News Archive
Wednesday, September 16 2009
News
ISU researchers study insecticide-free method for control of soybean aphids
Two Iowa State University researchers are looking at a way to genetically modify soybeans to prevent damage from aphids. If successful, soybeans will carry in-plant protection from aphids, similar to the way genetically modified corn now keeps the European Corn Borer from destroying corn yields.
Iowa State's seventh bioeconomy conference will be virtual
Iowa State will join 11 other Midwest universities to offer
solutions for sustainability at "Growing the
Bioeconomy," a virtual conference set for Dec. 1. It's
the seventh bioeconomy conference ISU has hosted, but the first
time the university has collaborated with other schools to
simultaneously hold the event. James Lovelock, renowned for his
global environmental science thinking, will be the keynote
speaker.
Researcher hopes to see results through federally funded ISU, UI collaboration
An Iowa State University researcher, Dr. Sinisa Grozdanic, has been named one of the lead investigators and head of animal research for the United States Veterans Affairs Center for the Prevention and Treatment of Visual Loss. Grozdanic will lead ISU's efforts as part of a $5 million federal grant that will focus on preventing and curing visual impairments.
Iowa State joins other leading research universities to launch futurity.org
Iowa State University is among 35 North American research universities that have launched futurity.org, an online news source featuring the latest discoveries in science, engineering, the environment, health and more.
Plant Sciences Institute leader goes to NSF, interim successor named
The director of Iowa State University's Plant Sciences Institute has accepted a position with the National Science Foundation. Agronomy Professor William Beavis, the George F. Sprague Endowed Chair, has been named interim director.
News release - Beavis named PSI interim director.
Solar Decathlon student team prepares Iowa State's solar house for a road trip
How long does it take to disassemble a house, transport it halfway across the country and reconstruct it to exact specifications? For traditional homes, the answer might be months or even years. Thanks to the Interlock House's unique design, the Iowa State University Solar Decathlon Team will accomplish this feat in the span of about three weeks, in time for the Oct. 8 start of the Department of Energy's Solar Decathlon competition on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.
Two ISU students receive Fulbright scholarships
Doctoral students Laura Christianson and Elise Regen have been awarded Fulbright U.S. Student Scholarships for 2009-2010.
As ash borer claims more trees, researcher at ISU works for species survival
Estimates say more than 70 million ash trees have been destroyed nationally by the emerald ash borer insect. Mark Widrlechner, assistant professor of agronomy and horticulture at ISU, is racing the clock to collect seeds from different ash species including green, white, blue, and black ash, and many variations within each species before they are killed by the pest. He thinks he may be about 10 percent there.
It's a record-breaker: Iowa State University fall enrollment nears 28,000
This fall has ushered in Iowa State University's highest-ever enrollment -- 27,945 students, an increase of more than 4 percent compared to fall 2008.
The Morgan twins.
Identical twins come from inner city to Iowa State on Gates Millennium Scholarships
When Iowa State's Derrick Rollins visited the inner-city home of two talented brothers and their family in Kansas City, Mo., he talked with them about the school's great facilities, supportive environment and dedication to success. But Rollins wasn't recruiting athletes. He was recruiting engineering students.
Rollins is assistant dean for diversity affairs in Iowa State University's College of Engineering. And his unique, personal approach to finding high-potential minority students and bringing them into the college has landed two of the nation's top recruits: identical twins Jonathan and Donathan Morgan.
Iowa Power Fund helps Iowa State establish Wind Energy Manufacturing Laboratory
Iowa State University researchers are working with TPI Composites Inc. and the U.S. Department of Energy's Sandia National Laboratories to study and improve the process used to manufacture wind turbine blades. The researchers' work is supported, in part, by a $2.1 million grant from the Iowa Power Fund.
ISU education researcher offers community college policy suggestions in book chapter
Linda Serra Hagedorn, a professor of educational leadership and
policy studies and director of Iowa State's Research
Institute for Studies in Education, warns community college
officials to proceed with caution as they use new federal money
to expand their degree options. Hagedorn made policy
suggestions on how community colleges could become more
effective in their postsecondary education role in a chapter
she authored for the annual edition of "Higher Education:
Handbook of Theory and Research." News
release.
ISU Dance Marathon wins award from Childrens Miracle Network
The 11th annual ISU Dance Marathon raised $171,955.41 to benefit sick and injured children and their families back in January. Organizers were also rewarded for their efforts this summer as they won the 2009 Best Closing Ceremony Award from Children's Miracle Network -- a non-profit organization that raises funds for more than 170 children's hospitals nationwide.
The Post Carbon Institute's Richard Heinberg to speak at ISU Sept. 24
Keynote speaker for ISU's Live Green! Sustainability Series
Richard Heinberg, a leading author on oil depletion and a post carbon world, will keynote Iowa State University's Live Green! Sustainability Series. Heinberg's lecture, "Toward a Post Carbon Food System," will be at 8 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 24 in the Memorial Union Sun Room. ISU President Gregory Geoffroy will kick off the series with brief remarks prior to Heinberg's lecture. The Live Green! Sustainability Series of speakers, panels and forums will address sustainability and energy innovation, and lead up to the university's Live Green Symposium in February 2010. The series includes a panel discussion on ISU sustainable energy innovation research on Oct. 6, and a faculty forum on global climate change on Nov. 3.
Iowa State students document the freshman-year experience through photos
Apollo 13 astronaut and space shuttle test pilot Fred Haise to speak Sept. 19
Astronaut Fred Haise, a member of the ill-fated 1970 Apollo 13 space mission who was severely burned while filming "Tora! Tora! Tora!," will speak at Iowa State on Saturday, Sept. 19. His presentation, "Failure is not an Option," will be at 7 p.m. in Stephens Auditorium. The event, which is free and open to the public, is a highlight of Engineers' Week 2009.
Seasonal flu shot clinic for employees under way
ISU employees can get seasonal flu immunizations on campus
weekdays (10 a.m. to 4 p.m.) in the Technical Administrative
Services Facility. The clinic will operate weekdays through
Sept. 28 or until the supply of vaccinations is gone. The
immunizations are available to eligible employees at no cost to
them.
More
information.
ISU exhibit displays ethnic textile traditions of Iowa immigrant and native populations
"The Ethnic Textile Traditions of Iowa Immigrants and Native Populations" will be showcased in the Mary Alice Gallery, 1015 Morrill Hall, Wednesday, Sept. 16, through Friday, Nov. 20. The gallery is open weekdays from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.