love pay less visual attention to attractive people of the opposite sex. |
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| ABC News | July 10, 2008 | ||
| MSN.com | July 9, 2008 | ||
| New Scientist | July 7, 2008 | ||
| FSU researcher using high-powered computers to test new cancer-killing drugs Kevin C. Chen, an assistant professor of chemical and biomedical engineering at the Florida A&M University-Florida State University College of Engineering, is using high-powered computers to determine how substances known as recombinant immunotoxins can best be modified in order to attack and kill malignant tumors while doing minimal harm to a patient's healthy cells. |
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| UPI | July 7, 2008 | ||
| Daily Tech | July 4, 2008 | ||
| Science Centric | July 3, 2008 | ||
| Medical News Today | July 3, 2008 | ||
| The Post Chronicle | July 2, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | July 2, 2008 | ||
| ...and numerous other outlets | ||
| Fun looks like next sacrifice American workers have the blues, and it's not just because of gas prices. Workers are dealing with a higher cost of living in an uncertain economy, where they're faced with smaller salaries or potential job loss. Extra financial stress has brought a "general malaise" in the workplace, says Wayne Hochwarter, professor of management at FSU's College of Business. |
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| Baltimore Sun | July 6, 2008 | ||
| News Tribune | July 2, 2008 | ||
| Surprising fact: Half of gun deaths are suicides The Supreme Court's landmark ruling on gun ownership last week focused on citizens' ability to defend themselves from intruders in their homes. But research shows that surprisingly often, gun owners use the weapons on themselves. Research from FSU College of Criminology and Criminal Justice Professor Gary Kleck is cited. |
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| NPR | June 30, 2008 | ||
| Forbes | June 30, 2008 | ||
| Associated Press | June 30, 2008 | ||
| Boston Herald | June 30, 2008 | ||
| The Guardian | June 30, 2008 | ||
| ...and numerous other outlets | ||
| Having kids makes you happy False. The most recent comprehensive study on the emotional state of those with kids shows us that the term "bundle of joy" may not be the most accurate way to describe our offspring. "Parents experience lower levels of emotional well-being, less frequent positive emotions and more frequent negative emotions than their childless peers," says FSU sociology Professor Robin Simon, who has conducted several recent parenting studies. |
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| The Atlanta Journal-Constitution | July 23, 2008 | ||
| National Post | July 13, 2008 | ||
| The Charlotte Observer | July 12, 2008 | ||
| Huffington Post | June 30, 2008 | ||
| Newsweek | July 7-14, 2008 issue | ||
| A better lifeline As the cost of gasoline, medical care, meat, vegetables, heating fuel and education are all soaring, real wages for the working poor across the country aren't keeping up. A study by FSU Professor of Economics Dave Macpherson is cited. |
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| Hartford Business | June 30, 2008 | ||
| Gun laws and crime: A complex relationship Lurking behind the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling last week that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to bear arms were fascinating, disputed and now in many ways irrelevant questions. FSU Professor Gary Kleck, whose work was cited by dissenting Justice Stephen G. Breyer, comments. |
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| The New York Times | June 29, 2008 | ||
| International Herald Tribune | June 29, 2008 | ||
| The Tennessean | June 29, 2008 | ||
| ... Will they come? The sports-facility-as-urban-development game can be a great for a city, but cities like Cleveland, Baltimore, Chicago, San Diego and others have all tried to rejuvenate older parts of their communities with a stadium or arena - with mixed results. FSU Professor Tim Chapin weighs in. |
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| Winnipeg Sun | June 29, 2008 | ||
| We're the pits: Cincinnati clings to sweat list Phoenix topped the Seventh Annual Top-100 Sweatiest Cities List. "People might be surprised that a city known for its 'dry heat' tops the Sweatiest Cities list," said Paul Ruscher, FSU associate professor of meteorology. (Tallahassee ranked No. 3.) |
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| United Press International | June 26, 2008 | ||
| Charlotte Business Journal | June 25, 2008 | ||
| MSN Money | June 25, 2008 | ||
| El Paso Times | June 25, 2008 | ||
| ...and numerous other outlets | ||
| Who are the 'Lucky Few'? Whether you're part of the Greatest Generation, the Baby Boom, Generation X or the Millennials, you've heard plenty about your peers. But a new book, "The Lucky Few: Between the Greatest Generation and the Baby Boom," takes a close look at a lesser-known group, born between 1929 and 1945. Author Elwood Carlson is an FSU demographer with the Center for Demography and Population Health. |
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| Medical News Today | August 24, 2008 | ||
| USA Today | June 25, 2008 | ||
| Caught off guard - but why? As the economy took a dive in the first half of this year, states started slashing budgets, which has left a host of state universities grappling with major shortfalls. Precious few institutions plan - at least publicly - for how to deal strategically with such budget deficits when they inevitably arrive. For obvious reasons, university leaders are loath to advertise where they'd stick the knife if called upon to cut. FSU Provost Larry Abele comments. |
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| Inside Higher Ed | June 24, 2008 | ||
| Music strikes a soothing chord Decades of studies, including one published recently, suggest that music might be a moderately effective pain reliever, an "audio analgesic." Others, including FSU's Jayne Standley, director of the music therapy program, are using music in a variety of ways. |
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| Shreveport Times | June 23, 2008 | ||
| EPI calls on Connecticut Legislature to uphold minimum wage veto The Employment Policies Institute (EPI) encouraged the Connecticut legislature to uphold Governor Jodi Rell's veto of HB 5015 which would increase the state's minimum wage twice over the next 18 months. New analysis of Census Bureau data by FSU Professor Dave Macpherson shows that the bill would cost the state over $25 million and an estimated 500 jobs. |
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| Sun Herald | June 23, 2008 | ||
| Earth Times | June 23, 2008 | ||
| Known genetic risk for Alzheimer's in whites also places blacks at risk, FSU research finds A commonly recognized gene that places one at risk for Alzheimer's disease does not discriminate between blacks and whites, according to new research led by FSU Psychology Professor Natalie Sachs-Ericsson and graduate student Kathryn Sawyer. |
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| United Press International | June 19, 2008 | ||
| The Money Times | June 19, 2008 | ||
| Huliq.com | June 19, 2008 | ||
| Science Daily | June 18, 2008 | ||
| PhysOrg.Com | June 18, 2008 | ||
| ...and numerous other outlets | ||
| FSU News Release | June 18, 2008 | ||
| Grad Tidings: Can a Test Steer You to the Ideal Career? Vendors of career tests, which assess one's interests and abilities and link them with potential occupations, see rising demand from teenagers, young adults and their parents, representatives say. FSU career-center official Janet Lenz comments. |
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| The Wall Street Journal | June 18, 2008 | ||
| FSU is nation's best in bridging racial graduation gap While many colleges and universities are struggling with a so-called graduation gap, Florida State University is receiving national attention for its record high graduation rate of African-American students. |
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| Washington Post | June 16, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | June 9, 2008 | ||
| Insomnia linked to suicide tendency in college women Poor quality sleep and insomnia are associated with suicidal symptoms among college undergraduates, according to a study of 322 female college students between 19 and 24 years old. Consistent with past research, FSU reseacher Rebecca A. Bernert and colleagues found that poor sleep quality and insomnia were associated with depressive symptoms. |
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| Daily Times | June 16, 2008 | ||
| Darwinists for Jesus In the book "Thank God for Evolution," published by Council Oak Books, Michael Dowd presents evolution as a sacred epic of emerging complexity that can be seen as "14 billion years of grace." FSU philosophy Professor Michael Ruse comments. |
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| The New York Times | June 15, 2008 | ||
| Fossils found in Tibet by FSU geologist revise history of elevation, climate About 15,000 feet up on Tibet's desolate Himalayan-Tibetan Plateau, an international research team led by Florida State University geologist Yang Wang was surprised to find thick layers of ancient lake sediment filled with plant, fish and animal fossils typical of far lower elevations and warmer, wetter climates. |
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| Huliq.com | June 12, 2008 | ||
| DailyIndia | June 12, 2008 | ||
| Thaindian.com | June 11, 2008 | ||
| Science Daily | June 11, 2008 | ||
| Environmental News Service | June 12, 2008 | ||
| ...and numerous other outlets | ||
| FSU News Release | June 12, 2008 | ||
| FSU to share $7 million grant to study autism in toddlers With a $7 million grant from the National Institutes of Mental Health, Florida State University and University of Michigan researchers aim to find out how effective early intervention is for children diagnosed with ASD by the time they are 18 months old. The study is one of the largest of its kind and one of the first to explore intervention in children that young. |
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| United Press International | June 5, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | June 3, 2008 | ||
| FSU chemist wins major grant to study obesity-diabetes link An FSU researcher has received a major scientific grant to study the chemical processes within the human body that may lead to the development of diabetes. Knowledge gained from Michael Roper's research could lay the foundation for future treatments of a disorder that is reaching pandemic proportions throughout the world, especially in the United States and other developed countries. |
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| Medical News Today | June 1, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | May 30, 2008 | ||
| Unintended Consequences of State Merit-Based Aid A study presented recently by FSU Professor Shouping Hu at the annual forum of the Association for Institutional Research suggests that, at least in one case, a state merit-based financial aid program may be working directly at odds with another priority that is near the top of concerns of most state and federal policy makers and educators: increasing the flow of Americans into scientific and technological fields. |
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| Inside Higher Ed | May 29, 2008 | ||
| Magnet Lab research suggests novel superconductor is in a powerful class all its own Superconductivity has perplexed, astounded and inspired scientists ever since it was discovered in 1911. Now, in the latest of a century of surprises, FSU researchers at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory and colleagues from Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee have discovered unusual properties in a novel superconducting material that point to an entirely new kind of superconductor. |
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| United Press International | June 2, 2008 | ||
| Thaindian.com | May 29, 2008 | ||
| Science Daily | May 28, 2008 | ||
| FSU News Release | May 28, 2008 | ||
| Tests can spot autism early, claim scientists Early diagnosis and treatment could reduce symptoms in later life or stop the condition developing altogether, according to FSU researcher Amy Wetherby, who has identified 13 "red flag" behaviors to look out for in children aged 18-24 months. But many children are not tested for the condition until at least the age of three. |
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| Telegraph | May 22, 2008 | ||
| A Purple Heart for PTSD? Idea sparks controversy A quick question recently tossed at Defense Secretary Robert Gates - should veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder receive the Purple Heart? - has created a maelstrom in the blogosphere, where some soldiers think that using the medal to lessen the stigma of mental health disorders may cheapen the meaning of the medal itself. FSU Professor Charles Figley weighs in. |
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| Tucson Citizen | May 19, 2008 | ||
| Army Times | May 19, 2008 | ||
| Why do economists frown on a tax on windfall oil profits? Hitting oil companies with a windfall profits tax seems like a perfect campaign pitch, since it would effectively return part of the industry's record profits to strapped consumers. But a lot of Republicans, as well as most economists, have serious questions about whether the tax makes sense. FSU Professor Lance deHaven-Smith is quoted. |
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| Charlotte Observer | May 18, 2008 | ||
| Myrtle Beach Sun News | May 18, 2008 | ||
| Fort Worth Star-Telegram | May 18, 2008 | ||
| ...and numerous other outlets | ||
| Giving Patients the VIP Treatment Many American patients feel like they're just a number in line at the butcher's shop. Some patients have had enough, and those who can afford it are choosing to pay hefty premiums out-of-pocket to get more personalized, more polite service. Dr. Robert Brooks, FSU College of Medicine professor of family medicine associate dean for health affairs, comments. |
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| Time | May 14, 2008 | ||
| Tracking down answers to combat-stress illness Some still see post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as the result of a weakness in character, or perhaps a lack of self-discipline, says FSU Professor Charles Figley, director of the FSU Traumatology Institute and keynote speaker at a recent national conference on the problem. It is neither. |
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| The Philadelphia Inquirer | May 12, 2008 | ||
| Study: Charter schools may improve graduation rates Students who attend multi-grade charter high schools in Chicago appear more likely to graduate and to enroll in college than their counterparts in traditional public high schools, a study co-authored by FSU researchers released on Wednesday found. |
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| Chicago Tribune | May 7, 2008 | ||
