UC Berkeley NewsView of Campanile and Golden Gate Bridge
NewsCenter
Today's news & events
News by email
For the news media
Calendar of events
Top stories
Untitled Document
Archive
Archive photo strip

Previous stories: 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001

2007 Stories

Donald Kaplan, expert on plant shapes and forms, dies at 69
Donald Robert Kaplan, UC Berkeley professor emeritus of plant biology and an influential expert on the development of the diverse forms and shapes of plants, has died at the age of 69. Fellow botanists credit Kaplan's detailed studies and analyses of leaf development for setting the standard in the field of plant morphology.
(21 December)

Neil Henry to lead journalism school
Neil Henry, a longtime Washington Post reporter and Newsweek staff writer who joined the Graduate School of Journalism faculty in 1993, has been appointed to serve as dean of journalism, pending approval by UC President Robert Dynes and the Board of Regents.
(19 December)

Forum begins sustained conversation about ways to foster female staff's success at UC
During a recent lunch hour, female campus staffers filled Sibley Hall to chew on a meaty topic — obstacles to women's advancement at UC Berkeley. UCOP leaders facilitated the Dec. 7 forum as part of the Creating Change Initiative, a systemwide effort to develop a strategy to address the advancement of women at UC.
(19 December)

Economist examines costs of extreme cold weather
Fatalities in the continental United States tend to climb for several weeks after severe cold spells, ultimately numbering 360 per chilly day and 14,380 per year, according to a new study co-authored by a University of California, Berkeley, economist. Deaths linked to extreme cold account for 0.8 percent of the nation's annual death rate and outnumber those attributed to leukemia, murder and chronic liver disease combined, the study reports. Cold-related deaths also reduce the average life expectancy of Americans by at least a decade, it says.
(19 December)

New biochip could replace animal testing
The drug industry, the cosmetic industry and the chemical industry in general generate scads of new products each year, and each must be tested for human toxicity. Since animal testing of some products, like cosmetics, will soon be banned, a rapid and inexpensive way to test new chemicals for toxicity is needed. Enter the DataChip and MetaChip, two quarter-sized biochips developed by chemical engineers at UC Berkeley and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
(18 December)

Andrew Imbrie, music professor and renowned composer, dies at age 86
Andrew Walsh Imbrie, a University of California, Berkeley, professor emeritus of music and a renowned composer, died Wednesday, Dec. 5, at his Berkeley home following a long illness. He was 86.
(14 December)

Cal Teach celebrates $2.4 million grant to foster science and math teaching
Officials and students gathered at UC Berkeley Dec. 11 to celebrate a $2.4 million grant from the National Science & Math Initiative to the Cal Teach program, which promotes science and math teaching among Berkeley's science, math and engineering undergraduates.
(14 December)

UC Berkeley research is part of Discover magazine's Top 100 Science Stories of 2007
Two UC Berkeley research discoveries – one on a hyperlens with a unique way of altering light and the other on the body positioning of dinosaurs in the throes of death – were honored as two of this year's top 100 science stories by Discover Magazine.
(14 December)

Stem cell grant will spur research on rejuvenating muscle
Irina Conboy, a young assistant professor who hopes embryonic stem cells can rejuvenate aging muscles, is the recipient of a $2.25 million research grant from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM).
(14 December)

Scholars say Dickens' "A Christmas Carol" still rings true
Charles Dickens' Victorian morality tale, "A Christmas Carol," remains a strong influence on contemporary appreciation of the holiday season and, thanks to its many incarnations, has become "one of those stories you know before you remember reading it," says a University of California, Berkeley, English professor.
(13 December)

Journalism professor nominated for three Writers Guild awards
Lowell Bergman, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism, a producer/correspondent for the Public Broadcasting System's documentary series "Frontline," and a New York Times investigative reporter, has been nominated for three Writers Guild of America Awards.
(13 December)

Moss genome tells of origin of land plants
Sequencing of the genome of a dainty green moss is telling scientists how aquatic plants learned to survive on land.
(13 December)

Ugandans want peace more than revenge against warlords
War-fatigued Ugandans would rather live in peace than retaliate against leaders of the Lord's Resistance Army, a rebel group that forcibly conscripted tens of thousands of women and children, according to a survey released this week by UC Berkeley, Tulane University and the International Center for Transitional Justice. The survey found, however, that many Ugandans still want the warlords held accountable for atrocities.
(13 December)

Judge delays ruling on student-athlete center suit
A ruling may not be issued until February on the three consolidated lawsuits over planned construction of UC Berkeley’s new student-athlete center, to be situated west of California Memorial Stadium. Alameda County Superior Court Judge Barbara Miller announced the delay late Monday; she had been expected to rule no later than January 11.
(12 December)

THEMIS probes view auroral substorms, bow shock explosions
As the five THEMIS probes approach an optimal lineup for studying magnetic substorms that tickle the Northern Lights, they already have revealed new information about how solar energy leaks into the Earth's magnetosphere and about explosions generated at the magnetosphere's bowshock.
(11 December)

Early warning system predicted shaking from Oct. 30 quake
An earthquake early warning system now being testing throughout the state correctly predicted ground shaking in San Francisco from October's 5.4 magnitude Alum Rock quake a few seconds before the ground started moving.
(10 December)

Taking a bullet for research
Geographer Michael Watts, an expert in "the oil complex" and its devastating impacts in the Niger Delta, learned a painful lesson on his most recent trip to the region: Things are even worse than he knew.
(06 December)

The most wonderful time of the year?
Is it drummer-boy time again? A trio of wise Haas School scholars weighs in on the commercial side of the holidays.
(06 December)

$5.2 million grant from Moore Foundation funds ambitious project to barcode an entire ecosystem
UC Berkeley researchers are leading an ambitious, first-of-its-kind effort to inventory all non-microbial life on the South Pacific island of Moorea. Supported by a new three-year, $5.2 million grant from the Moore Foundation, the Moorea Biocode Project will turn the island into a model ecosystem that promises to provide insight into the effects of climate change, invasive species, habitat destruction and other global challenges.
(06 December)

Recruitment effort is launched for three dean positions
The office of the vice provost for academic affairs and faculty welfare invites nominations and applications for three decanal positions currently open at Berkeley: dean of University Extension; dean of the College of Chemistry; and dean of the Division of Biological Sciences in the College of Letters and Science.
(06 December)

Laurels
Honors, awards, and other faculty and staff achievements of note.

(06 December)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(06 December)

VèVè Clark, cosmopolitan African diaspora scholar, dies at 62
VèVè Amasasa Clark, an associate professor of African American studies at UC Berkeley, and a literary scholar who coined the term "diaspora literacy," died Dec. 1 at Alta Bates Hospital in Berkeley after being found at home in a coma. She was 62.
(06 December)

Tetlock wins "Ideas for Improving World Order" award
Philip Tetlock, a professor of organizational behavior at the Haas School of Business, has earned the 2008 University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order for ideas he set forth in a 2005 book that concluded political experts should be held accountable for their predictions.
(05 December)

"Big Box Living Wage Ordinance" would benefit low-wage Wal-Mart workers, minimally impact shoppers, says new study
Wal-Mart could increase its minimum wage to $10 per hour and greatly boost the well-being of its low-income workers with little financial impact on most shoppers, says a study released today by the University of California at Berkeley's Center for Labor Research and Education.
(05 December)

East Bay announces its 'green corridor' ambitions
At Richmond's industrial waterfront, leaders of UC Berkeley, four East Bay cities, and the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab pledged to join forces to make their region a leader in green research and industry.
(04 December)

Nobelist Smoot launches new cosmology center
George Smoot, winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physics, has put $500,000 of his prize money with $7.6 million in other gifts and support to jump-start a new cosmology center at UC Berkeley to explore cosmic questions of dark energy and dark matter.
(04 December)

Fall 2007 student enrollment data released
More than 34,900 students, including 9,000 new freshman, transfer and graduate students, are currently enrolled in the University of California, Berkeley, according to final enrollment data released by campus officials today (Monday, Dec. 3).
(03 December)

Paleontologist Joseph Gregory has died at 93
Joseph T. Gregory, a professor emeritus of paleontology at UC Berkeley who was well known for his studies of fossil amphibians and reptiles as well as for his contributions to the history of vertebrate paleontology, died Nov. 18 in Houston, Texas, at age 93.
(29 November)

Ralph Rader, English professor and theorist on the novel, dies at age 77
Ralph W. Rader, a professor emeritus of English at the University of California, Berkeley, and a major theorist on the novel as a genre, died of heart failure on Nov.23 at Alta Bates Hospital in Berkeley. He was 77.He is recognized for his essays on James Boswell's "Life of Johnson" and James Joyce's "Portrait of the Artist" and "Ulysses," as well as for a series of essays in which he developed an original and influential interpretation of the emergence and development of the English novel as a form.
(28 November)

Black, white, and shades of green
Exploring issues of race, land, and identity, geographer Carolyn Finney finds a place for herself in academia.
(28 November)

Might as well face it — we’re addicted to oil
The first step in cleaning up the environment is plugging in our cars, says Clintonista-turned-Brookings-scholar David Sandalow.
(28 November)

Lost 16th-century mass discovered by Berkeley music scholar
More than 400 years after Italian composer Alessandro Striggio wrote his extravagant 40-part Missa sopra Ecco sì beato giorno, it has been rediscovered by Berkeley music scholar Davitt Moroney, who identified the work and rescued it from obscurity.
(28 November)

A passion for pachyderms
Tang Center nurse Julie Barnett is on a crusade to save Asian elephants, a cause she came to several years ago after visiting a sanctuary for the abused mammals in northern Thailand.
(28 November)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(28 November)

Global warming sends salamanders packing
During two past episodes of global warming, salamanders moved back and forth between North America and Asia as they sought cooler climes. This long march for such a slow-moving creature has been reconstructed by UC Berkeley biologists from genetic and climatic data.
(27 November)

Fin whales' big gulp
When it comes to big gulps, baleen whales take the prize. Scientists have measured the volume of water engulfed when fin whales lunge after prey, and calculate it to be about the size of a bus.
(27 November)

New technique captures chemical reactions in a single living cell for the first time
A team of UC Berkeley bioengineers have developed a technique that for the first time enables the detection of chemical signals from biomolecules in a single living cell with unprecedented resolution. By coupling metallic nanoparticles with biomolecules, researchers can obtain information critical to cell-based drug discovery, early disease detection and biomedical diagnostics.
(19 November)

Digital project to boost Irish studies with "virtual Ireland" Web site
digital collaboration between the University of California, Berkeley, and the Queen's University of Belfast, Northern Ireland, aims to better connect Irish studies materials and to make them easily accessible 24/7 from anywhere with a quick click of the computer mouse.
(15 November)

Robert Hass wins 2007 National Book Award for his latest poetry
Robert Hass, a UC Berkeley professor of English and former U.S. poet laureate, is the 2007 winner of the National Book Award in poetry, for "Time and Materials." The prize was announced Nov. 14 in New York City.
(15 November)

It’s no page-turner, but . . .
The Disabled Students' Program's Assistive Technology Center matches students who are blind, visually impaired, physically limited, or learning-disabled with the software and hardware they need to make their careers at Berkeley less fraught and more successful.
(14 November)

No Republican debate at UC Berkeley
Fox News Network officials have informed UC Berkeley that changes to the U.S. Presidential primary and caucus schedule have forced the network to abandon plans for a possible Republican candidates' debate on campus this semester.
(14 November)

From their table to yours
Thanksgiving brings familiar fare, a menu of standards any American can name — turkey, stuffing, sweet potatoes, cranberry sauce, pumpkin pie. Thankfully, every family puts its own stamp on the meal: Some faithfully recreate a dish that’s been passed down the bloodline; others introduce new dishes into the mix, establishing traditions of their own. The Berkeleyan asked a number of people on campus to reminisce about their family’s trademark Turkey Day dishes. Along with their memories, several participants shared their recipes — some of which, perhaps, will become staples on your Thanksgiving sideboard.
(14 November)

Energy Biosciences Institute contract signed
With a final signature today (Nov. 14) from BP president Bob Malone, the Energy Biosciences Institute has become reality. The EBI partners - BP, the University of California, Berkeley, the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign - embark on a critical mission to explore the potential of biofuels to help forestall the effects of global warming.
(14 November)

Inside Innovation conference to showcase faculty research
UC Berkeley's business faculty will share their latest research, opinions and insights on driving innovation in business at the inaugural Inside Innovation 2007 conference on Saturday (Nov. 17) at UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business. The all-day conference celebrates the 50th anniversary of California Management Review, the Haas School's peer-reviewed, practitioner-oriented journal. The publication's special anniversary issue on "Leading through Innovation" focuses entirely on Haas School faculty research that explores innovation in business.
(13 November)

Chocolate drinks - probably fermented ones - popular long before previously thought, says anthropologist
Mesoamerican menus featured cacao beverages - probably fermented ones - at least as early as 1100 B.C., some 500 years earlier than previously documented anywhere, according to new research published in the latest issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
(13 November)

Avoid raising ungrateful kids
Reams of academic research abound across the country on how to raise happy children, but who has the time to read this myriad of findings, boil down the facts, and then turn them into practical parenting advice? UC Berkeley's Greater Good Science Center is taking on the job with its new Web site on how to foster joy and avoid brattish behavior in children.
(13 November)

At Academic Senate meeting, salary increases take center stage
UC Berkeley faculty will receive a 2.5 percent cost-of-living increase and a market adjustment to the salary scales, to bring them closer to market rates.
(13 November)

Donald Kennedy on the control of scientific knowledge
In the first of three Clark Kerr Lectures, the editor-in-chief of Science,
former head of Stanford University, and FDA commissioner for President
Jimmy Carter traces the current state of university science to a Bush in
FDR’s White House.
(08 November)

Robert Hass: Eight years of activism, writing, and reflection
A finalist for poetry in next week's National Book Awards, Professor of English Robert Hass, in this issue's Q&A, ruminates on all manner of things. (Our favorite exchange involves snow, covered bridges, and Dick and Jane.) Two of his poems are also featured: "Ezra Pound's Proposition" and a contemporary ode in the manner of Horace that's 100 percent Hass.
(08 November)

Sun struck
Student concern about global warming is fueling broad research interest in harnessing 'the warm power of the sun.'
(08 November)

A cool, green place to be
Sierra, the 1.2-million circulation national magazine of the Sierra Club, has named the University of California system one of America’s Top 10 “coolest” schools for its efforts to stop global warming.
(08 November)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(08 November)

Record 5th planet found around nearby star
A record-breaking fifth planet has been discovered around 55 Cancri, a yellowish star only 41 light years from Earth. The discovery implies that the star has even more planets that are smaller than the gas giants found so far and possibly include a rocky, Earth-like planet.
(06 November)

Steps you can take to protect your home during wildfire season
The state of California is adopting new building and fire codes, effective January 2008, that will primarily affect new construction. But homeowners with existing homes to worry about can take independent action to safeguard their dwellings in the event of a wildfire — an eventuality that is, or ought to be, top-of-mind for those who own or live in housing vulnerable to such a catastrophe.
(31 October)

In Burma, repression — and rebellion — are linked to healthcare crisis
Human Rights Center researchers find the roots of the 'Saffron Revolution' in the despair, desperation, and disease that have come with decades of harsh military rule.
(31 October)

November is Open Enrollment month
Open Enrollment for UC’s health-and-welfare benefits plans runs from Nov. 1 through Nov. 27. This is an important Open Enrollment for UC faculty and staff because the university has restructured medical-plan options for 2008 to help preserve meaningful choices and quality benefits while limiting cost increases, ensuring that faculty and staff will continue to have access to quality health benefits at competitive prices in 2008.
(31 October)

Career Compass responds to feedback
The Career Compass team has been busy since the spring, holding open-information sessions that have reached more than 1,250 campus employees, as well as launching a new website, disseminating new performance-evaluation forms for the 2008 cycle, and publishing more than 330 separate job standards.
(31 October)

Bunnies, boring objects, and the guilt-free zone
Artist Squeak Carnwath decodes the symbols in and the process behind her inimitable paintings.
(31 October)

Laurels
Honors, awards, and other faculty and staff achievements of note.
(31 October)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(31 October)

Single nanotube makes world's smallest radio
Wielding a single carbon nanotube 10,000 times smaller than a human hair, UC Berkeley and LBNL physicists have constructed the smallest radio yet. With such a small receiver or transmitter, you could put a tracking collar on a bacterium.
(31 October)

New program to focus on sustainable products, solutions
With an initial $2 million gift announced today (Tuesday, Oct. 30), the University of California, Berkeley, will move forward to establish a new program aimed at providing students educational and research opportunities in the area of sustainable products and solutions.
(30 October)

African diaspora graduates in hot demand
Graduates of UC Berkeley’s decade-old African Diaspora Studies Program have begun a diaspora of their own, landing plum academic appointments across the country, from the University of Hawaii to Michigan’s Wayne State University and beyond. This Thursday (Nov. 1) some of them will return to their academic homeland at UC Berkeley to discuss their research and share their success stories
(30 October)

Social standing influences how far elephants travel for food, study finds
A study of African elephants led by UC Berkeley researchers finds that dominant elephants will trek significantly fewer miles in search of food during the dry season compared with their less dominant counterparts. The findings highlight the influence of social standing on elephant movement.
(29 October)

Letter from a soldier
A Navy instructor describes an 'otherworldly' experience: listening to podcasts of a UC Berkeley physics course while on patrol in Iraq.
(26 October)

Ten scientists named fellows of AAAS
Ten UC Berkeley faculty members have been named fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the nation's premier scientific organization and publisher of the weekly journal Science. This brings the campus total to 205.
(26 October)

Students pursue program promoting science, math teaching
Science and math education in the United States may be viewed as flawed experiments lately, but some 200 University of California, Berkeley, students majoring in math, science and engineering may help fix that through a new program promoting teaching of these crucial subjects.
(25 October)

Ideas and reaction sought on report examining People's Park future
Comments sought on 9-month study to examine current and future state of People's Park.
(25 October)

A message from Chancellor Birgeneau on the Southern California wildfires
Chancellor Birgeneau extends UC Berkeley's sympathies and support to victims of the Southern California wildfires, and details campus support services available to students, staff and faculty.
(24 October)

Center for Energy and Environmental Innovation launched
Energy and environmental innovation is the focus of a new cross-disciplinary center housed at the University of California, Berkeley, that aims to promote viable global energy solutions.
(24 October)

Frederick E. Balderston, Haas School professor emeritus, dies at 84
Frederick E. Balderston, a professor emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley's Haas School of Business, an authority on the savings and loan industry as well as on university administration, and an early experimenter with computer simulation of banking and marketing decisions, has died at the age of 84.
(24 October)

Burma’s ‘transformative moment’
The so-called "Saffron Revolution" may not be televised, but much of what's happening inside the locked-down nation is nonetheless finding its way to the outside world via the Internet. And that, says Southeast Asia scholar Darren Zook, could spell "the beginning of the end" of 45 years of military rule.
(24 October)

‘We had the vision, but not the opportunity’
The 10 programs approved for funding by BILD — the Berkeley Initiative for Leadership on Diversity — during the 2007-08 fiscal year represent the best diversity-promoting thinking of staff and administrators all across campus.
(24 October)

Gentleman and scholar, academic leader and diplomat
This week, Karl Pister will receive the Clark Kerr Award from the Academic Senate for a career (still going strong) of service, leadership, and advancing higher education for all.
(24 October)

Graduate Council Lectures showcase Freeman, Heilbron, and Dretske
The Graduate Division has announced the first Graduate Council Lectures for 2007-08, bringing distinguished scholars in economics, history, and philosophy to campus between now and mid-November.
(24 October)

Draft report on People’s Park study is open for comment
Public comments are being sought on a draft report on the current state and future of People’s Park, the result of a nine-month assessment of the UC-owned and long-controversial site.
(24 October)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(24 October)

"Livable Buildings Awards" salute comfort and conserve
To recognize commercial buildings that do much more than provide the space and tools for workers to toil away, UC Berkeley's Center for the Built Environment has issued its first-ever "Livable Buildings Awards. "The center's kudos for building resource efficiency, architectural design and occupant satisfaction are unique in the building industry because they consider the building users' feelings about features such as lighting, acoustics and thermal comfort, said Edward Arens, the center's director and a UC Berkeley professor of architecture.
(23 October)

Memorial for late yeast expert Robert Mortimer
An Oct. 28 memorial service will honor Robert K. Mortimer, a yeast expert and UC Berkeley professor emeritus of molecular and cell biology who died Aug. 10 at the age of 79. Mortimer was key to making yeast an important organism for studying the action of genes and chromosomes, and investigated the yeast strains that give wine complexity.
(23 October)

Sleep loss linked to psychiatric disorders
In the first neural investigation into what happens to your emotions when you don't sleep, results from a UC Berkeley brain imaging study suggest that while a good night's rest can regulate your mood and help you cope with the next day's emotional challenges, sleep deprivation excessively boosts the part of the brain most closely connected to depression, anxiety and other psychiatric disorders.
(22 October)

World Bank report co-authored by UC economists calls for more investment in agriculture
A renewed focus on agricultural development is critical to successfully reducing global poverty and hunger, according to a new World Bank report co-authored by UC Berkeley economists. The report was released Friday, Oct. 19, at the World Bank's annual meeting in Washington, D.C.
(19 October)

Researchers caution against genetic ancestry testing
For many Americans, the potential to track one's DNA to a specific country, region or tribe with a take-home kit is highly alluring. But while the popularity of genetic ancestry testing is rising - particularly among African Americans - the technology is flawed and could spawn unwelcome societal consequences, according to researchers from several institutions nationwide, including UC Berkeley.
(18 October)

UC Berkeley student wins environmental leadership award
(17 October)

UC Berkeley: Virgil E. Schrock, thermal hydraulics expert who helped improve safety of nuclear reactors, dies at 81
Virgil Schrock, UC Berkeley professor emeritus of nuclear engineering and an internationally recognized expert in thermal hydraulics, died of cancer on Monday, Oct. 1. He was 81.
(17 October)

At Zellerbach, visions of the technological
Charlie Rose, Laura Tyson, and leaders in high tech chart a course on education, immigration, globalization, innovation, and the coming green revolution.
(17 October)

On track and going strong
"This is the greatest investment I've ever made," says George A. Miller about the program he founded to help low-income, first-generation community-college transfer students make the adjustment to life at Berkeley. "And I was in investment banking for 35 years."
(17 October)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(17 October)

Dedication of C.V. Starr East Asian Library on Oct. 20
Scholars and donors from around the world will gather at the University of California, Berkeley, on Saturday, Oct. 20, for private ceremonies to dedicate the C.V. Starr East Asian Library, the first freestanding library in the United States constructed exclusively for an East Asian collection and one of the few such facilities in the world.
(16 October)

Homecoming: Slideshow of blue and gold festivities
(15 October)

Methane drizzle on Saturn's moon Titan
Near-infrared images from Hawaii's Keck Observatory and Chile's Very Large Telescope show for the first time a nearly global cloud cover at high elevations on Titan, Saturn's largest moon, and a widespread and persistent morning drizzle of methane on the flanks of Titan's major continent, Xanadu.
(11 October)

Marketing professor explores the responses viewers reap from scary movies
Eduardo Andrade of the University of California, Berkeley's Haas School of Business wondered why his wife loves scary movies that make him squirm. So, the assistant professor of marketing interested in consumer behavior teamed up with Joel B. Cohen, a professor of marketing and anthropology at of the University of Florida, to deconstruct what happens when people watch horror films.
(11 October)

Three campus career counselors’ nonlinear path to authorship
Career Center staffers — two current, one recently retired — hit the trifecta with new Princeton Review series advising undergrads how to make the most of their liberal-arts degrees.
(10 October)

Come home (and visit the kids)
It's Homecoming & Parents Weekend at Berkeley, Friday, Oct. 12 through Sunday, Oct. 14. The combined celebration gives alumni and the parents of current students an overview of all the things that make this campus special — from a stellar roster of faculty seminars and a skein of tours and open houses to all the activities surrounding Saturday's football game with Oregon State.
(10 October)

Mental-health priorities: increasing awareness, decreasing stigma
Mental Health Awareness Week takes place at Berkeley starting on Monday, Oct. 15. Lectures, a self-administered "mental-health check-in" survey, and a panoply of "address your stress" activities (free massages, anyone?) are among the key elements of this expanded program.
(10 October)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(10 October)

Rejection sets off alarms for folks with low self-esteem
Few can tolerate such romantic or professional rebuffs as "It's not you, it's me" and "We regret to inform you that your application was not successful." But while a healthy dose of self-esteem can absorb the shock of rejection, poor self-esteem can trigger the primal fight-or-flight response, according to a new UC Berkeley study.
(10 October)

$25 million gift to add new faculty at Haas School
At least five new faculty positions will be crated at the Haas School of Business with a $25 million gift from alumnus Gerson Bakar, a prominent San Francisco real estate developer. Announcement of the gift, the largest individual donation in Haas School history, was made today (Wednesday, Oct. 10) by the school's dean, Tom Campbell.
(10 October)

A town hall meeting with UC's president
The ‘power of 10’ keeps the University resilient in the face of ‘dark forces,’ Dynes tells faculty
(05 October)

Scholar activist bridges the distance between the barrio and the Ph.D. seminar room
As a teen he got a taste of back-breaking yard maintenance, as a day laborer in Malibu. Now his Ph.D. research focuses on immigrant gardeners in L.A.'s vast informal economy.
(05 October)

Bears' football fortunes prompt a trip down memory lane
Cal's ascent to #3 in the national football polls isn't unprecedented, but it is a long time coming back. Return with us now to those thrilling days of yesteryear — 1952, to be exact — when Bums were bums, politics was beanbag, and Bears were (briefly) near the top of the heap.
(03 October)

Subatomic particles and giant magnets
Like Stanley Hall itself, Berkeley's new NMR facility is already helping to shorten the distance between disciplines in the quantitative sciences.
(03 October)

A building with its own fan club
The Berkeleyan wandered through Stanley Hall one day last week, asking everyone we met how working in the new building was likely to make a difference in their work. Not a few said it already had...
(03 October)

Seven score and four years ago …
Historian Garry Wills, author of Lincoln at Gettysburg and the focus of Berkeley's "On the Same Page" program, looks back at how the nation's 16th president changed America for the better — and compares and contrasts Lincoln with today's leadership.
(03 October)

Thoroughly modern — and steps ahead of her time
There was once a time when the boundaries between ballet and modern dance seemed clear ... but that was before Twyla Tharp set the dance world on its ear. Cal Performances highlights her career with upcoming performances by the Joffrey, Miami City Ballet, and the American Ballet Theatre, supported by a full campus program of lectures, conversations, and films.
(03 October)

Kevin Consey to step down as BAM/PFA director
Kevin Consey, who has led the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAM/PFA) since 1999, announced his retirement on Sept. 21, effective Jan. 2, 2008.
(03 October)

Campus launches YouTube channel
Further expanding public access to its intellectual riches through the most popular Web destinations, UC Berkeley announced today (Wednesday, Oct. 3) that it is making entire course lectures and special events available, free of charge, on YouTube.
(03 October)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(03 October)

Judge rules that Memorial Stadium oak grove protest is illegal
Alameda County Superior Court Judge Richard Keller today issued a preliminary injunction, ruling that the protesters living in the oak trees west of UC Berkeley's Memorial Stadium on the site of the proposed Student-Athlete High Performance Center must come down.
(01 October)

Neuroscientists connect neural activity and blood flow in new brain stimulation technique
UC Berkeley neuroscientists have for the first time measured the electrical activity of nerve cells and correlated it to changes in blood flow in response to transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), a noninvasive method to stimulate neurons in the brain. Their findings, reported in the Sept. 28 issue of the journal Science, could substantially improve the effectiveness of brain stimulation as a therapeutic and research tool.
(27 September)

Three-year plan for professional-school fees fixed
The UC regents last week endorsed a three-year (2008-09 through 2010-11) plan of fees for students in professional-degree programs and approved professional-school fee increases for the 2008-09 academic year.
(26 September)

For service above and beyond . . .
Since Human Resources introduced the Spot Award Program last year, 836 employees have received $250 (less taxes) for special accomplishments, on the strength of nominations submitted by their supervisors.
(26 September)

Stanley Hall dedication heralds new era of bioscience innovation
When Stanley Hall is officially dedicated on Friday, Sept. 28, it will represent the promise of a new era in interdisciplinary bioscience research at UC Berkeley. The state-of-the-art facility will be a catalyst for innovations that may one day lead to new treatments or preventions for diseases, more environmentally friendly sources of energy and better ways to clean up pollutants.
(26 September)

Tracing a spidery family tree
Insect biologist Rosemary Gillespie’s research has taken her from Scotland to Hawaii to Berkeley. Here, at least, she doesn’t have to capture specimens with a tuning fork.
(26 September)

A life in theater, sans histrionics
For more than 35 years, Stan Kramer has worked entirely behind the scenes on campus theater and dance productions. So it’s no coincidence that when he retires next week as technical director for the Department of Theater, Dance, and Performance Studies (TDPS), he will do so without much fanfare or hoopla.
(26 September)

Salary-increase pool for 2007-08 determined
The Berkeley campus will be implementing a salary-increase program for employees in positions covered by the Personnel Policies for Staff Members (PPSM). The fund pool for merit increases is 4 percent, effective Oct. 1, 2007.
(26 September)

Laurels
Honors, awards, and other faculty and staff achievements of note.
(26 September)

John Chemsak, entomological researcher, dies
John Chemsak, an entomological researcher and curator long associated with the Essig Museum of Entomology at Berkeley, died Aug. 26 at the age of 75.
(26 September)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(26 September)

Claire Kremen, UC Berkeley conservation biologist, wins MacArthur 'genius' fellowship
Claire Kremen, a UC Berkeley conservation biologist whose applied research advances the fields of ecology, biodiversity and agriculture, has been named a MacArthur Fellow, one of 24 nationwide "genius" award recipients announced Tuesday, Sept. 25, by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
(24 September)

NASA resurrects NuSTAR mission to image massive black holes
NuSTAR, a NASA mission canceled in 2006 a year before its planned launch, has been resurrected by the agency as it moves toward more small class explorer missions. UC Berkeley will collaborate with Caltech in building the black hole imager, and will serve as mission operations center.
(21 September)

Students to manage Socially Responsible Investment Fund
Managing a socially responsible investment fund is one of the new learning experiences the University of California, Berkeley's Haas School of Business is offering its graduate students for the first time this fall.
(20 September)

Author, historian Garry Wills "On the Same Page" at Berkeley
"On the Same Page," a signature program of the University of California, Berkeley's College of Letters & Science in which all new students receive the same book to read and discuss, is highlighting its second year with the book "Lincoln at Gettysburg: The Words That Remade America."
(20 September)

Pleasant odors perceived the same by different cultures
Are people's taste preferences totally dependent on culture, or are there universal likes and dislikes? A cross-cultural study by UC Berkeley and Israeli neurobiologists shows that the odors people perceive as pleasant or unpleasant are the same around the world. In fact, they've created a way to predict the degree of pleasantness of new chemicals.
(20 September)

Midanik appointed dean of School of Social Welfare
Professor Lorraine Midanik, an expert in alcohol issues, has been named dean of UC Berkeley's School of Social Welfare. Midanik, whose teaching and scholarly work focus on drug- and alcohol-related problems in the United States, had served as acting dean since July 2006.
(19 September)

L’affaire Chemerinsky: One to remember?
The shortest-lived controversy in recent UC history is over - isn't it? Two Boalt Hall professors share their opinions on the Drake/Chemerinsky brouhaha at UC Irvine.
(19 September)

A half-century of China scholarship at Berkeley
Born at the height of the Cold War, the Center for Chinese Studies remembers the days of Mao and Sputnik — and sees big things ahead.
(19 September)

Next assignment: Lincoln at Gettysburg
“On the Same Page,” a signature program of the College of Letters and Science, is highlighting its second year by exploring the most famous speech in American history with Garry Wills, author of Lincoln at Gettysburg: The Words That Remade America.
(19 September)

What’s modern planning theory got to do with my day hike?
In his latest book, The Country in the City, geography professor Richard Walker calls the Bay Area ‘the leading edge of modern environmentalism.’ Much of what it stands for today, he adds, ‘came right out of Berkeley.’
(19 September)

Campus to honor those it has lost
On Tuesday, Oct. 2, the Berkeley campus will gather for its sixth annual memorial service to honor those of its own who have died during the past year.
(19 September)

Put down that iPod and listen up!
In the wake of several recent robberies on and near the campus, UC police urge late-night scholars to keep their eyes and ears open, and to take advantage of shuttle and escort services.
(19 September)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(19 September)

Young innovator in cancer research chosen for NIH award
A young UC Berkeley researcher with ambitious plans to identify tissue-specific cancer drugs has been chosen to receive a National Institutes of Health New Innovator Award, one of 29 to be announced Sept. 19.
(18 September)

New grants to help researchers improve nuclear detection, domestic security
A pair of grants from the Academic Research Initiative, a partnership between the National Science Foundation and the Department of Homeland Security's Domestic Nuclear Detection Office, will help UC Berkeley researchers improve domestic security by developing better methods of detecting nuclear material.
(14 September)

Donors, chairs and Cal: Launching lasting friendships
Larry and Diane Bock, who last year endowed the Larry and Diane Bock Endowed Chair in Nanotechnology, exemplify how endowing a chair "is much more than making a monetary gift," says Scott Biddy, vice chancellor for University Relations. “Donors often form lasting, meaningful relationships with the campus and our faculty."
(13 September)

Ancient whale fall found from Año Nuevo Island
When a whale dies and falls to the bottom in the deep ocean, it attracts a weird community of mollusks, crabs and worms that feed on its oil-rich bones. A 15 million-year-old fossilized whale discovered on Año Nuevo Island is the first fossil whale fall discovered in California, and one of the youngest and most complete fossil whale falls ever found.
(13 September)

New economic, social benefits report highlights campus impacts
A new economic impact and social benefits report documents the University of California, Berkeley's contributions to the economy and quality of life for residents of the San Francisco Bay Area and highlights the wide-ranging, local to global impacts of campus research.
(13 September)

Sustainability 101
Berkeley's reputation rests on the twin pillars of access and excellence. Its future depends on a paradigm shift in the way it balances public and private funding.
(12 September)

Birgeneau: ‘A quantitative and qualitative change for us’
In this fall’s Berkeleyan interview, the chancellor speaks about the great promise of the Hewlett matching gift, touching on other campus priorities as the academic year gets under way.
(12 September)

Down from the mountains
In 1977, Berkeley biochemist Arlene Blum warned of the dangers of toxic flame retardants in household products -- and then departed academia to climb some of the world's highest mountain peaks. Three decades later, she's picking up right where she left off.
( 12 September )

It's My Job
In this new semi-regular feature, the Berkeleyan showcases a staff member whose work is essential to the smooth functioning of the campus (or one of its many departments and units).
(12 September)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(12 September)

Physicists pin down atomic spin for spintronics
UC Berkeley physicists have successfully measured the atomic spin of an isolated atom, one of the necessary steps on the road to quantum computers and spintronic devices.
(12 September)

Uptick in late-night robberies highlights need for students to be alert, campus police warn
A spate of armed robberies around the UC Berkeley campus, including one Monday night (Sept. 10) in which a victim was struck by BBs, should be a warning to students to walk at night only in well-lit areas and in groups, according to UC police.
(11 September)

Hewlett Foundation gift of $113 million is largest private gift in campus history
UC Berkeley today received the largest private gift in its history, $113 million from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. This gift represents a turning point in the financing of public higher education, providing endowment support that will help to close the funding gap between the nation's preeminent public university and its elite private peers, according to UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert J. Birgeneau.
(10 September)

Forestry field camp at 90
As the term 'forest wars' suggests, our woodlands have long been fiercely contested terrain. For nine decades UC Berkeley students of all stripes — from would-be timber operators to aspiring environmental activists — have been learning the complex science of forestry, from the ground up, at a summer field camp in the northeastern Sierras.
(06 September)

Astronomers eager to add to Sky in Google Earth
Since Sky in Google Earth debuted two weeks ago to let the public explore the heavens from their computers, two UC Berkeley astronomers have jumped at the chance to populate Google's sky with the most recently discovered heavenly objects, including new exoplanets, gamma-ray bursts and supernovas.
(06 September)

Professor known for his inspirational teaching has died
Norman Jacobson, a University of California, Berkeley, political science professor whose outstanding skills as a teacher drew national recognition and inspired many students to delve into political theory and political action, died on Tuesday (Sept. 4). He was 84.
(05 September)

Lunch Poems kickoff features faculty and staff
The campus’s popular Lunch Poems series launches its 12th season on Thursday, Sept. 6, with a multiple-reader lineup of faculty and staff. After that, the series settles into its usual monthly focus on single poets.
(05 September)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(05 September)

Whales evolved biosonar to chase squid into the deep
Sperm whales, dolphins and other "toothed" whales today chase squid so deep in the ocean that they have to rely on biosonar instead of their eyes to find them. Two UC Berkeley paleontologists have come up with a likely evolutionary scenario to explain how these whales developed their echolocating "biosonar" over the past 40 million years.
(05 September)

Coming attractions for fall 2007 find inspiration in East Asia
Conferences and a bloom of events inspired by the dedication of the new C.V. Starr East Asian Library and Chang-Lin Tien Center for East Asian Studies highlight the fall calendar at UC Berkeley. Scholars, dance and opera enthusiasts are in for a rare treat
(04 September)

UC Berkeley's settlement offer on Memorial Stadium project
UC Berkeley submitted a settlement offer to the City of Berkeley Tuesday regarding the city's lawsuit challenging the campus's planned construction of a Student-Athlete High Performance Center just west of California Memorial Stadium.
(04 September)

John Gofman, anti-nuclear activist & lipid researcher, has died
John William Gofman, a professor who first discovered the role of LDL and HDL in heart disease and went on to document and publicize the health dangers of low-level radiation, died Aug. 15 of heart failure at his home in San Francisco. He was 88.
(04 September)

NIEHS awards $4.7 million to help detect human exposure to environmental contaminants
UC Berkeley researchers have received a $4.7 million grant to develop cutting edge methods for detecting diseases in humans exposed to environmental contaminants, the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences announced today (Tuesday, Sept. 4).
(04 September)

Black workers face low wages, advancement obstacles, report says
A new report by UC Berkeley's Center for Labor Research and Education finds that more than half of black workers in the United States have jobs that don't pay well, provide retirement and health benefits, or offer avenues for advancement.
(04 September)

UC Berkeley says public safety comes first; police cite nearly 100 arrests at site of tree protest since December
The university's obligation to protect public safety outside California Memorial Stadium was at the heart of the case made by UC Berkeley on Thursday to an Alameda County Superior Court judge. Citing more than 155 violations and 98 arrests or citations of protesters outside the stadium since December, 2006, UC Police Chief Victoria Harrison outlined in detail the need for erecting a temporary fence at the site in advance of Saturday's season-opening football game.
(30 August)

Alexander C. Scordelis, renowned structural engineer, dies at 83
Alexander C. Scordelis, UC Berkeley professor emeritus of structural engineering and among the world's most influential experts on long-span bridges and pre-stressed concrete, has died at the age of 83.
(29 August)

Governor signs 2007-08 state budget
On Aug. 24, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a 2007-08 state budget that includes funding for student enrollments, faculty and staff compensation, academic-preparation programs, and key research initiatives at the University of California.
(29 August)

As the Bears head onto the field . . .
As the Cal football team prepares to meet Tennessee this Saturday at Memorial Stadium, the campus is readying for a court date over the planned Student-Athlete High Performance Center, the first phase in a multi-year southeast-campus plan that includes seismic retrofitting of the 84-year-old stadium. But while the Bears are eager to avenge last year’s opening-day loss to the Volunteers, a legal battle is something campus leaders would prefer to avoid.
(29 August)

Harassment, predatory behavior spell trouble at River High
Doing sociological fieldwork, C.J. Pascoe infiltrated the macho, homophobic world of adolescent boys.
(29 August)

Opinion
Esther Gulli, executive administrative officer for the vice chancellor for student affairs, on the devastation still evident in New Orleans two years post-Katrina.
(29 August)

Laurels
Honors, appointments, and other faculty and staff achievements of note.
(29 August)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(29 August)

Flies prefer fizzy drinks
Fruit flies like a splash of soda water in their drinks, according to UC Berkeley neuroscientist Kristin Scott and her colleagues. They discovered that the insect has specialized taste cells for carbonated water, probably to encourage them to binge on food with microorganisms like yeast and bacteria that give off carbon dioxide.
(29 August)

Campus provides updates on Memorial Stadium Project and Student-Athlete High Performance Center
With the football season about to begin, Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost George Breslauer and Vice Chancellor-Administration Nathan Brostrom provide updates on developments surrounding the Memorial Stadium project and the new Student-Athlete High Performance Center.
(29 August)

New interdisciplinary 'Global Poverty & Practice' minor is launched
UC Berkeley's Blum Center for Developing Economies has announced the creation of a new undergraduate program that, beginning this fall, will seek to motivate and prepare students to become active in alleviating poverty worldwide. The "Global Poverty & Practice" minor will be housed in the International and Area Studies Teaching Program.
(27 August)

Meeting with the media
At his annual press conference, Chancellor Birgeneau briefs reporters on the biggest campus stories of the year ahead.
(23 August)

Fall 2007 semester kicks off
More than 34,500 students are expected to enroll for UC Berkeley's fall 2007 semester. Among other developments, the campus will see new faces in several top leadership positions and the unveiling of new facilities, including Stanley Hall, a state-of-the-art home for bioengineering and nanotechnology.
(23 August)

Former street tough takes miraculous route to UC Berkeley
Next week, Derick Brown starts his junior year at UC Berkeley, arriving as a transfer student from City College of San Francisco. While the campus is less than 15 miles from the Western Addition neighborhood where he grew up, it may as well be the moon, as far as many of his former cohorts are concerned. "Growing up, Berkeley was just off limits. African Americans where I come from, we just can't get in," he said. "But I took a chance and enrolled in community college, then things started happening, and look at me now. I'm floating on a cloud."
(23 August)

Keck, Hubble provide new view of Uranus' rings
Astronomers discovered 30 years ago that Uranus, like Saturn, has a set of rings comprised of rocks, pebbles and dust, and Voyager 2 snapped the first and best pictures of the rings in 1986. With more powerful ground based telescopes and the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers are now primed to learn even more about the rings as they swing edge-on to Earth, a perspective that Earth gets only once in 42 years.
(23 August)

It's My Job
In this new semi-regular feature, the Berkeleyan showcases a staff member whose work is essential to the smooth functioning of the campus (or one of its many departments and units).
(22 August)

Chancellor’s Fund lends a helping hand — or hundreds of them — to campus neighbors
Seeking to bolster the efforts of local, community-based organizations to improve the quality of life for Berkeley residents, the Berkeley campus has awarded grants totaling $207,500 to a baker’s dozen projects ranging from mentoring and mental-health services to habitat restoration and landscape rehabilitation.
(22 August)

Grad students pitch in to make NRC rankings reflect their experience
Participation of Berkeley’s doctoral candidates in the National Research Council's survey of their graduate experience has been exemplary, according to Graduate Dean Andrew Szeri and the team facilitating the campus response.
(22 August)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(22 August)

"On the Same Page" program features opera about Lincoln's assassination
A free campus performance Thursday (Aug. 23) of a wrenching but humorous opera about President Abraham Lincoln's assassination highlights this semester's "On the Same Page" program hosted by the College of Letters & Science.
(22 August)

Study finds early difficulty for community college students
A new report by Policy Analysis for California Education (PACE) finds that six in 10 students who enter the California community college system as freshmen with high school diplomas and aspirations to transfer to four-year institutions drop out or lower their academic sights after just one semester. The report recommends increasing support for these students.
(20 August)

Compound in broccoli has immune-boosting properties, finds new study
A compound found in broccoli and related vegetables may help boost the immune system, according to a new UC Berkeley-led study. Researchers found that mice fed mice a solution of the compound, 3,3'-diindolylmethane (DIM), had increased blood levels of cytokines, proteins which help regulate the cells of the immune system, and were better able to clear reoviruses from their intestines.
(20 August)

Savanna habitat drives birds to cooperative breeding
Birds of a feather stick together, but for African starlings, this is true primarily in savannas, where cooperation improves survival in the unpredictable habitat, according to researchers from UC Berkeley and Cornell. Cooperative breeding, where helpers forego breeding to gather food for the offspring of others in the group, seems to be a successful survival strategy in the highly variable rainfall of the savanna.
(16 August)

Scientists honored by technology magazines for scientific and technological innovation
Chemical engineer Rachel Segalman, synthetic biologist J. Christopher Anderson and Tapan Parikh, who is bringing high-tech to the developing world, are among Technology Review's top innovators over the age of 35, while chemist Alex Pines was named one of R&D Magazine's top 100 innovators of the year.
(15 August)

Students to learn new Internet piracy rules
As part of their fall semester 2007 orientation, thousands of students moving into UC Berkeley residence halls, starting this weekend, will learn that if they use campus computer networks to download copyrighted music, they'll find themselves surfing without a Net. Under UC Berkeley's new "Learn before you Burn" campaign, residence hall denizens caught illegally downloading music will automatically lose their in-room Internet connection for one week or longer.
(15 August)

Graduate students find no match in evening cell phone use spike and crash data
It's conventional wisdom that talking on cell phones while driving is risky business, but two University of California, Berkeley, graduate student economists report that a spike in cell phone use in recent years and on weekday evenings is not matched by an increase in fatal or non-fatal car crashes from 2002-2005.
(13 August)

Latin American perspectives on Iraq
Leading intellectuals from Mexico and South America offer commentary, in English and Spanish, on U.S. military involvement in Iraq.
(10 August)

Researchers explore increasing foreign investment in U.S. bonds, mortgage securities
Unprecedented investment in U.S. securities such as government bonds and mortgage-backed securities by China and other foreign countries reflects a growing globalization of real estate finance and generally benefits all sides - including U.S. home buyers enjoying lower interest rates - say researchers at the University of California, Berkeley's Haas School of Business.
(10 August)

UC Berkeley: Seismologists confirm mine collapse caused temblor
A 3.9 magnitude temblor recorded at the time of a mine collapse in southern Utah on Aug. 6 was not caused by an earthquake, but more likely was the result of the collapse itself, according to an analysis by UC Berkeley seismologists.
(09 August)

R. Brady Williamson, pioneer in fire safety engineering science, dies at 73
Robert Brady Williamson, a pioneer in fire safety engineering science education and a professor emeritus at UC Berkeley, died of melanoma on Wednesday, Aug. 1. He was 73.
(09 August)

Frog-killing fungus could be greater threat, finds new genetic analysis
A new study led by UC Berkeley researchers suggests that a frog-killing fungus may be harder to fight because of the pathogen's ability to spread over long distances and possibly persist in the environment as a consequence of sexual reproduction. The fungus has already decimated populations of mountain yellow-legged frogs in the Sierra Nevada.
(06 August)

Chancellor leads effort to back federal math education bill
University of California, Berkeley, Chancellor Robert J. Birgeneau, who has led an effort by leaders of some of the nation's premiere colleges and universities to back a federal bill that would strengthen K-12 math and science education, applauded today the recent passage of the bill and expressed his optimism that it will be signed into law.
(03 August)

E-voting systems vulnerable to viruses and other security attacks, new report finds
A "Top-to-Bottom Review" of California's electronic voting systems has revealed flaws that leave the machines vulnerable to security attacks. The review was commissioned by California Secretary of State Debra Bowen and conducted by researchers at UC Berkeley and UC Davis.
(02 August)

Details announced of new vehicle-fuel standard
UC energy experts release their much-anticipated blueprint for fighting global warming by reducing the amount of carbon emitted when transportation fuels are used in California. This "low carbon fuel standard," designed to stimulate improvements in transportation-fuel technologies, is expected to become the foundation for similar initiatives in other states, as well as nationally and internationally.
(02 August)

Faculty Nightstand: For Erin Murphy, summer offers the time to immerse in long reads
Erin Murphy, assistant professor of law, calls herself "a pretty voracious reader." Summer's relaxed schedule only exacerbates her bookworm tendencies. This summer, she's discovered a new favorite and managed to delve outside of the fictive realm.
(02 August)

Researchers recommend tougher post-election audits
Two UC Berkeley researchers are among the four authors of a report released today (Wednesday, Aug. 1) that recommends more targeted and rigorous audits of paper records produced by electronic voting machines.
(01 August)

Ichthyologist, animal behaviorist George Barlow has died
Preeminent U.S. ichthyologist George W. Barlow, who studied parenting behavior and aggression in fish and was a well-known expert on cichlid fishes, died July 14 at the age of 78.
(30 July)

A big stink to come at UC Botanical Garden
When UC Botanical Garden's rare corpse flower blooms this week, the flower will both attract and repel visitors with its large and visually arresting but odiferously revolting blossom.
(30 July)

Researchers report northern Uganda PTSD, preference for violence findings
In an upcoming issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), researchers at the University of California, Berkeley's Human Rights Center and Tulane University's Payson Center for International Development report high rates of symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and depression in residents of conflict-ridden northern Uganda. They also find that those with such symptoms favor violent -- rather than peaceful -- means to resolve their country's conflict.
(27 July)

UC Berkeley geography professor wounded in Nigeria
Geography professor Michael Watts, who studies violence in the oil fields of Nigeria, was injured July 25 in the center of the country's oil-rich Niger delta by a group of gun-wielding men who attacked a newspaper office.
(25 July)

Transportation researchers to test Toyota plug-in hybrid vehicles
UC Berkeley transportation researchers have been given a $750,000 grant to conduct, along with project partner groups, the first real-world testing of an automaker-produced, plug-in hybrid electric passenger vehicle (PHEV). The campus's Institute of Transportation Studies announced the award July 25.
(25 July)

Eminent biochemist Daniel Koshland has died
Daniel E. Koshland Jr., an eminent biochemist and energetic guardian of UC Berkeley's research preeminence, died on July 23 following a massive stroke. A former editor of the journal Science, Koshland was 87.
(24 July)

Chancellor's Community Partnership Fund awards announced today
The Chancellor's Community Partnership Fund awards for 2007-08 are being given to 13 projects that demonstrate how local, community-based organizations and UC Berkeley are working together to improve the quality of life for Berkeley residents. Chancellor Birgeneau established this annual grant program in 2006.
(24 July)

Jon Gjerde named permanent social sciences dean
History professor Jon Gjerde, who has served as an interim dean in the College of Letters and Science for the past year, has been appointed permanent dean of the college's division of social sciences.
(19 July)

S. Shankar Sastry named new dean of engineering
S. Shankar Sastry, NEC Distinguished Professor and former chair of the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences at UC Berkeley, has been appointed the campus's new dean of the College of Engineering. His appointment was approved July 19 by the UC Board of Regents and is retroactive to July 1.
(19 July)

Gibor Basri selected new vice chancellor for equity and inclusion
Gibor Basri, a highly esteemed University of California, Berkeley, astrophysics professor with an extensive background working on diversity and outreach issues, has been selected as the campus's new vice chancellor for equity and inclusion.
(19 July)

A profile of Gibor Basri
UC Berkeley's new vice chancellor for equity and inclusion plans to take a "holistic view" of the campus — its faculty, students, and staff — to help ensure that it's serving and tapping the talents of California's diverse populations.
(19 July)

Rise of dinosaurs not so rapid after all
The ancestors of dinosaurs seemed to disappear before the dinosaurs took over the Earth, suggesting to many that dinosaurs were so successful that they rapidly outcompeted their ancestors and drove them extinct. New fossil finds in New Mexico, however, show that this was not true -- dinosaurs and their ancestors lived side by side for 15-20 million years in the Late Triassic before the dinosaur precursors vanished.
(19 July)

Researchers at UC Berkeley and LBNL share $500,000 Gruber Cosmology Prize for discovering universe acceleration
Researchers at the UC Berkeley and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) have been awarded the 2007 Gruber Cosmology Prize for their role in the seminal discovery that the expansion of the universe is accelerating.
(17 July)

Researchers witness natural selection at work in dramatic comeback of male butterflies
When an invasive bacteria ravaged the male embryos of the Blue Moon butterfly, it left populations that were nearly entirely female. But in an extraordinary example of natural selection at work, the males made a comeback, going from 1 percent of the population to 39 percent in the span of one year, or 10 generations. Researchers at UC Berkeley and elsewhere witnessed this evolutionary event and credited it to the rise of a suppressor gene that stopped the male-killing bacteria in its tracks.
(12 July)

UC Berkeley, 'the people's university,' featured on Chinese TV
People throughout mainland China got a glimpse of the Berkeley campus — and its public mission — in an interview with Chancellor Robert Birgeneau broadcast recently on a popular prime-time talk show.
(11 July)

Making the connections
Putting undergrads and faculty together is easy: just schedule a required lecture course in a 700-seat hall. But finding ways for them to work in smaller groups, on topics of mutual interest, takes dedication - something that College of Letters and Science staffers Terry Strathman and Alix Schwartz display in abundance.
(11 July)

Haas researcher identifies book-cooking tipoffs
Growth companies that are suffering deteriorating operating performance are the most likely firms to manipulate their financial numbers, according to a new, comprehensive analysis of Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) documents by an accounting professor at the Haas School of Business.
(11 July)

Laurels
Honors, awards, and other faculty and staff achievements of note.
(11 July)

Obituary
Anthony (Tony) Brennan, assistant director of the California Partners for Advanced Transit and Highways Program (PATH), died of leukemia on May 31, at the age of 71.
(11 July)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(11 July)

Study predicts positive net economic impacts of key health reform plans
A UC Berkeley study released today (Wednesday, July 11), says that two of the main health care reform proposals under consideration in California are likely to have a positive net impact on the state's economy.
(11 July)

Professor emeritus Peter Lyman dies at age 66
Peter Lyman, a professor emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley's School of Information and a former university librarian, whose legacy includes pioneering research on online information, ethnographic analyses of online social relationships and communities, and helping bring university libraries into the digital era, died Monday (July 2) at his Berkeley home. He was 66 and had battled brain cancer.
(05 July)

Anemone genome gives new view of multi-celled ancestors
The genome of the sea anemone is nearly as complex as the human genome, according to UC Berkeley researchers who have completed the first analysis of the animal's genes. Because of this similarity, it is providing major insights into the common ancestor of not only humans and sea anemones, but of nearly all multi-celled animals.
(05 July)

Burma junta faulted for rampant diseases
As Congress debates extending political and economic sanctions against Burma's military regime, a new report from UC Berkeley and Johns Hopkins University documents how decades of repressive rule, civil war and poor governance in the Southeast Asian country have contributed to the spread of HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and other infectious diseases there.
(28 June)

Ken Goldberg named new director of Center for New Media
Ken Goldberg, a UC Berkeley professor of engineering and an artist, has been named the new director of the UC Berkeley Center for New Media, effective July 1. The center, established in 2004, is dedicated to exploring the impacts of digital media on people and society.
(28 June)

Wellesley administrator, a Berkeley alumnus, to lead campus fundraising operations
David Blinder, vice president for resources and public affairs at Wellesley College, has been named the new chief development officer for UC Berkeley. Blinder, who holds master's and doctoral degrees in philosophy from Berkeley, will return to his alma mater as associate vice chancellor for University Relations, starting Aug. 13.
(27 June)

DOE awards LBNL, UC Berkeley and partners $125 million for biofuels research
Berkeley and the Bay Area cemented their position as the nation's center of alternative "green" energy research with the announcement June 26 by the Department of Energy of a $125 million, five-year grant to Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, UC Berkeley, and four other partners to develop better biofuels.
(26 June)

The state of the campus is good, says chancellor
In a wide-ranging give-and-take session with campus staff on June 23, Chancellor Robert Birgeneau fielded queries on pay, pensions, health care, diversity, the environment, and more.
(26 June)

Drug resistance argues against mutation theory of cancer
Most cancer researchers are convinced that cancer results from a handful of genetic mutations that kick a cell into uncontrolled growth. UC Berkeley genetics researcher Peter Duesberg disagrees, and finds support for his "chromosomal" theory of cancer in the development of drug resistance by many cancers.
(26 June)

YouTube clip features Berkeley's musical serenade to Stephen Hawking
In March, world-renowned physicist and cosmologist Stephen Hawking came to the Berkeley campus for a series of events and was serenaded in a musical tribute shown in this YouTube clip.
(22 June)

Student-athlete facility to get its day in court Sept. 19
The judge presiding over legal challenges to Berkeley's planned Student-Athlete High Performance Center — the first phase in a multi-year southeast-campus plan that includes seismic retrofitting of Memorial Stadium — has set trial for Sept. 19, responding to the university's growing sense of urgency and giving Cal fans hope that the project schedule can get back on track.
(21 June)

Damning report on Uganda war crimes
A report released today (Friday, June 15) by UC Berkeley's Human Rights Center and Tulane University provides the first hard data on forced conscription into the Lord's Resistance Army, a rebel group accused of kidnapping tens of thousands of women and children to serve as soldiers, servants or sex slaves in northern Uganda. The report documents rising violence in the 20-year-long conflict between the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) and Ugandan government forces, which have been negotiating a ceasefire. Data was collected from rehabilitation centers in the war-torn, eastern African republic.
(15 June)

Chancellor Birgeneau denounces move to boycott Israeli universities
In a statement, UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert J. Birgeneau has expressed his outrage over the efforts by some members of Britain's University and College Union to promulgate a boycott against Israeli academics and academic institutions.
(14 June)

Strong evidence that Mars once had an ocean
UC Berkeley geophysicists are providing strong evidence that Mars once had an ocean. Naysayers have argued that what appear to be ancient coastlines are too warped to be true seashores. The researchers claim, however, that this anomaly resulted from the tilt of Mars' spin axis 2 to 3 billion years ago, possible because the weight of surface water made the planet tip like a weighted top.
(13 June)

Cancer death rates remain high decades after exposure to arsenic, new study finds
A new study by researchers at UC Berkeley and in Chile has found that death rates from lung and bladder cancer remained high decades after residents in northern Chile were exposed to high levels of arsenic in their drinking water. That a population's cancer mortality rates from an environmental health hazard remained high so long after exposure is unprecedented, the authors say.
(12 June)

LifeCycle Journal: Seven Cal Team cyclists and a roadie reflect on the ride's highs, lows, and enduring memories
After riding into L.A. on AIDS LifeCycle's Day 7, eight Cal Team members reflect on the meaning of the ride.
(12 June)

Chemist Gabor Somorjai to receive Priestley Medal
The American Chemical Society will bestow its highest honor, the Priestley Medal, on Gabor A. Somorjai, University Professor and professor of chemistry at the UC Berkeley, for his "extraordinarily creative and original contributions to surface science and catalysis."
(12 June)

New book outlines discrimination against moms
Three decades after women began breaking into male-dominated professions, their numbers in top academic and corporate echelons remain flat, according to Mary Ann Mason, UC Berkeley's graduate dean. Largely to blame are family demands and "maternal discrimination," according to "Mothers on the Fast Track: How a New Generation can Balance Family and Careers," a new book Mason has co-authored with her daughter, Eve Mason Ekman.
(12 June)

Geochemist Harold Helgeson has died at 75
Harold C. Helgeson, who rose from gold and diamond prospecting to become the world's foremost geochemist and the father of theories about where to look for ore and oil, died May 28 at the age of 75.
(11 June)

LifeCycle Journal: Climbing that last hill, with miles yet to go
Cal Team member and chef Chuck Davies reflects on how all the aches and pains of a week in the saddle are overcome by the outpouring of support from the community, and by the chance to celebrate life and those who live fully in the face of AIDS.
( 09 June )

LifeCycle Journal: Two perspectives on ride's Dress Red Day
A Cal grad student and an adjunct lecturer describe a low-mileage day marked by campiness and fun.
(08 June)

LifeCycle Journal: Catching the spirit of the event
UC Berkeley staffer Devin Wicks reports from Santa Maria on early-morning preparations for ride-out on Day 4, taking riders up the infamous Evil Twins and across the half-way mark to L.A.
(07 June)

Leonard Nathan, distinguished poet, dies at 82
Leonard Nathan, a UC Berkeley professor emeritus of rhetoric and prolific American poet, critic and master of the short lyric, died peacefully on June 3. He was 82. The author of 17 volumes of poetry, Nathan was a fixture for 50 years in literary circles both on and off the UC Berkeley campus.
(07 June)

Martin Meyerson, former CED dean and acting chancellor, dies at age of 84
Martin Meyerson, who is credited with defusing some of the Free Speech Movement tensions at the University of California, Berkeley, while serving as acting chancellor in 1965, died Saturday (June 2). He was 84. The native of New York City also was an authority on urban development and was dean of UC Berkeley’s College of Environmental Design (CED) from 1963 to 1965.
(06 June)

LifeCycle journal: Missing out on 72.3 miles of fun
Incoming freshman Claire Veening describes the disappointments of Day 3 (King City to Paso Robles) on her first AIDS LifeCycle ride.
(06 June)

Agonized pose tells of dinosaur death throes
Like investigators out of CSI or Cold Case, UC Berkeley and Montana paleontologists find clues to a dinosaur's demise in its peculiar death pose. They argue that the open-mouthed, head-back posture of many dinosaur fossils tells of an agonized death from brain damage and suffocation.
(06 June)

Career Compass website is launched; HR rolling out new staff job structure
Human Resources has launched a new website, careercompass.berkeley.edu, to publish information about Career Compass, a set of three linked initiatives focusing on creating new job standards, improving performance management, and providing greater career development opportunities for staff.
(06 June)

Punching a clock into the golden years
The UC Berkeley Retirement Center's Retiree Work Opportunities (RWO) program — an innovative solution to address the campus's short-term, temporary staffing needs — was among 10 nonprofit and public-sector organizations honored last week with a BreakThrough Award at the National Press Club in Washington, DC.
(06 June)

'The university is a subversive force' (and other wisdom from the podium)
Good graduation pictures, in capturing joy and a sense of accomplishment, resemble one another strongly. Good graduation speeches, if carefully written, strike their own singular chords. Here, examples of both, from the Berkeley commencement season just concluded.
(06 June)

Activism, service, and engagement recognized at first annual Chancellor's Public Service Awards ceremony
The first annual Chancellor's Public Service Awards were presented at a University House ceremony on May 14. The awards, as the chancellor noted in a message to attendees, "recognize the commitment of faculty, staff, and students … whose individual or combined efforts enhance the quality of life of our community, whether here in the Bay Area or around the globe."
(06 June)

Campus managers honored for leadership
The 19th annual BSA Excellence in Management awards, presented by the Berkeley Staff Assembly, were conferred on 44 Berkeley managers at a May 10 event at International House.
(06 June)

Seventeen junior faculty receive Hellman Family funding
The Hellman Family Faculty Fund, established in 1995, supports the research of promising assistant professors who show capacity for great distinction in their research. Seventeen awards have been announced for 2007 and are listed below.
(06 June)

Awards
Recent faculty and staff awards.
(06 June)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(06 June)

William K. Pritchett, emeritus professor of Greek, dies at age 98
William Kendrick Pritchett, emeritus professor of Greek at the University of California, Berkeley, died on Tuesday, May 29, at his Berkeley home a day after taking a bad fall. He was 98. Pritchett, who joined the UC Berkeley faculty in 1948, was one of the most highly regarded authorities in the fields of Greek topography, military science and practice, and the intricacies of the Athenian calendar and time-reckoning systems.
(05 June)

LifeCycle Journal: Part endurance event, part circus, part therapy
Cal grad Ben Spoer reports on the challenges of sleeping in a tent city of 2,300, the circus atmosphere that help riders persist after the mileage count tops 75, and the shared sense of loss on AIDS LifeCycle 6.
(05 June)

Riding to stop AIDS
Cal senior Hailey Gilmore reports from the road following Day 1 of the week-long AIDS LifeCycle ride from San Francisco to Los Angeles.
(04 June)

An artist honors U.S. fatalities in Iraq
Included in this year's Venice Biennale is a memorial to American troops who have died in the Iraq War, by UC Berkeley art-practice graduate student Emily Prince.
(04 June)

Survival theme for freshman summer reading
Students navigating their freshman year at UC Berkeley this fall may find the 2007 unofficial summer reading list especially helpful. The theme is "Survival!"
(04 June)

Cal AIDS LifeCyclists get in gear for an arduous (and memorable) ride
When AIDS Life Cyclists pedal out of San Francisco this Sunday, June 3, one contingent will sport Cal jerseys. Members of the Cal Team plan to file first-hand reports on the benefit ride, beginning with this overview from team co-captain Christine Shaff.
(31 May)

Seismic study clears site of future athlete training center
A follow-up geologic study of the planned building site for a new student-athlete training center has confirmed earlier conclusions that there is no active earthquake fault running through it. This removes one barrier to construction of the center, though pending lawsuits challenge other aspects of the project.
(31 May)

After 'Dreamz,' it's back to surviving reality
This season's recent Survivor:Fiji results proved stunningly disappointing for fans of Yau-Man Chan, the College of Chemistry's information-systems director, who braved hunger and thirst, poisonous snakes, 108-degree temperatures and backstabbing competitors, only to be eliminated before reaching the competition's final round. But Chan emerged from the three-month ordeal with unprecedented popularity and self-confidence.
(30 May)

Team reports 28 new exoplanets
The world's largest and most prolific team of planet hunters announced on May 28 the discovery of 28 new planets outside our solar system, increasing to 236 the total number of known exoplanets. The bounty of new planets, not to mention 7 new brown dwarfs, allows the astronomers to draw conclusions about how planets form and how planet systems evolve.
(29 May)

J-school announces competition for three investigative reporting fellowships
To help develop a new generation of investigative reporters in an era of cutbacks at major news organizations, UC Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism has established three post-graduate fellowships in investigative reporting.
(23 May)

HIV in breast milk killed by flash-heating, new study finds
Research led by UC Berkeley and UC Davis has found that breast milk naturally infected with HIV can be treated with a simple method of flash-heating, providing hope that HIV-positive mothers in developing countries will soon be able to more safely feed their babies.
(21 May)

UC Berkeley's Alex Farrell joins governor in introducing low-carbon fuel standard for state
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has announced a proposed new low-carbon fuel standard for the state and praised the University of California scientists who worked intensively over the past four months to put it together.
(18 May)

Ultra-cold gas makes great magnetometer
The universe's coldest state of matter is the Bose-Einstein condensate, a 50 nanoKelvin-above-absolute-zero gas of frigid atoms that behaves like a superfluid. UC Berkeley physicists have found a way to use these ultra-cold atoms to measure very small magnetic fields, which could be applied to mapping brain waves.
(18 May)

New teaching, research building gets go-ahead
The outdated and seismically poor Warren Hall is set for demolition in 2008, to be replaced by a modern, five-story teaching and research building that will house stem cell research as well as work on infectious diseases, cancer and brain disorders. The Li Ka Shing Center for Biomedical and Health Sciences should open for business in 2011.
(17 May)

Faculty Nightstand: On sabbatical in Britain, Nick Jewell searches for a compelling portrait of London
Biostatistician Nick Jewell usually keeps a stack of books on his bedside cabinet, each title "brimful of promise and intrigue." While traveling in Britain, that stack has included books to teach him about the history of his surroundings, and about his family roots; he shares the best of the lot with NewsCenter readers.
(17 May)

Three new top campus administrators named
Chancellor Robert Birgeneau today announced the appointment of Andrew J. Szeri as dean of the Graduate Division, Sheldon Zedeck as vice provost for academic affairs and faculty welfare, and Keith Gilless as acting dean of the College of Natural Resources.
(16 May)

68-year-old Ph.D. candidate beats the odds
For 68-year-old Ananda Sattwa, the long and rocky journey from Kingston, Jamaica, to UC Berkeley will crest this Friday (May 18) as she attends the Department of Ethnic Studies' graduation ceremony. That's when her eldest son, African American historian and anthropologist Robin D. G. Kelley, will place a doctoral hood over his mother's long mane of wavy silver hair. The Ph.D. candidate has yet to complete her dissertation. However, with her son – a sought-after scholar – delivering the keynote address, her family felt the time was right to honor the achievements of the woman who made sacrifice after sacrifice so they might pursue their dreams.
(16 May)

Inside the Beltway
Through the UC Berkeley Washington Program, Cal undergrads fan out through the D.C. area to take internships in government, non-profit, and private organizations, while learning from UC faculty at night.
(16 May)

Chemist Peidong Yang wins NSF Waterman Award
Peidong Yang, a 36-year-old chemist who is a pioneer in the creation of nanowires, has been awarded the $500,000 Waterman Award, the National Science Foundation's top prize for young researchers. Yang's work could lead to miniaturized labs-on-a-chip, nano-scale electronic circuits and inexpensive, flexible solar cells.
(15 May)

Round-the-clock studies: The library as first resort
Writing in the newsletter fiat lux, University Librarian Thomas Leonard takes a look at final exams from the library perspective: students in every corner, tents pitched in the stacks, and a round-the-clock "study resort."
(14 May)

In praise of 'dynamo' dean Mary Ann Mason
A crowd of well-wishers gathered Thursday afternoon at International House to toast Mary Ann Mason, who will step down as dean of the Graduate Division in June. Speakers cited Mason’s many important accomplishments as dean — from hard-won policy changes to help make academia more "family friendly" to new graduate-student housing and more robust fellowship support.
(14 May)

Mathematician Emma Lehmer dies at 100
Emma Trotskaya Lehmer, a member of UC Berkeley's mathematical community since 1940, died peacefully in her sleep on May 7 at the age of 100.
(11 May)

Former U.S. Ambassador to head International House
Martin G. Brennan, a diplomat who served as U.S. Ambassador to Uganda and Zambia, has been named the new executive director of International House, a multicultural residence and program center at the UC Berkeley. Brennan succeeds Joe Lurie, who will step down at the end of June as executive director of the unique, 75-year-old center after two decades of service.
(11 May)

Don Minkler, champion of family planning and professor emeritus of public health, dies at 85
Dr. Donald H. Minkler, UC Berkeley professor emeritus and a renowned leader in women's health and family planning, has died at the age of 85. Minkler died of Alzheimer's disease at Salem Lutheran Home in Oakland on Friday, May 4.
(10 May)

New campus-city program helps students discard unwanted items
Students about to move out of their housing units for the summer no longer have an excuse for dumping unwanted items, including furniture, on the sidewalks as they leave town. A new program being launched by UC Berkeley and the city of Berkeley provides students with giant outdoor refuse bins, garbage truck sweeps and a drop-off recycling center on campus.
(08 May)

Leon Litwack's last stand
The renowned historian Leon Litwack gave the final lecture of his 34-year teaching career at Berkeley to an energetic crowd of well-wishers on May 7.
(08 May)

Researcher offers steps to help doctors move past anger with patients
A UC Berkeley bioethicist addresses the challenge when anger or frustration enters into a doctor-patient relationship. She provides guidelines to help physicians empathize with their patients, particularly when faced with negative emotions.
(08 May)

Commencement Convocation this Wednesday
Network television news reporter Bob Woodruff, Oakland hip-hop artist Boots Riley, Nobel physicist Andrew Fire and Lt. Gen. Daniel Leaf, deputy commander of the U.S. Air Force, are among the diverse luminaries set to offer inspiration and practical advice this month to graduates at UC Berkeley. Ceremonies begin this Wednesday, May 9, at 4 p.m. with Commencement Convocation, an event for all graduating seniors at the campus's Greek Theatre
(07 May)

Largest, brightest supernova announced
UC Berkeley astronomers report the most luminous supernova ever detected, the result of the explosion of a super-massive star in a galaxy 250 million light years away. The scientists estimate the star was 150 times larger than our sun, and argue that it is similar to the massive stars that populated the universe shortly after its birth.
(07 May)

University Medal finalists shaped by a world of experiences
Drawing on their varied pasts and envisioning their myriad futures, this year's University Medal finalists — an aspiring doctor, a voracious reader, an successful immigrant, a health activist — tell their own stories of challenge and accomplishment.
(04 May)

Islamic scholars receive Carnegie grants
Anthropologists and Islamic scholars Saba Mahmood and Charles Hirschkind have been named Carnegie Scholars and will receive $100,000 each to research themes relating to Islam and the modern world.
(04 May)

For 90 minutes this week, Berkeley was Carter Center West
Before a packed Zellerbach Hall audience on Wednesday, former President Jimmy Carter urged the United States to reassume its role as "honest broker" in the Middle East, citing strong support among Israelis for a deal that would trade territory for a lasting peace.
(03 May)

Francis Moffitt, leading figure in photogrammetry, dies at 84
Francis H. Moffitt, UC Berkeley professor emeritus of civil and environmental engineering and a prominent name in the field of surveying and photogrammetry, has died at the age of 84. Moffitt died of complications from pneumonia on Saturday, April 21, at his home in Berkeley.
(03 May)

Faculty's NRC input is ready for grading
An update of the massive and influential report, "Research Doctoral Programs in the United States," is scheduled to be released by the National Research Council in December 2007.
(02 May)

Greenhouse-gas emissions: How low can we go?
Last week Chancellor Birgeneau announced that that the Berkeley campus has committed to reducing its greenhouse-gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2014 — six years earlier than the target set by California Assembly Bill 32, the Global Solutions Warming Act. The chancellor made the announcement at the campus's fourth annual Sustainability Summit to an enthusiastic audience that packed the Wells Fargo Room in the Haas School of Business.
(02 May)

Benefiting faculty into the future
Vice Provost Jan de Vries, who steps down June 30, set the bar for programs to support faculty.
(02 May)

Self-study affirms Cal's commitment to NCAA's principles
The National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA) has certified a comprehensive self-study of Intercollegiate Athletics at Berkeley, confirming that the athletic department is operating in full compliance with NCAA operating principles.
(02 May)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(02 May)

Generating pressures at the cores of giant planets
UC Berkeley, LLNL researchers have developed a technique that could generate pressures of more than a billion atmospheres, the equivalent of the pressure at the center of a supergiant planet.
(02 May)

Top graduating senior is "quintessential Berkeley"
Most days, Adrian Down can be found pushing a wheelbarrow around the UC Berkeley student organic garden. Resembling a tropical frog or vulgar tourist, he’s often garbed in orange T-shirt, blue plaid shorts and blue and pink sneakers. But goofy thrift store outfits belie Down’s wisdom and humility. His 3.9 GPA, intense scientific curiosity and altruism have landed him UC Berkeley’s highest honor for a graduating senior. As the winner of the 2007 University Medal, Down will speak at Commencement Convocation at the campus's Greek Theatre on May 9.
(02 May)

Relax – the siren wail you'll hear on Wednesday is just a test
Campus emergency sirens will sound at noon on Wednesday, May 2, as part of the regular monthly testing of UC Berkeley's comprehensive Alerting and Warning System. In addition to familiarizing the Berkeley community with campus emergency procedures, the test will allow students, staff and faculty to test out the new People Locator system.
(01 May)

Chemist elected to National Academy of Sciences
Graham Fleming, a UC Berkeley professor of chemistry and deputy director of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, is among 72 new members of the National Academy of Sciences announced May 1.
(01 May)

Engineer receives NSF grant to study MacArthur Maze freeway collapse
Abolhassan Astaneh, a UC Berkeley civil engineering professor, has received funding from the National Science Foundation to investigate the collapse of the MacArthur Maze freeway ramps after last Sunday's fiery tanker truck crash. He has formed a team to collect evidence from the site, including samples of the steel support beams and photographs of the collapsed roadways.
(01 May)

Academy of Arts & Sciences elects 7 Berkeley faculty
Seven UC Berkeley faculty members will join the likes of former Vice President Al Gore, Google Chairman Eric Schmidt and chef Alice Waters as new members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
(30 April)

Training taking place to spot depression
Spring green stickers are sprouting around the UC Berkeley as part of a campaign to help students who are depressed or suffering from other mental illnesses to locate faculty and staff members trained to help.
(30 April)

Jimmy Carter to speak on campus this Wednesday
Former President Jimmy Carter will discuss his hopes for Israeli-Palestinian peace and his new book, "Palestine Peace Not Apartheid," in a lecture at the University of California, Berkeley's Zellerbach Hall, 4:30 p.m. this Wednesday (May 2).
(30 April)

Popular professor and esteemed historian to deliver last lecture
Leon Litwack, a national expert on African American history and an extremely popular UC Berkeley history professor, will deliver his last classroom lecture on Monday, May 7. Litwack, 77, is retiring from the University of California, Berkeley at the end of this semester.
(30 April)

Everyone's got an opinion …
But not everyone — even in today's freewheeling media environment — can get people to listen. That's where academics with Berkeley-bred expertise enjoy an advantage.
(25 April)

Clover, Kay honored with 2007 Faculty Service Awards
Two Berkeley faculty members — Professors Carol Clover and Herma Hill Kay — have been selected as winners of the 2007 Berkeley Faculty Service Award (BFSA).
(25 April)

Leaving no Pop-Tart unscrutinized
A cohort of 26 Berkeley faculty members, students, and service-unit representatives, called the Campus Nutrition and Physical Activity Work Group, is working to make healthier food options more available on campus.
(25 April)

Journal focuses on 'transitional justice'
A new academic journal from Oxford Journals focuses on the growing field of transitional justice, defined by the publisher as "the study of strategies employed by states, civil society, and international institutions to deal with a legacy of human-rights abuses, and to effect social reconstruction in the wake of widespread violence."
(25 April)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(25 April)

Reduced steam for heat and hot water May 4-6
Physical Plant–Campus Services plans to shut down and repair a 10-inch steam line, one of two steam mains under Campanile Way that serve much of the campus, during the weekend of May 4-6. The work may result in reduced heat and hot water for buildings on the east side of campus during the repair period.
(24 April)

Distinguished Teaching awards announced
Three professors in the humanities and one in science have won UC Berkeley’s prestigious 2007 Distinguished Teaching Award. A ceremony honoring Andrew Garrett, associate professor of linguistics; Steven Goldsmith, associate professor of English; Eileen Lacey, associative professor of integrative biology and Kathleen McCarthy, associate professor of classics and comparative literature, will be held tomorrow (Wednesday, April 25) at 5 p.m. at the campus’s Zellerbach Playhouse.
(24 April)

Opting for advisory role, Academic Senate resolves to back EBI
At a special meeting called to resolve questions of "scholarly integrity" and transparency hovering over the campus's nascent Energy Biosciences Institute, Berkeley faculty on Thursday gave their tacit blessing to the administration's contract negotiations with corporate partner BP, subject to input on the agreement and its ongoing implementation by a faculty committee.
(19 April)

Jimmy Carter to speak at Zellerbach on May 2
Former President Jimmy Carter will speak on the UC Berkeley campus on Wednesday, May 2, at 4:30 p.m. in Zellerbach Hall on the subject of his latest book, "Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid."
(19 April)

Birdwatching goes hi-tech with online video camera game
Researchers from UC Berkeley and Texas A&M University have developed a new online game that will allow players to earn points by taking live photos using a remotely controllable robotic video camera and classifying the wild birds they see. The game, to be launched April 23, will be free and open to the public.
(19 April)

Dirty work for a clean creek
UC Berkeley students turned out in force for the campus's spring cleanup of Strawberry Creek.
(18 April)

Lura Dolas: Helping hearts 'shine hugely'
Theater lecturer shares stage skills with aspiring thespians — and those who 'perform' in other walks of life.
(18 April)

Beth Luke makes a graceful exit
For almost two decades, HR program director has done the right thing for campus staff.
(18 April)

The 'undisputed leader' among students of children
A pioneer in exploring the history of children, Paula Fass began to examine American culture as a child herself. Today, she leads Berkeley students in considering this population once overlooked by historians.
(18 April)

What does it mean to be present?
A cross-disciplinary performance uses dance and technology to explore this provocative question.
(18 April)

Dance takes center stage in 2007-08 Cal Performances season
Cal Performances Director Robert Cole has announced plans for the 2007-08 season, with dance featured prominently among the 72 programs that will comprise the organization's 102nd year of presenting performing-arts programs.
(18 April)

Awards
Recent faculty and staff awards.
(18 April)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(18 April)

MBA team Revolution Foods wins social venture competition
Serving healthy home-style school lunches in the San Francisco Bay Area earned Revolution Foods, based in Emeryville, Calif., the grand prize at the eighth annual Global Social Venture Competition held recently at the University of California, Berkley’s Haas School of Business.
(17 April)

Green Biofuels Index would aid consumers, market
Confusion reigns around biofuels such as ethanol, because some production methods can be worse for the environment than gasoline refining. A UC Berkeley group proposes a Green Biofuels Index to help consumers decide where to fill their tanks, and to spur a market for "green" biofuels.
(17 April)

Policy expert appointed to intl. biofuels panel
As biofuels take over more of the marketplace, nations around the world are struggling to deal with the environmental and societal effects of producing large quantities of plants for fuel. A UC Berkeley energy expert has been appointed to a new international roundtable to develop guidelines for assessing the impact of biofuels production.
(17 April)

'The promise of higher education at San Quentin'
UC Berkeley alumna Jody Lewen '02 is receiving the prestigious Peter E. Haas Public Service Award for her contributions as director of a college program at San Quentin State Prison. In a lecture on April 21, Cal Day, she'll speak on her work.
(16 April)

Energy Biosciences Institute timeline
Dates and details on the process leading to creation of the Energy Biosciences Institute.
( 12 April )

Energy Biosciences Institute Q&A
Answers to frequently asked questions about the partnership with BP to create the Energy Biosciences Institute
( 12 April )

EBI: Taking a closer look
In a package of articles, the Berkeleyan offers details on the Energy Biosciences Institute (EBI), including answers to often-asked questions, an overview of the social-science component of the research effort, a primer on intellectual- property issues, and an update on Academic Senate involvement
( 12 April )

Profs reap Chancellor's Awards for diversity-related contributions
Four faculty members were the guests of honor April 4 at a University House ceremony celebrating recipients of the 2007 Chancellor's Award for Advancing Institutional Excellence.
(12 April)

Cal Dining wins the Oscar of eateries
Chez Panisse, French Laundry, Spago, Charlie Trotters … and Cal Dining? That's right. Berkeley's campus dining service recently earned its place among these much-lauded establishments when it snagged (as the others have in the past) a prestigious Ivy Award.
(12 April)

Contemporary world cinema, right on Bancroft Way
Pacific Film Archive curator Susan Oxtoby shares her picks from the 2007 San Francisco International Film Festival.
(12 April)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(12 April)

What is EBI?
Information about the background and objectives of the Energy Biosciences Institute.
(12 April)

Shifting to a biofueled world
Much of the buzz over the Energy Biosciences Institute (EBI) has centered on the promise of new, cleaner fuels from renewable resources. Equally important will be research by EBI partners into the social, economic, and environmental impacts of the move toward biofuels.
(12 April)

An intellectual-property primer
Carol Mimura, of the campus's Office of Intellectual Property and Industry Research Alliances, helps explain the role of IP in transferring technology to benefit society.
(12 April)

Senate wrestles with industrial alliances
On April 19, the Berkeley Division of the Academic Senate will hold a special meeting to discuss competing views related to the industry-sponsored research contract to establish the Energy Biosciences Institute.
(12 April)

Cal Day to pulsate with extra energy
Blue and gold will equal green on Cal Day, Saturday, April 21, as UC Berkeley's annual open house spotlights research into green sustainable energy.
(11 April)

Chancellor announces program to assist needy students with financial aid
A new program initiated by University of California, Berkeley, Chancellor Robert Birgeneau will double the impact of personal gifts made by members of the campus community to UC Berkeley endowment funds that provide needy undergraduate and graduate students with financial aid.
(10 April)

Bees keep her busy as a, well, a bee
Public curiosity about bees kept UC Berkeley graduate student Alex Harmon-Threatt on her toes at an annual wildflower festival last weekend at the Sunol-Ohlone Regional Wilderness, south of Livermore, as kids and adults alike peered through her magnifying glass at a collection of native wild bee species on display.
(10 April)

UC Berkeley's 'Tree of Wisdom' featured in Vanity Fair
UC Berkeley's Nobel Prize winners and Chancellor Robert Birgeneau are featured as part of Vanity Fair magazine's "Green Issue," hitting national newsstands today.
(10 April)

Finalists face off with global social venture plans
Ten social venture finalists from around the world will compete for $45,000 in prizes and funds for business plans ranging from health and renewable energy to special childcare for families with disabled children at the eighth annual Global Social Venture Competition hosted by the University of California, Berkeley's Haas School of Business on Friday, April 13. The competition will culminate in a one-day symposium on Saturday, April 14, at UC Berkeley's Clark Kerr campus. Panel discussions will focus on measuring impact, social venture financing, developing regions, and social entrepreneurship as a competitive strategy – and how to get started.
(06 April)

Afghan ambassador to the U.S. to speak at UC Berkeley on April 17, student penny campaign begins
Afghanistan's ambassador to the United States, Said T. Jawad, will speak at the University of California, Berkeley, on Tuesday, April 17, about efforts to secure peace in his war-torn country. At a reception following his talk, Jawad and his wife, Shamin, will be presented with money collected by UC Berkeley students through a Roots of Peace penny campaign.
(06 April)

A week of service and learning at the border
Twenty-five UC Berkeley students spent an 'alternative' spring break on the San Diego-Tijuana border, learning about immigration and human-trafficking issues from law-enforcement officials and community organizers.
(05 April)

Scholars to receive William Sloane Coffin Awards for moral leadership
The first Berkeley William Sloane Coffin Jr. Awards recognizing moral leadership tied to the University of California, Berkeley, community will be bestowed on UC Berkeley scholars Robert N. Bellah and Nancy Scheper-Hughes in a ceremony on Monday, April 12.
(05 April)

Fall 2007 freshman admissions data released
More than 10,000 high school students have received the happy news that they may attend the University of California, Berkeley as freshmen next fall, an increase from last year of approximately 370 offers of admission, according to data released by campus admissions officials today (Thursday, April 5).
(05 April)

A match to spark student support
A new program initiated by Chancellor Birgeneau this week will match gifts and pledges, dollar for dollar, from active or emeriti faculty, staff, and students to Berkeley's endowment for need-based scholarships or fellowships.
(04 April)

Joshua Cohen to present Tanner Lectures
Joshua Cohen, a distinguished political philosopher, will present this year's Tanner Lectures on Human Values, a three-day event to be held April 10-12.
(04 April)

Obituary
Wilson Gifford Combs—who, two decades after being expelled from Berkeley for misbehavior during the Depression, went on to win the University Medal and to hold a faculty position in the architecture department — died March 15 at his home in Berkeley at age 92, following a stroke.
(04 April)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(04 April)

Richard Meier, emeritus professor and "super planner" dies at 86
Richard Louis Meier, an emeritus professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and an early thinker on the importance of sustainability in planning, died on Feb. 26 of pneumonia and congestive heart failure at Alta Bates Medical Center in Berkeley.
(04 April)

Institute of Industrial Relations gets new name
­The Institute of Industrial Relations at the University of California, Berkeley, has a new name: the Institute for Research on Labor and Employment (IRLE).
(04 April)

Massive star burps, then explodes
Two and a half years ago, a distant star burped - producing a bright flash called a supernova imposter - then two years later, exploded for real. With the help of two NASA satellites, astronomers have now determined that when the star initially hiccupped, it spewed a shell of gas that the supernova shock wave later rammed, producing copious X-rays.
(04 April)

Weighing the financial risks of nuclear power
Power companies are rushing to invest in new nuclear power plants, thanks to promised government subsidies, but a new study warns that unexpected costs often arise that may not make such plants a good financial investment.
(02 April)

"Stories in the Time of Cholera" wins top anthropology prize
Charles L. Briggs and Dr. Clara Mantini-Briggs of UC Berkeley, win top anthropology book prize for "Stories in the Time of Cholera"
(02 April)

Gill Tract fire is under investigation
A fire early Monday morning destroyed a building on UC Berkeley's Gill Tract, next to the University Village student-family housing complex in Albany. No one was injured in the blaze.
(02 April)

Nelson Polsby campus memorial on Thursday
A memorial service will be held at the University of California, Berkeley, this Thursday (April 5) to honor Nelson W. Polsby, one of the world's leading experts on American politics and the U.S. Congress. He died in February at age 72.
(02 April)

AIDS LifeCycle Cal team faces down misfortune
Cal junior Hailey Gilmore is in training for the San Francisco-to-L.A. AIDS LifeCycle this June. When she encountered a string of misfortunes, adjunct professor of education
(29 March)

Campus animal facilities earn gold star
Calling the University of California, Berkeley's animal care and use program "exemplary," the international organization that inspects and accredits facilities that use animals in research has given the campus another gold star.
(29 March)

Binary asteroid revealed as twin rubble piles
The asteroid Antiope is among the few known binary asteroids discovered in recent years, visible through even the Earth's largest telescopes as merely two bright blobs orbiting one another endlessly. By harnessing the power of larger telescopes and the eagerness of amateurs with smaller instruments, UC Berkeley and Paris Observatory astronomers have constructed a detailed picture of two rubble-piles in a perpetual pas de deux.
(29 March)

Botero's Abu Ghraib exhibit closes after 15,000 visitors view his images of torture and humiliation
The paintings and sketches by Colombian artist Fernando Botero of the abuses at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq may have been hard for many viewers to stomach but, nevertheless, nearly 15,000 visitors flocked to see them during their seven-week exhibit at UC Berkeley's Doe Library.
(27 March)

Changing the culture of the academy
In keynote address to UC conference on diversity and inclusion, Troy Duster casts a sociologist’s eye on the dynamics of challenging, and defending, the traditional curriculum
(26 March)

Chemists strike gold with gold catalysts
Few people look beyond gold's glitter and rarity, but chemists have found that its chemical properties are just as interesting, making it a unique catalyst for producing unusual organic molecules. A UC Berkeley leader in the area of gold catalysis attributes these properties to relativistic effects in the gold atom.
(22 March)

Goal of nanoscale optical imaging gets boost with new hyperlens
UC Berkeley scientists have created a hyperlens capable of projecting a magnified image of a pair of nanowires spaced 150 nanometers apart onto a plane up to a meter away. The development brings them a giant step closer to the goal of nanoscale optical imaging.
(22 March)

Students adore retiring historian
Standing ovations for UC Berkeley professor Leon Litwack have been reaching a fever pitch in the countdown to his retirement at the semester's end. But today's (Wed., March 21) applause was particularly poignant when it was announced that the 77-year-old iconoclastic social historian had won the student-conferred Golden Apple Award.
(21 March)

Center for Studies in Higher Education marks its half-century milestone
Established 50 years ago to look at higher-ed policy issues, it thrives today as an interdisciplinary center where 'the future is always arriving.'
(21 March)

'If we all develop our employees, we all benefit,' says HR's top manager
Looking at Berkeley's current job structure as well as its future needs, assistant vice chancellor of human resources Jeannine Raymond sees opportunities for employees to grow and advance.
(21 March)

Religion, cartoons, and the law
When a Danish newspaper published images of the Muslim prophet Muhammad, much of the world responded with outrage. But what is the appropriate legal response to religious outrage? Robert Post, this year's Una's Lecturer, argues for a distinction between hate speech and ordinary expression.
(21 March)

The responsibility to protect
A newly emerging international doctrine, the "responsibility to protect," was at the heart of a two-day human rights conference last week on the Berkeley campus.
(21 March)

Mark your calendars for Cal Day 2007
The Berkeley campus's popular spring open house takes place Saturday, April 21.
(21 March)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(21 March)

2007 public health heroes to be honored March 23
The person who helped wipe out smallpox, a diet educator, a health care administrator and a hospital servicing the Chinese community are being honored by the UC Berkeley School of Public Health. D.A. Henderson, Dean Ornish, David Kears and Chinese Hospital will receive Public Health Heroes Awards at a March 23 ceremony at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco.
(19 March)

Origins of the universe: Stephen Hawking's J. Robert Oppenheimer Lecture
The is the text of the J. Robert Oppenheimer Lecture in Physics, delivered March 13, 2007, by Stephen Hawking, the Lucasian professor of mathematics at Cambridge University. Hawking spoke at Zellerbach Hall on the campus of the University of California, Berkeley.
(16 March)

Report makes case against Delta urbanization
Urban development in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta poses a major threat to the Delta's health and sustainability, according to a report released today by the University of California, Berkeley-based Delta Initiative.
(15 March)

Fiat Lunch
Berkeley staff and faculty, we've long known, are a well-read bunch. Turns out they're well-fed, too.
(14 March)

Moving forward on equity and inclusion
As the search for a new vice chancellor progresses, diversity-related efforts on campus continue on multiple fronts.
(14 March)

A grand stage for our lives and times
American historian Michael Kammen, of Cornell University, will discuss the history of the National Mall — from the early plans sketched out in the late 1700s to its role as the site of major antiwar and civil-rights protests in recent decades — in a Jefferson Memorial Lecture set for Monday, March 18.
(14 March)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(14 March)

Famed paleoanthropologist Clark Howell has died
Paleoanthropologist F. Clark Howell, who turned the field of human origins into a scientific study by drawing in researchers from all fields, ranging from ecology and geology to ethnography, has died at 81.
(13 March)

John Thow, internationally acclaimed composer, dies at age 57
John Holland Thow, a University of California, Berkeley, professor of music and an internationally acclaimed composer, died on Sunday (March 4) at Alta Bates Medical Center in Berkeley. He was 57. Thow, who joined the UC Berkeley faculty in 1981, produced an extensive and diverse repertoire of solo, chamber, vocal, choral, operatic and orchestral music.
(12 March)

Faculty Nightstand: A buffet of books from writing guru Steve Tollefson
Not surprisingly, UC Berkeley writing and grammar guru Steve Tollefson has a tower of tomes sitting next to his bed at all times. Reluctant to pick just a current favorite, he's offered a veritable buffet of recommendations for Faculty Nightstand.
(12 March)

Researchers debunk conventional wisdom on trial witnesses
A new study authored in part by a University of California, Berkeley, professor of public policy and law throws cold water on a common theory that a confident witness who errs in trial testimony is still more credible than a less confident witness who similarly slips up.
(12 March)

Daylight Savings Time gotchas may get you
Got a hot meeting Monday morning? You may need to double-check your watch, your calendar, and your key ring, as a change in the time of the Daylight Savings Time causes unintended side effects across campus.
(09 March)

St. Patrick was ahead of his time, says Celtic Studies professor
It's commonly known that St. Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland, was a fifth century Christian missionary who led Ireland's conversion to Christianity but also, legend has it, drove the snakes from the Emerald Isle. And while the exact dates of his life have never been certain, commonly-accepted estimates are between A.D. 390-460 or 490. But a UC Berkeley professor's research on the matter is challenging those dates, placing Patrick's birth approximately 50 years earlier.
(08 March)

US experiment extending Daylight Saving Time unlikely energy saver, researchers say
As the United States readies to launch Daylight Savings Time this Sunday (March 11) -- three weeks earlier than previous years -- residents can count on more sunshine later in the day, but not on saving energy, advise two University of California, Berkeley, Ph.D. students.
(08 March)

Sharing genes a common affair, studies show
Bacteria are known to share genes among different species, but how common is it in other organisms, including mammals like us? Two new studies show that most bacteria have genes or large groups of genes shared by other bacteria, and even among higher organisms, gene sharing is the rule rather than the exception.
(08 March)

Human rights conference to tackle "R2P" resolution
A year after the U.N. Security Council unanimously adopted the "Responsibility to Protect" resolution, human rights groups are pressing world leaders to act on their declaration to stem genocide and other atrocities. At UC Berkeley next Tuesday, the campus's Human Rights Center will launch the West Coast's first conference to work on how to implement the ambitious principle known as "R2P."
(08 March)

Campus will grant paid maternity leave to women doctoral students
As one of only a handful of universities across the country to offer paid pregnancy leave for doctoral students, Berkeley is 'on the cutting edge' of family-friendly benefits.
(07 March)

Faculty and undergrads get on the same page
Superstar cosmologist Stephen Hawking's visit to campus — four years in the making — finally becomes a reality this Tuesday. If you haven't been caught up in the excitement, well, the explanation could have something to do with black holes.
(07 March)

Keeping Native tongues out of the pickling jar
For linguist Leanne Hinton, the path to becoming a champion of California's vanishing Indian languages began with a love of music, a suggestion from Alan Dundes, a summer field trip to Arizona's Havasu Canyon — and an unwavering belief in immersion.
(07 March)

A goodwill ambassador steps down
Pat Perkins, the longtime office manager and receptionist for Student Life Advising Services/ Educational Opportunity Program (SLAS/EOP), retired in October, but her impact on Berkeley has yet to diminish.
(07 March)

Nobel Prize medal stolen from Lawrence Hall of Science is found, student arrested
The Nobel Prize medal belonging to Ernest O. Lawrence that was stolen last week from the Lawrence Hall of Science has been recovered, and a UC Berkeley student has been arrested and booked on suspicion of felony grand theft, according to UC police.
(07 March)

Preventing the unthinkable
An international assembly of policymakers, legislators, philanthropists, religious leaders, scholars, and activists will discuss how state governments can be encouraged to stop genocide and other mass atrocities at "Stopping Mass Atrocities: An International Conference on the Responsibility to Protect," set for Tuesday and Wednesday, March 13 and 14.
(07 March)

School of Public Health to honor its 'heroes'
Three individuals and one organization will be honored on Friday, March 23, at the 11th annual Public Health Heroes Awards Ceremony in San Francisco. The award, founded by the School of Public Health (SPH), is presented to innovative leaders who have made meaningful contributions to the protection and promotion of health.
(07 March)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(07 March)

Cosmologist Stephen Hawking to draw crowds
It's a rare day that a physics lecture at UC Berkeley fills 2,000 seats, with an overflow crowd of several hundred people eager to watch a live video simulcast on a big screen. But that day will arrive next Tuesday on campus when cosmology superstar Stephen Hawking delivers the annual J. Robert Oppenheimer Lecture in Physics.
(06 March)

Galaxy survey focuses on "pre-teen" years
A massive project to generate an all-color map of the galaxies in a small area of sky is yielding new information about the universe's "pre-teen" years and the early evolution of galaxies and galaxy clusters.
(06 March)

Use of ADHD medication soars worldwide
The use of psycho-stimulant drugs to treat attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder has more than tripled worldwide since 1993, challenging widespread assumptions that this neuro-developmental disorder is concentrated in the United States, according to new research from UC Berkeley.
(06 March)

E.O. Lawrence's Nobel medal goes missing from LHS
The Nobel medal belonging to the late Ernest O. Lawrence, winner of the 1939 Nobel Prize is Physics, is missing from its display case at the Lawrence Hall of Science, according to campus police. LHS is offering a $2,500 reward for its safe return.
(05 March)

Martin Trow, leading scholar in higher education studies, dies at 80
Martin Trow, UC Berkeley professor emeritus of public policy and an internationally recognized leader in higher education studies, died at age 80 on Feb. 24 of an inoperable brain tumor. Trow is credited with being the first scholar to describe the transition in higher education from elite to mass to universal student access.
(02 March)

Michael Pollan, Whole Foods' John Mackey usher Berkeley foodies into 'ecological era'
A sellout crowd turned out on a rainy, blustery evening for a conversation between a reporter and a grocer — Berkeley professor and food detective Michael Pollan, and Whole Foods CEO John Mackey, who discussed the history of agriculture and the future of organic food.
(28 February)

In the event of an actual disaster…
… a new virtual bulletin board will help the campus take roll and let community members send messages to co-workers, friends, and loved ones.
(28 February)

Feinstein's pitch for cap-and-trade legislation
U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) made a rare visit to the Berkeley campus Friday, Feb. 23, to promote what she called "a practical, achievable, and sustainable regimen" to combat global climate change, beginning with a package of five bills she has either introduced in the Senate or plans to offer in the near future.
(28 February)

It's Bob Reich's story, and he's sticking to it
The Berkeley professor, former Cabinet member, and sometime playwright outlined 'four narratives of American public life' in last week's Townsend Center appearance.
(28 February)

What's the frequency, Bill?
Journalism-school professor William Drummond tunes in to satellite radio, and likes what he hears.
(28 February)

Mathematician Vaughan Jones to discuss 'a new kind of algebra' in next Faculty Research Lecture
In the second 2007 Faculty Research Lecture — titled "Flatland, a Great Place to Do Algebra" — Berkeley mathematician Vaughan Jones will discuss a new kind of algebra based on two-dimensional configurations, hoping to "communicate its flavor and give some idea of where it should be useful."
(28 February)

First Terner Prize for affordable housing awarded
The inaugural I. Donald Terner Prize for Innovation and Leadership in Affordable Housing — named for the late Berkeley professor and founder of Bridge Housing in San Francisco — has been awarded to Central City Concern for a building that provides 180 units of housing for nearly 700 formerly homeless residents in the historic Pearl District of Portland, Ore.
(28 February)

Heart-starting news from UCPD
Campus police are now armed with a new weapon aimed at maintaining the health and safety of faculty, staff, and students: the portable defibrillator kit.
(28 February)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(28 February)

Smoking increases risk of TB infection, new study finds
People who smoke have a greater risk of becoming infected with tuberculosis (TB) and of having that infection turn into active TB disease, according to a new meta-analysis of 24 studies by UC Berkeley researchers. Overall, a smoker has about a 2.5 times greater risk of contracting active TB than does a non-smoker in the same population.
(26 February)

MBA students focus on education finances
MBA students at the University of California, Berkeley's Haas School of Business will host the Education Leadership Case Competition, the first of its kind at a business school in the United States, on Thursday and Friday, March 1-2. The competition will focus on a new financial plan for the Oakland Unified School District, which has been in state receivership since 2003 due to financial troubles.
(26 February)

Looking for life on Jupiter's moon Europa
If life exists on other planets, it almost certainly will be found where there's water. While many scientists pin their hopes on Mars, paleobiologist Jere Lipps yearns to probe Jupiter's moon Europa, because its jumbled ice cover reminds him of the Antarctic ice sheets that are home to abundant life on Earth.
(22 February)

Faculty Research Lecturer Martin Jay to speak Feb. 28
When, if ever, is it defensible to lie in the political arena? In the first of two 2007 Faculty Research Lectures, historian Martin Jay will canvass the arguments that have been made since Plato's defense of the "noble lie," and provide a fresh way to consider the functions of mendacity.
(21 February)

National Academy of Engineering elects three Berkeley faculty
Three members of the Berkeley faculty have been elected to the National Academy of Engineering (NAE), one of the highest professional distinctions for an American engineer.
(21 February)

Awards
Recent faculty and staff awards.
(21 February)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(21 February)

Faculty Nightstand: Louise Fortmann recommends some 'elementary' reading
UC Berkeley professor of natural resource sociology Louise Fortmann discusses a novel by Nobel Laureate Orhan Pamuk and a nonfiction account by Indian activists.
(21 February)

UC Berkeley expert, campus officials refute protesters' latest charges
In response to claims made to the media Feb. 20 by protesters camped at the grove outside California Memorial Stadium and by their attorney stating that the grove could be the site of a Native American burial ground, Kent Lightfoot, curator of North American archaeology at the Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology, and campus officials issued statements challenging the protesters' charges.
(20 February)

Journalism school team wins Polk Award for climate change stories
A University of California, Berkeley, team of reporters from the Graduate School of Journalism has earned a George Polk Award for their 2006 series of reports on the early signs of global warming from spots around the world, including Mt. Kilimanjaro, the Andes, Bangladesh and the world's so-called polar bear capitol in Hudson Bay, Canada.
(20 February)

Robotic cameras search for ivory-billed woodpecker, "Holy Grail of birdwatching"
A robotic video system developed by researchers at UC Berkeley and Texas A&M University has been installed in the Arkansas bayous, waiting to capture video of the ivory-billed woodpecker, an elusive bird once thought to be extinct. If the researchers obtain conclusive photographic evidence of the woodpecker, it will settle a debate that has become heated in recent years and fascinated millions of people around the world.
(20 February)

Successful launch of UC Berkeley’s THEMIS satellites positions NASA mission to answer key questions about Earth’s auroras
After a picture-perfect launch into clear, blue skies on Saturday, Feb. 17, the five THEMIS probes appear to be healthy and in their expected orbits. THEMIS is NASA's first five-satellite mission and the first to investigate a key mystery surrounding the auroras, or Northern and Southern lights: When, where and how are they triggered?
(18 February)

Despite delay, prospects good for Friday's launch of THEMIS
A storm front that moved off the Gulf of Mexico through northern Florida on Tuesday, forcing a 24-hour delay in the scheduled launch of five UC Berkeley-built THEMIS satellites, was a mild inconvenience for many space scientists. But it proved a boon for their families, who spent Thursday further exploring the John F. Kennedy Space Center or splashing in the hotel pool in sunny, 70-degree weather.
(16 February)

Battling today's crime problems, discussed at AAAS this morning by UCB law professor
A UC Berkeley law professor will discuss his new research on the nation's 1990s crime decline, the longest and deepest drop in crime since World War II, during a presentation in San Francisco, Friday, Feb. 16, at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Professor Franklin Zimring, of UC Berkeley School of Law (Boalt Hall), contends that the decline provides important, instructive lessons for policy makers and law enforcement officials grappling with today's toughest violent crime problems.
(16 February)

Researchers convert heat to electricity using organic molecules, could lead to new energy source
UC Berkeley researchers have successfully generated electricity from heat by trapping organic molecules between metal nanoparticles, an achievement that could pave the way toward the development of a new source for energy.
(15 February)

Three faculty elected to National Academy of Engineering
Three UC Berkeley faculty members have been elected to the National Academy of Engineering (NAE), one of the highest professional distinctions for an American engineer. This brings to 85 the total number of UC Berkeley faculty members in the society.
(14 February)

Free-science movement gains a foothold at Berkeley
Berkeley biologist Michael Eisen, who co-founded the Public Library of Science in 2000 with the aim of making all scientific research findings freely available online, thinks it's "fantastic" that the $10 billion scholarly-publishing industry seems to be fighting back. "It's just evidence that open access is working," he says.
(14 February)

A plant-based diet for small-planet diplomats
In their own own species of botanical détente, U.S. and Iranian plant experts have been exploring the rich flora of Iran, and building professional connections, for close to a decade via the American-Iranian Botanical Program.
(14 February)

Thomas G. Rosenmeyer, professor of Greek and comparative literature dies
Thomas G. Rosenmeyer, a professor emeritus of Greek and of comparative literature at the University of California, Berkeley, died at his home in Oakland on Feb. 6. He was 86.
(14 February)

The real cost of a café latte
Black Gold, a 2006 documentary showing on campus next Friday as part of the Human Rights Watch International Film Festival, exposes the bitter grounds at the bottom of your cup.
(14 February)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(14 February)

Engineers create new mirror for high-performance optics
Engineers at UC Berkeley have created a new high-performance mirror that packs the same 99.9 percent reflective punch as current high-grade mirrors, but in a package that is 20 times thinner and easier to manufacture. The new mirror could dramatically improve the design and efficiency next generation laser optics for such devices as high-definition DVD players, computer circuits and laser printers.
(13 February)

New medical technique punches holes in cells, could treat tumors
A large animal study has shown that certain microsecond electrical pulses can punch nanoscale holes in the membranes of target cells without harming collagen fibers and other vascular tissue structures. The new medical technique, called irreversible electroporation (IRE) and developed at UC Berkeley, is a potential breakthrough in minimally invasive surgical treatments of tumors.
(12 February)

Collegiate Licensing Co. to manage Cal brand
The campus has reached agreement with the Collegiate Licensing Co. to manage UC Berkeley's trademark licensing program. UC Berkeley had been one of the few universities in the country to independently manage its own trademark licensing program.
(09 February)

Berkeley, LBNL, Illinois join forces with BP
The stars came out to celebrate what campus, LBNL, and government officials call the beginning of a beautiful relationship with the University of Illinois and energy giant BP -- in the form of a 10-year, $500 million strategic partnership to develop new, carbon-neutral biofuel technologies at Berkeley. "We are not waiting for a clean energy revolution," declared Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. "We are the leaders in that revolution."
(08 February)

Conference on Feb. 16-17 to explore "What's Left of Life?"
A group of scholars, artists, social scientists, biologists and public intellectuals will gather at the University of California, Berkeley, Feb. 16-17 to explore connections between their own work and a world beset on one hand by ongoing wars, genocides, and epidemics and on the other by life-extending technologies, the promises of stem cell research and potent new pharmaceuticals.
(08 February)

Nelson Polsby, leading expert in American politics, dies at age 72
Nelson W. Polsby, one of the world's leading experts on American politics and the U.S. Congress, died Tuesday (Feb. 6) at his home in Berkeley. He was 72. His death was caused by complications associated with heart disease.
(08 February)

'. . . fatiguing and inspiring all at the same time . . .'
Work on the BP proposal was fueled by Berkeley's scientific and technical expertise, a large number of take-out sandwiches, and just enough printer toner.
(08 February)

Birgeneau: 'This is going to be a phenomenal place…'
The day following the announcement of BP funding for the Energy Biosciences Institute (EBI) — led by Berkeley and with Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign as partners — Chancellor Birgeneau sat down with Public Affairs for a discussion about the implications of this research for Berkeley.
(08 February)

Poetry's 'inherited and inexhaustible mystery'
In his appearance at last week's inaugural event of the Townsend Center's "Forum on the Humanities and the Public World" series, former U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky made a persuasive case for the necessity of poetry in American life.
(08 February)

Chancellor's Community Partnership Fund gears up for a second year of grantmaking
The Chancellor's Community Partnership Fund is inviting local community groups to apply for its second annual grants program. Berkeley-based nonprofit organizations and neighborhood groups that propose projects linking the campus with the community to improve the quality of life for Berkeley residents are eligible to apply for funding.
(08 February)

Campus public-service programs live (virtually) under one roof
A wealth of information about the campus's public-service programs is now collected in one place, a development that staff involved in such efforts likely will find of interest.
(08 February)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(08 February)

Nelson Polsby, distinguished scholar of American politics, dies at 72
Nelson Polsby, a national authority on Congress and the presidency who inspired generations of students and colleagues at UC Berkeley and charmed them with his wit, died Tuesday (Feb. 6) at his home in Berkeley. He was 72.
(07 February)

Journalism student wins Lange award
Color photos of farm workers in the fields, orchards and labor camps of California’s Central Valley have won Jeremy Rue, a student at the University of California, Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism, the 2007 Dorothea Lange Fellowship.
(07 February)

Chemist Paul Alivisatos named Lawrence Award winner
Paul Alivisatos, a chemist and materials scientist, has been named one of eight winners of this year's E. O. Lawrence Award of the U.S. Dept. of Energy. Alivisatos is one of the pioneers of nanotechnology, working with nanocrystals, nanorods and aggregates of nanorods that have promise as inexpensive and flexible solar panels.
(07 February)

Male sweat boosts women's hormone levels
Male sweat, and one particular chemical in male sweat, is known to influence women's moods, and even increase their sexual arousal. Now, a study by Claire Wyart at UC Berkeley shows that the chemical androstadienone in male sweat also boosts levels of the hormone cortisol in women who sniff it. These findings suggest that andrastadienone may be a human pheromone, causing both behavioral and hormonal changes in women.
(06 February)

Biologists shed light on health of marbled murrelet population in early 1900s
UC Berkeley biologists studied marbled murrelets specimens collected around the early 1900s, and reconstructed the seabird's reproduction and survival rate before its dramatic decline. Their work provides for the first time a baseline measure of health by which contemporary populations can be compared.
(05 February)

Glossary of alternative-fuel terms
From biofuel to synthetic biology (plus a deeper look at cellulosic biomass), this glossary defines the terms that are important to understanding the issue of alternative fuels.
(01 February)

Energy Biosciences Institute proposal summary
A summary of the plan submitted to BP for creation of the Energy Biosciences Institute lays out the qualifications of the partners and their vision for the institute.
(01 February)

BP awards $500 million for clean energy research
Global energy firm BP announced Feb. 1 that it has selected UC Berkeley, in partnership with Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, to lead an unprecedented $500 million research effort to develop new sources of energy and reduce the impact of energy consumption on the environment. The funding will create the Energy Biosciences Institute, which initially will focus its research on biotechnology to produce biofuels.
(01 February)

'Our generation's moon shot': Launching the Energy Biosciences Institute
Excitement and purpose were palpable as the governors of California and Illinois and other speakers addressed a packed press conference announcing the formation of the Energy Biosciences Institute. The launch of the new industry-university partnership, to develop and deliver clean, renewable sources of energy, made today (Thursday, Feb. 1) not only "a good day for the University of California, but a really good day for California — and a tremendous day for Mother Earth," said UC President Robert Dynes.
(01 February)

Tribe of ancients
From prehistoric predators to modern poachers, the UC Botanical Garden's cycad species have seen it all.
(01 February)

Point of view: How concerned are you about climate change?
As climate change and energy policy move to center stage, the NewsCenter asks students whether global warming is a major worry for them.
(31 January)

Obituary
New York publisher Rodney Friedman — who conceived of the idea of the UC Berkeley Wellness Letter and partnered with the School of Public Health for 25 years to produce it — died on New Year's Day at his home in Redding, Conn.
(31 January)

Obituary
Kaye Bock, a student-affairs officer in the Department of City and Regional Planning (DCRP) for more than 20 years, died in her sleep from unknown causes on Jan. 16 at her home in Richmond. She was 62.
(31 January)

Obituary
Ronald Murillo, an office-services assistant in the Office of the Registrar, died of a stroke in December, at the age of 55.
(31 January)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(31 January)

Court ruling is "a temporary setback," but planning continues for new student-athlete center
UC Berkeley officials called a judge's decision Monday to block immediate construction of a new student-athlete training facility "a temporary setback" in the university's plans for the southeast corner of campus. They said, however, that planning for the new facility will continue to move forward.
(29 January)

Coming attractions for Spring 2007: From human rights to the human condition
Just as the Middle East dominates the news, the region's culture, history and religion are the focus of a significant part of UC Berkeley's slate of events this semester. The campus also can expect a rich array of lectures and discussions exploring the basics of being human — how we think, what we eat, and where we live — while an inviting feast of arts and music celebrates human creativity and inspiration.
(29 January)

Applications being sought for Chancellor's Community Partnership Fund grants
Local community groups are being invited to apply for the Chancellor's Community Partnership Fund grants program. Applicants must propose projects that link UC Berkeley and community to improve the Berkeley residents' quality of life.
(26 January)

San Francisco firm will guide People's Park community planning process
The San Francisco firm MKThink has been chosen by UC Berkeley to guide a community planning process for People’s Park. The firm will analyze how the park is used by the community and campus and make recommendations to the university.
(26 January)

Faculty Nightstand: Professors Scott Saul, Julia Hastings, and David Presti tell what they're reading at home
Inspired by UC Berkeley's popular Summer Reading List for freshmen, the NewsCenter has invited a rotating cast of faculty members to share what they're reading — and why.
(26 January)

Nobel laureate Kahneman to deliver Hitchcock Lectures
Eminent psychologist and behavioral economist Daniel Kahneman will deliver the Hitchcock Lectures for spring 2007. His lectures will address the topic "Explorations of the Mind."
(26 January)

Regents approve two permanent staff advisers
The UC Regents voted last week to permanently add two UC employees as advisers to the board. The action comes amidst completion of a two-year pilot program designed to strengthen inclusion of employees' views in board decisions.
(26 January)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(25 January)

Psych department's RSVP program invites scientists and subjects to join in demographically diverse exploration
The Research Subject Volunteer Program, or RSVP, a sort of online matchmaking service for scientists and subjects, has allowed psychology department researchers to open up their experiments to a far broader — and more demographically representative — population.
(25 January)

From Calcutta to Barrows Hall
Drawn to the academic life, sisters Isha and Raka Ray traveled halfway 'round the world — each going her own separate way — to end up working under one roof as assistant professors at Berkeley.
(25 January)

Making the case for the humanities
Anthony Cascardi, the Townsend Center's new director, thinks it's time for humanists to move from the wings of academia to center stage — and he's doing something about it
(25 January)

New apparent patterns in campus crime 'alter perception of safety'
A disturbing new kind of campus-area street crime appears to be emerging this year — one more frequent, more bold, and more dangerous than before, involving more suspects (often groups of teenagers or young adults), according to campus police. Even as it deploys more officers and closes more cases, UCPD urges caution and awareness as a first defense.
(25 January)

Atkins Foundation pledges $10 million to Center for Weight and Health
The Dr. Robert C. and Veronica Atkins Foundation has pledged $10 million to UC Berkeley's Center for Weight and Health to support nutrition research and obesity prevention programs. The announcement was made Wednesday, Jan. 24, at the 2007 California Childhood Obesity Conference in Anaheim.
(25 January)

Botero exhibit joined by talk with artist, panels on violence, art, human rights
UC Berkeley's exhibit of Colombian artist Fernando Botero's depictions of Abu Ghraib prison abuses is stimulating a series of public conversations on campus on related issues such as art and violence, torture, human rights and terrorism. The Botero exhibit, sponsored by UC Berkeley's Center for Latin American Studies with the support of UC Berkeley's School of Law (Boalt Hall) and the University Library, opens at 6 p.m. Monday, Jan. 29, in Room 190 of Doe Library and closes March 23. It and all related programs are free and open to the public. Funds for the events have been privately raised.
(24 January)

Chemical engineer Donald Hanson dies at 88
Donald N. Hanson, professor emeritus of chemical engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, and an inspiring teacher and mentor, died on Jan. 11 in Orinda, Calif., following a year of illness and hospice care. He was 88.
(24 January)

Judge hears challenge to EIR and Student-Athlete Center; ruling to be issued by Monday
An Alameda County Superior Court judge said Tuesday that she will issue a ruling by next Monday on a request for a preliminary injunction to halt construction of the Student-Athlete High Performance Center, a key element in UC Berkeley's plans to enhance the safety of those who currently work and train in California Memorial Stadium.
(23 January)

"There is no time": Six Nobel Laureates say averting world's climate crisis requires immediate research, conservation, and regulation
The six Nobel Laureates who participated in the sold-out "Energy Self-Sufficiency in the 21st Century" colloquium took the global climate crisis as the starting point for a freewheeling discussion about the urgent need to make conservation a national way of life, get the U.S. public to accept nuclear reactors, and persuade the U.S. government to serve as a world leader in developing clean, renewable energy sources.
(22 January)

Hearst Museum to open "Land of the Rajas" exhibit
"From the Land of the Rajas: Creativity in Rajasthan," a new exhibition that opens Feb. 2 at the Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley, explores a northwestern Indian state famed for its princely rulers’ enthusiasm for a wide range of colorful and distinctive art styles.
(22 January)

Robert Pinsky launches new humanities forum
In the first program of a new "Humanities and the Public World" forum being launched Feb. 1 by UC Berkeley's Doreen B. Townsend Center for the Humanities, Robert Pinsky, a U.S. poet laureate and public ambassador for poetry, will talk about the national Favorite Poem Project he initiated.
(22 January)

Conference to prevent childhood obesity kicks off this week
More than 1,700 researchers, educators, public health professionals and others dedicated to solving the nation's obesity crisis are meeting in Anaheim for the 2007 California Childhood Obesity Conference. The four-day conference, which begins Tuesday, Jan. 23, is considered the largest meeting on childhood obesity in the United States. It is being organized by UC Berkeley's Center for Weight and Health, the California Department of Health Services, the California Department of Education and the California Endowment.
(22 January)

Stephen Smale awarded Wolf Prize in mathematics
Stephen Smale, a Fields Medalist and a major contributor to many fields of mathematics, has received the prestigious Wolf Foundation Prize in Mathematics. Smale proved, among other things, that a sphere can be turned inside out without breaking it, or even leaving a crease.
(19 January)

Pssst … Cal students! Wanna buy a cheap ticket to the ballet? How about the circus?
Imagine seeing the legendary Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater defy gravity for the same price as Ben Stiller defying history in "A Night of the Museum." You could — if you're a UC Berkeley student willing to be both spontaneous and flexible about getting your entertainment fix. To entice more students to venture through the doors of Zellerbach Hall, Cal Performances has been quietly selling last-minute, $10 "rush" tickets to many shows an hour before the curtain goes up.
(19 January)

Rotting leaf litter study could lead to more accurate climate models
Bags of decomposing leaf litter have allowed a research team led by scientists at UC Berkeley and Colorado State University to produce an elegantly simple set of equations to calculate the nitrogen released into the soil during decomposition, which in turn could significantly improve the accuracy of global climate change models.
(18 January)

The NRC's 10-year report card
The NRC is now crafting the third version of its influential report, "Research-Doctoral Programs in the United States," and Berkeley is mounting a major effort to put its best foot forward while conforming to the rigorous and complex rules guiding the process.
(17 January)

A single window onto all that happens at Berkeley
With the launch of a new campuswide online calendar, staying on top of campus events is about to get a whole lot easier.
(17 January)

Labor programs to link to noted labor leader, the late Miguel Contreras
The University of California, Berkeley’s Institute of Industrial Relations and Center for Labor Research and Education – along with their counterpart programs based at UCLA – will become affiliated with an umbrella virtual organization named for prominent state labor leader Miguel Contreras.
(17 January)

California Newspaper Project — read all about it!
The California Newspaper Project is a long-running effort to track down, catalogue, and in many cases preserve and make readily accessible thousands of California papers that have rolled off the presses since the state's beginnings.
(17 January)

What are they building over there?
Construction seems as much a part of the landscape here at Berkeley as Oski or the Campanile. To explain the hieroglyphics on Barrows Hall and unravel other mysteries of the local landscape, we've compiled information on current campus construction and landscaping projects.
(17 January)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(17 January)

Nobel laureates, chancellor to discuss energy self-sufficiency
Six Nobel laureates will gather at the University of California, Berkeley, with Chancellor Robert Birgeneau this Saturday (Jan. 20) to discuss energy self-sufficiency in the 21st century.
(17 January)

NASA to launch THEMIS probes Feb. 15
Substorms in the Earth's magnetosphere turn the shimmering Northern and Southern lights into a dancing light show. A new NASA mission called THEMIS, designed and built by UC Berkeley scientists and scheduled for a Feb. 15 launch from Cape Canaveral, will field five probes that will lurk in Earth's shadow to determine where and how these substorms are triggered.
(17 January)

Stigma of mental illness explored
As Congress considers legislation that would require the same health coverage for mental illness as for physical ailments, UC Berkeley psychologist Stephen Hinshaw publishes a book that explores the enduring stigma of disorders ranging from depression and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder to schizophrenia and autism.
(16 January)

NASA funds instrument to probe life on Mars
A joint UC San Diego/UC Berkeley experiment to detect life on Mars that is scheduled to fly aboard the European ExoMars rover mission in 2013 will receive $750,000 in development funding from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), according to a NASA announcement this week.
(11 January)

Campus leads state study of low-carbon alternatives
UC Berkeley will play a key role in California's strategy to combat global warming, with scientists here and at UC Davis researching ways to lower vehicle emissions in order to reduce the state's carbon footprint.
(10 January)

Before buying a car, be sure to cruise the Web
Shopping for a new car can drive even the most relaxed consumer over the edge. But new research by a Haas School of Business marketing professor shows that the Internet can help with this often-trying experience by boosting a buyer's negotiating power.
(10 January)

News Briefs
Shorter items of interest to the campus community.
(10 January)

Physics teaching award to astronomer Alex Filippenko
Astronomer Alex Filippenko, who late last year was named national Professor of the Year, has received an equally prestigious teaching award, the Richtmyer Award, from the American Association of Physics Teachers. After presentation of the award Jan. 9 at the association's annual meeting in Seattle, he delivered a talk on how supernovae have led to the mysterious concept of dark energy.
(09 January)

Noted civil engineer dies at age 87
Ben C. Gerwick Jr., a civil engineer and University of California, Berkeley, professor emeritus known for his pioneering contributions to deep foundation construction and for making heavy construction engineering a part of scholarly research, died at age 87 on Dec. 25.
(09 January)

Geographer, social scientist Allan Pred dies at 70
Allan Pred, one of the world’s leading geographers and social scientists who retired last year from UC Berkeley, has died at the age of 70. His scholarship radically shaped today's understanding of city development, landscape, modernity and race.
(09 January)

Hip-hop scholars push for recognition
UC Berkeley students are increasingly tapping into hip-hop culture for their research and field work. But when it comes to finding faculty members to review and assess their research, hip-hop scholars – undergraduate and graduate students alike – say they face a generational divide. To break down this barrier, one doctoral student in sociology has formed the Hip-Hop Studies Working Group.
(09 January)

Rethinking last century's closest, brightest supernova
February will be the 20th anniversary of the nearest and brightest supernova humans have seen in 400 years. Called SN1987A, it burned for weeks in the Large Magellanic Cloud, and provided astronomers with new information that forced them to rethink theories of how massive stars explode. Now a UC Berkeley astronomer says that theory needs rethinking again.
(09 January)

Dust around nearby star like powder snow
A nearby star a mere 12 million years old is surrounded by a dusty disk reminiscent of the disk from which the Earth and other planets formed around our sun more than 4.5 billion years ago. Peering into this dusty disk, UC Berkeley astronomers have found that the dust is as fluffy as powder snow.
(08 January)

I-School Dean AnnaLee Saxenian assists with immigrant entrepreneurs study
More than a quarter of the engineering and technology companies established in the United States in the past decade were founded by immigrant entrepreneurs, according to a new report co-authored by AnnaLee Saxenian, dean of Berkeley's School of Information.
(04 January)

Richard Newton, engineering dean and technology visionary, dies at 55
A. Richard Newton, UC Berkeley professor and dean of the College of Engineering, a pioneer in integrated circuit design and electronic systems architecture, and a visionary leader in the technology industry, died Tuesday, Jan. 2, at the UC San Francisco Medical Center, less than two months after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. He was 55.
(04 January)

Campus to receive papers of the late Congressman Matsui
The late U.S. Congressman Robert T. Matsui's papers, including documentation of legislative efforts surrounding the North American Free Trade Agreement, welfare reform, base closures and Japanese-American reparations, will be donated to the campus's Bancroft Library, UC Berkeley officials announced today (Tuesday, Jan. 2). In conjunction with this gift, the campus is launching an effort to establish the Robert T. Matsui Center on Politics and Public Service at the Institute of Governmental Studies.
(02 January)

Peptide targets latent papilloma virus infections
Infection with the human papilloma virus, the major cause of cervical cancer, is forever -- the virus remains latent in skin cells, ready to flare up at any time to create warts on the skin or the genitals. A new finding, however, offers hope that a drug could halt spread of the virus into new cells, and perhaps even eliminate the virus from the body.
(02 January)

Archive stories by year: 2009 | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001

 

[an error occurred while processing this directive]