University of Florida

UF Drug Development Researchers Are Forging New Trails to Cancer Treatments

UFlorida Drug

David Ostrov fancies himself a molecular mountaineer of sorts. It’s an apt description for a scientist who is just as comfortable scaling the world’s tallest peaks as he is staring down some of the most challenging questions in science.

Texas A&M University

University of Dayton

  • Nostalgia of Hope

    Amish tourism is rooted in nostalgia for a slower, simpler time, says a University of Dayton researcher in a new book.

The University of Scranton

Chapman University

  • What Makes Us Chapman

    Our mission is to provide personalized education of distinction that leads to inquiring, ethical and productive lives as global citizens.

University of South Florida

  • Mailer Review Focuses on Author's Wife

    An intimate and intriguing portrait emerges of Norman Mailer’s wife, Norris Church Mailer, in writings found in the latest issue of The Mailer Review. Edited by University of South Florida English Professor Phillip Sipiora with Guest Editor John Buffalo Mailer and Deputy Editor Michael L. Shuman, the journal’s fifth edition is dedicated to Norris Mailer.

The University of Warwick

  • What Makes a Good Leader?

    Would you rather have a distant, aggressive leader, or a caring, hands-on leader? Would it depend on the results they got? And can only certain styles of leadership achieve good results? Professor André Spicer, WBS, has been researching varying methods of leadership.

Audencia Nantes

Amity University

  • Faculty and Research at Amity

    A faculty credited with filing 150 patents in just a year, apart from 150 books, 1000 researcher papers and 250 ongoing research projects.

University of Phoenix

Bryant University

1994 group

  • Environmental Essex

    One of Essex’s core values is its commitment to the environment and sustainability and 2007-08 has been a year of rapid development in this area.

University of Florida

  • Professors Lead Research Initiatives

    As a high school student in his native Mexico, one of Jacobo Konigsberg’s favorite classes was philosophy. He loved the age-old mysteries surrounding the nature of matter, time and space at the heart of cosmology and metaphysics. David Reitze had a different obsession: astronomy. From his parents’ home in Florida’s Pompano Beach, he scoured the heavens with a series of ever-more-sophisticated homemade telescopes. His largest and best measured four feet in length, with a headlight-sized mirror and the zany appearance of a ray gun.