|
Highlights:
This Week in PNAS Highlights from the recent edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), the Academy's scientific journal
Biographical Memoirs Access more than 1,000 biographies of leading U.S. scientists including Thomas Edison, Alexander Graham Bell, Margaret Mead, Louis Agassiz, and Joseph Henry
News:
NAE Awards $1.5 Million for Accomplishments in Engineering Jan. 5, 2009: The National Academy of Engineering will award the Charles Stark Draper Prize to Robert H. Dennard for his invention of Dynamic Random Access Memory. Elmer Gaden will receive the Fritz J. and Dolores H. Russ Prize for pioneering the engineering of biological reactors for large-scale, low-cost production of antibiotics and other drugs. Tom Byers and Tina Seelig will share the Bernard M. Gordon Prize for advancing education resources in technology entrepreneurship for engineering students and educators.
Statement Concerning Travel by U.S. Scientists to Iran Dec. 26, 2008: For eight years, the National Academies have endorsed and coordinated mutually beneficial exchanges and cooperation with our scientific colleagues in Iran. However, due to a recent incident, the NAS, NAE and IOM presidents announced today that they can no longer “sponsor or encourage scientists to visit Iran unless there are clear assurances that the personal safety of visiting scientists will be guaranteed…” It is our hope that assurances will soon be forthcoming that will permit our institution to resume scientific visits to Iran.
NAS, NAE, and IOM Members to Fill Obama Energy, Climate, and Science Posts Dec. 23, 2008: U.S. President-elect Barack Obama has selected academy members Steven Chu, John P. Holdren, and Jane Lubchenco as his nominees for secretary of energy, chief science adviser, and administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
IOM Proposes 20 Optimal Indicators to Measure Nation’s Health Dec. 17, 2008: Policymakers, the media, and the public should focus on 20 specific health indicators as "yardsticks" to measure the overall health and well-being of Americans. The indicators are intended for the health section of a new Web site that the nonprofit State of the USA Inc. is building to help people to become better-informed and active participants in national discussions about important topics such as health.
>> More News
|
|
|

|
|
EPA Should Pursue Cumulative Risk Assessment of Phthalates The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency should examine whether multiple exposures to chemicals called phthalates -- used in cosmetics, medical devices, and children's toys -- could cause adverse health effects, says a new report from the National Research Council.
Read more ...
|
 |
National Academy of Sciences 500 Fifth Street, NW Washington, DC 20001
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy Contact Us | Site Map
| | | |
|