Podcasts from The City University of New York
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Podcasts from The City University of New York
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Podcasts from The City University of New York
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Podcasts from The City University of New York
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Podcasts from The City University of New York
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Podcasts from The City University of New York
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Board of Trustees Meetings & Public Hearings – CUNY Podcasts
Board of Trustees Meetings & Public Hearings – CUNY Podcasts
Podcasts from The City University of New York
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CUNY’s Transformation SWAT Team
26:49
26:49
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26:49
A conversation about CUNY's ambitions for the coming years with Rachel Stephenson and Cathy N. Davidson of the new Office of Transformation.CUNY Podcasts
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Tales of the Eng Dynasty
26:08
26:08
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26:08
How BMCC's Alvin Eng found his soul as an ‘acoustic punk rock raconteur.’CUNY Podcasts
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For Ava Chin, All Roads Lead to Mott Street
35:39
35:39
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35:39
CSI and Graduate Center professor Ava Chin uncovers her family's remarkable history and reveals the deeper history of exclusion that defined the Chinese American experience for a century in "Mott Street."CUNY Podcasts
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The Emergence of Sidik Fofana
29:23
29:23
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29:23
Sidik Fofana, a high school teacher who earned his masters in education at City College, wrote fiction on the side for a decade. He finally got his first book published -- and was awarded a prestigious Whiting Award for Emerging Writers.CUNY Podcasts
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A Young Writer Born of a Forgotten War
20:37
20:37
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20:37
Crystal Hana Kim says the Korean War is so deeply ingrained in her family's history--but so remote for Americans today--that it became the driving force for her to become a writer.CUNY Podcasts
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Ryan Martin’s got game. And he’s putting CUNY adaptive sports on the map.
23:51
23:51
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23:51
Ryan Martin, CUNY's first director of inclusive and adaptive sports, has quickly built a nationally recognized wheelchair basketball program. His focus is on bringing athletes with disabilities to CUNY, but he says it's ultimately not about the game.CUNY Podcasts
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Behind the Closed Doors of a Queens Family Story
18:52
18:52
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18:52
Queens College alum Nira Burstein talks about making "Charm Circle," her intensely persona, award-winning documentary about the fractured emotional landscape of her parents' lives in the house in Flushing where Burstein grew up.CUNY Podcasts
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Illuminating the Nazis’ Vast System of Genocide
30:09
30:09
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30:09
An immersive new exhibition at Queensborough Community College's renowned Kupferberg Holocaust Center documents the vastness of the Nazi's system of genocide. The center's Laura Cohen and Cary Lane discuss the exhibit and the emotional toll of creating it.CUNY Podcasts
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A Backpack at 75: Ciro Scala’s Long Quest for a CCNY Degree
27:59
27:59
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27:59
Nearly six decades after he dropped out, Ciro Scala went back to City College, earned two degrees and started a workshop program to help first-generation college students navigate some of the same kinds of challenges that sidetracked his hopes for a college degree.CUNY Podcasts
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Bringing Authenticity to Artistry in Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’
35:42
35:42
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35:42
Brooklyn College professor emerita Virginia Sánchez Korrol talks about her role as historical consultant for Steven Spielberg's reimagined "West Side Story" and how she helped portray New York’s Puerto Rican community of the 1950s with more authenticity and nuance.CUNY Podcasts
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When Jill Biden Rallied Kingsborough Grads
10:21
10:21
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10:21
Citing President Obama's intent to strengthen community colleges, "second lady" Jill Biden told the 2009 graduates of Kingsborough Community College the two-year schools are "one of America's best-kept secrets," and "the education gained on campuses like this one will provide the knowledge that will power the 21st century." Dr. Biden, an adjunct pr…
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Meeting of the CUNY Board of Trustees
1:23:49
1:23:49
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1:23:49
Meeting of the Board of Trustees, June 25, 2018.Board of Trustees Meetings & Public Hearings – CUNY Podcasts
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Committee on Facilities, Planning and Management
40:33
40:33
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40:33
Standing committee meeting of the Board of Trustees, Committee on Facilities, Planning and Management, June 04, 2018.Board of Trustees Meetings & Public Hearings – CUNY Podcasts
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Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration
1:07:18
1:07:18
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1:07:18
Standing committee meeting of the Board of Trustees, Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration, June 04, 2018.Board of Trustees Meetings & Public Hearings – CUNY Podcasts
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Committee on Student Affairs and Special Programs
36:16
36:16
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36:16
Standing committee meeting of the Board of Trustees, Committee on Student Affairs and Special Programs, June 04, 2018.Board of Trustees Meetings & Public Hearings – CUNY Podcasts
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Meeting of the CUNY Board of Trustees
58:18
58:18
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58:18
Meeting of the Board of Trustees, May 09, 2018.Board of Trustees Meetings & Public Hearings – CUNY Podcasts
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Committee on Student Affairs and Special Programs
1:26:55
1:26:55
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1:26:55
Standing committee meeting of the Board of Trustees, Committee on Student Affairs and Special Programs, April 16, 2018.Board of Trustees Meetings & Public Hearings – CUNY Podcasts
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Committee on Fiscal Affairs
2:16:24
2:16:24
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2:16:24
Standing committee meeting of the Board of Trustees, Committee on Fiscal Affairs, April 16, 2018.Board of Trustees Meetings & Public Hearings – CUNY Podcasts
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Subcommittee on Investment
14:27
14:27
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14:27
Subcommittee meeting of the Board of Trustees, Subcommittee on Investment, Monday, April 16, 2018.Board of Trustees Meetings & Public Hearings – CUNY Podcasts
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Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration
32:29
32:29
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32:29
Standing committee meeting of the Board of Trustees, Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration, April 16, 2018.Board of Trustees Meetings & Public Hearings – CUNY Podcasts
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Committee on Facilities, Planning and Management
21:08
21:08
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21:08
Standing committee meeting of the Board of Trustees, Committee on Facilities, Planning and Management, April 16, 2018.Board of Trustees Meetings & Public Hearings – CUNY Podcasts
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Bad Test Taker? Good News
51:02
51:02
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51:02
Since 1963, U.S. students have been “very bad at tests and very good at life,” Fareed Zakaria says, noting that during the same period of time the United States has “dominated the world of science, technology, innovation, entrepreneurship, economic growth.” The U.S. tradition of students receiving “a broad general education that prepares you not fo…
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Why You Wanted Your MTV
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58:04
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58:04
In this message-oversatuartion era, marketers have to “pick an audience and superserve them,” says branding guru Alan Goodman, who teaches a marketing master class at Macaulay Honors College. At MTV, where he developed the logo and the iconic animation IDs, Goodman says he saw the network as more than just a music video channel, and identified the …
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#ThePeople Raise Their Voice
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46:50
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46:50
Hashtag politics gives people who don’t have big money to donate to candidates a way to compete with big donors, or so says social media guru Alan Rosenblatt in a talk at Baruch. Hashtags like #BlackLivesMatter aggregate conversation and opinion, creating “powerful social capital” to compete with financial capital, Rosenblatt says. The hashtag has …
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The cyber currency created in 2009 as “a plaything for hackers,” will be used by governments by 2023 and consumers by 2027 by some estimates, Nathaniel Popper, author of Digital Gold: Bitcoin and theInside Story of the Misfits and Millionaires Trying to Reinvent Money, tells a Baruch audience. The digital dough wasn’t worth anything until 2011, add…
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U.N. Chief to Youth: “Rise Up”
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32:11
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32:11
Young people can agitate against injustice better than the leader of the United Nations can, or so he says. “I as secretary-general have constraints sometimes, political constraints,” Ban Ki-moon tells his audience at Lehman College, which was the U.N.’s home for five months in 1946. “But young people, you don’t have a limit,” Ban says. “You just r…
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Colum McCann’s advice to aspiring writers? Write. The Hunter College creative writing MFA professor reads “A Letter to a Young Writer” and his short story “What Time Is It Where You Are” at the Writing Center. Going against the common advice to write what you know, McCann urges young writers to “write toward that which you want to know. Better stil…
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Who is the Neapolitan novelist writing as Elena Ferrante? The world doesn’t know, yet the world has taken notice of such books as The Days of Abandonment and The Story of the Lost Child, the final story of her (or his?) Neapolitan quartet, which place Naples at the center of the universe. Ferrante’s translator Ann Goldstein and publisher Kent Carro…
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You Can’t Make This Stuff Up (But He Can)
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58:10
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58:10
Donald Trump is the only pol “who screws up and his poll numbers go up,” says Maggie Haberman of The New York Times, and he seems willing to say anything. “It’s funny how when you’re president of the United States,” says Politico chief political correspondent and Brooklyn College alum Glenn Thrush, that “stuff you say has a tendency to actually hap…
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The Sugar Wasn’t Sweet
52:24
52:24
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52:24
They could starve in India or work like slaves on the sugarcane plantations of British Guiana; that was the choice for thousands of Indians who left home from 1838-1917. One was journalist Gaiutra Bahadur’s great-grandmother Sajuria, who, pregnant and alone, immigrated in 1903. Bahadur seeks her story in Coolie Woman: An Odyssey of Indenture. Inden…
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A Privileged Experience
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14:53
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14:53
What makes us special? “Being a public university in New York with a majority population of students of color gives CUNY a very, very special mission in the context of American life, something that most other universities do not share,” says Zujaja Tauqeer, who started at Brooklyn College and Macaulay Honors College, won a Rhodes Scholarship to Oxf…
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Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams urged Brooklyn College graduates to explore the world in all its forms. “Go visit a mosque, or synagogue, or Buddhist temple,” said Adams, who served in the NYPD for 22 years and holds a B.A. from John Jay College of Criminal Justice. “Understand how diversity helps us to develop our full personhood and become …
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John O’Keefe on Inner Workings of the Brain
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52:43
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52:43
Nobel Laureate and City College alum John O’Keefe traces historic findings on the hippocampus and human memory to his recent research on the brain’s cognitive map. O’Keefe, along with two other scientists, won the 2014 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for discovering an inner GPS in the brain that helps navigate surroundings. His engaging, and…
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Stephen Sommerstein covered the historic 1965 march for voting rights as a student photographer for the City College newspaper. Fifty years later, his evocative photographs are on exhibit at the New York Historical Society and those five days in Alabama are still vivid in his memory.Newsmakers – CUNY Podcasts
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Committee on Student Affairs and Special Programs
31:46
31:46
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31:46
Standing committee meeting of the Board of Trustees, Committee on Student Affairs and Special Programs, April 6, 2015.Newsmakers – CUNY Podcasts
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Sagrada Família Exhibit Offers Rare Look at a Masterpiece
19:35
19:35
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19:35
CCNY's Spitzer School of Architecture hosts an unprecedented exhibition on Antoni Gaudí's "unfinished masterpiece" — Sagrada Família, the basílica in Barcelona that generations of architects and builders have continued since Gaudí's death in 1926. George Ranalli, dean of the architecture school, talks about the world's longest-running construction …
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In a NY1 interview with Sam Roberts on The New York Times Close Up, Chancellor James Milliken discussed CUNY's plans to expand programs that boost student success. Success, he noted, includes graduating with a two-year degree: "There are great opportunities for high-paying jobs for two-year graduates," he said, noting that to meet the needs of the …
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John O’Keefe’s Journey
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25:56
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John O’Keefe (City College, 1963) describes his discovery of the brain’s “internal GPS,” which won him a 2014 Nobel Prize, and discusses his formative years as a CUNY undergraduate. The son of Irish immigrants, born in Harlem and raised in the South Bronx, he transferred to CUNY from a private college that he had attended at night while working to …
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Dreams for a Cuban Free Press
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13:55
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Cuban dissident Yoani Sánchez gained international fame for her eloquent and outspoken opinions on Cuba in her blog, Generación Y, translated into 20 languages. In her visit to City College in March, Sánchez praised blogs and social media as “vital” journalistic tools, and described her dreams for a free press in her country: “In this future Cuba, …
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Rosa Parks’ “Rebellious Life”
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20:59
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20:59
There’s a myth about Rosa Parks - a pivotal figure in the American civil rights movement who refused to give her seat on a Montgomery, Ala. bus to a white passenger. The myth is that Parks was a quiet, humble woman until that historic moment. But, in the revealing new book, “The Rebellious Life Mrs. Rosa Parks,” Brooklyn College political science p…
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Kofi Annan’s Global Legacy
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15:36
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Kofi Annan, former U.N. Secretary-General, used his post as a “bully pulpit” to draw world attention to issues such as human rights, poverty and child soldiers, says Jean E. Krasno, a political science lecturer at City College, who led a six-year project to organize and publish Annan’s collected papers. Krasno sees the historic papers as crucial to…
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John Elliott, dean of Baruch’s Zicklin School of Business, and Terrence Martell, Zicklin’s Saxe Professor of Finance, look at results of the 2011 second-quarter “Chief Financial Officers Outlook Survey,” compiled by Financial Executives International and Baruch College’s Zicklin School of Business. Optimism in the global economy dropped among CFOs,…
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Is It Superman? No, It’s 2100
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31:09
By the end of the century, Michio Kaku sees a world in which humans will have x-ray vision, and micromachines — smaller than the period at the end of this sentence — will perform surgery. “Your computerized toilet will be able to analyze proteins emitted from a colony of cancer cells from excretions,” says Kaku, co-founder of string field theory an…
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In a White House ceremony earlier this year, Anthony Carpi, professor of Environmental Toxicology at John Jay College, was recognized with the Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring — the most prestigious honor in his field. “It was an absolute thrill to see the program that we had initiated become so ef…
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Development Heats Up the Earth
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45:12
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45:12
Human population growth has long been linked to global warming, but according to Deborah Balk its impact may be overemphasized. “Future population growth does have a role,” says Balk, the associate director of the CUNY Institute for Demographic Research and professor at Baruch College School of Public Affairs. “But climate change is mainly driven b…
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Evolution’s Limits
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1:01:05
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Is Evolution Over? William Bialek, the Graduate Center’s Visiting Presidential Professor of Physics, argues that evolution has pushed living systems to operate at the limits of what the laws of physics allow. “There are many places,” Bialek says, “where organisms have been pushed to, basically, an endpoint of evolution.” In a lecture at the Graduat…
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Birds, Dolphins and Mimicry
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47:08
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The ability to learn and mimic vocal sounds is rare in nature but found in certain birds and in dolphins says Diana Reiss, professor of psychology at Hunter College. “There’s been a lot of anecdotal reporting over the years that dolphins are highly mimetic,” says Reiss, an expert on dolphin cognition. City College associate professor of biology, Of…
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Inside the World of Human Guinea Pigs
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Since 1980, when Phase 1 drug tests were banned in the United States, the pharmaceutical industry has relied on medical volunteers to participate in safety trials of new drugs. In his recently published book, “The Professional Guinea Pig: Big Pharma and the Risky World of Human Subjects,” Robert Abadie, an anthropologist and a visiting scholar in t…
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Instead of debating why science and technology remain male-dominated fields, Julie Des Jardins chose to explore the personal and professional lives of female scientists to reveal how they were able to make enormous scientific contributions. "The reason she discovered radium was because she was wanted to find a cure for cancer -- for humanity," said…
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With the closing of the Guantánamo Bay detention camp, the Justice Department is evaluating the cases of the remaining 241 detainees, and there are reports some may end up being tried on U.S. soil, perhaps in Manhattan Federal Court. Prof. Joseph King sees that as a strong possibility. "It's the logical place," he says. "The Southern District (cou…
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