How fall vaccines keep pace with evolving viruses
UBC medicine researchers share how new vaccines are handled to ensure they are safe and effective against evolving strains of influenza and SARS-CoV-2.
First-year students make the best of a Zoom-filled year
Chatting with first-year students in the College of Arts & Sciences would normally be done over coffee at the Temple of Zeus, with stories, smiles and even some tears...
Ten University of Canterbury research projects gain MBIE funding
Ten University of Canterbury research projects tackling the big issues have been green-lit with funding worth $23 million.
Researchers extol skills of ancient Egyptian medics
Cleopatra would have been in safe hands if she really had been bitten by a snake, or a affected by any number of illnesses - say University of Manchester Egyptologists in a new book.
William Bolcom named winner of 2021 Michael Ludwig Nemmers Prize in Music Composition
American composer William Bolcom, National Medal of Arts recipient, Pulitzer Prize and Grammy Award-winner, has been awarded the $100,000 Michael Ludwig Nemmers...
Two Stevens Faculty Receive Prominent ONR YIP Award
Mechanical Engineering Assistant Professors Nick Parziale and Brendan Englot receive prestigious young investigator honors
Top researcher and British COVID-19 key expert joins UCPH from Imperial College
The English researcher and disease-modeling expert Dr. Samir Bhatt will soon join University of Copenhagen. From his position at Imperial College London
Children’s screen time surged during pandemic: study
Children have been spending almost triple the recommended amount of screen time during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a new Western-led study.
Rights Lab review calls for robust modern slavery prevalence estimates in the UK
A new scoping review by the Rights Lab at the University of Nottingham has highlighted the urgent need for scientifically rigorous and regularly updated estimates of modern slavery prevalence in the UK.
ECE teachers essential workers in all but name
Returning to work amidst the outbreak of the Delta variant, early childhood teachers must be recognised as essential workers - and remunerated as such, writes Dr Sue Cherrington.














































