Daily non-political popular news in brief.
New seminar series in coaching and mentoring
01-16-2007 · University of BathCoaches and mentors working in business, education or sport in the South West have the opportunity to explore the place of goals in their work, in the first of a new series of free seminar events at the University of Bath in Swindon (Tuesday 30 January).
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- Workshop to teach self-coaching skills
08-23-2007 · University of Bath
Local business people can find out how to be their own coach, in a free seminar at the University of Bath in Swindon on Monday 10 September (7pm).
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- Penn historian discovers evidence documenting first European voyage up the Delaware
04-23-2007 · EurekAlert!
A University of Pennsylvania scholar has pinpointed 1616 as the year of the first European voyage up the Delaware River.Jaap Jacobs, a senior fellow at Penn’s McNeil Center for Early American Studies, detailed his findings in a paper, "Truffle Hunting with an Iron Hog: The First Dutch Voyage up the Delaware River," presented to the McNeil Center Seminar Series on April 20.
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- Research finds that male athletes prefer female team physicians
04-26-2007 · EurekAlert!
Many studies in coaching literature have found that male athletes tend to prefer a male coach. Newly released research from the University of Alberta has indicated that male athletes actually prefer a female team physician to attend to their medical issues, including those related to sexual health.
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- Outstanding mentors and teachers honored at ORNL
02-14-2008 · Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL)
The U.S. Department of Energy, Oak Ridge Associated Universities and Oak Ridge National Laboratory have recognized outstanding ORNL staff for mentoring students and teachers in laboratory education programs and throughout the community.
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- Business seminar to kick-start sales
05-30-2007 · University of Bath
Local business people can get practical advice to kick-start their sales and profits in a seminar given by one of the UK's best-known speakers on entrepreneurship.
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- Study finds race affects African American survival of breast cancer
10-23-2006 · EurekAlert!
African American women with breast cancer were more likely to have larger, later-stage tumors that were more difficult to treat and also had lower survival rates than Hispanic and Caucasian women who received the same treatment in two independent series of clinical trials examined by researchers from the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center.
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- Stardust Papers Give Insight Into Early Solar System
12-14-2006 · Brookhaven National Laboratory
The preliminary examination of space dust brought back to Earth by NASA's Stardust spacecraft has been completed. The results of the studies, which could help explain the origin of the universe, appear in a series of seven papers to be published in the December 15, 2006 issue of
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- How do marine turtles return to the same beach to lay their eggs?
02-26-2007 · EurekAlert!
French scientists from CNRS and other groups shows that the marine turtles use a relatively simple navigation system involving the earth's magnetic field, and this allows them to return to the same egg-laying site without having the ability to correct for the deflection of ocean currents. Published in the Current Biology and Marine Ecology Progress Series.
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- Malaria-infected mice cured by 1 dose of new drug
04-17-2007 · EurekAlert!
Johns Hopkins researchers have cured malaria-infected mice with single shots of a new series of potent, long lasting synthetic drugs modeled on an ancient Chinese herbal folk remedy.
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- Research links genetic mutations to lupus
07-29-2007 · EurekAlert!
A gene discovered by scientists at Wake Forest University School of Medicine has been linked to lupus and related autoimmune diseases. The finding, reported in the current issue of Nature Genetics, is the latest in a series of revelations that shed new light on what goes wrong in human cells to cause the diseases.
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