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Talking Points

Anthropology graduate student awarded scholarship for research in Italy

Anthropology graduate student Johanna Mitterhofer has been awarded a $11,000 Postgraduate Research Scholarship from the Autonomous Province of Bozen in Italy. 

In her dissertation research, Mitterhofer plans to investigate how cross-border projects promoted by the European Union's InterReg policies are taken up by different groups within South Tyrol, an ethnically and linguistically diverse border region in northern Italy. 

Mitterhofer developed and initiated her research project as a student participant in the Department of Anthropology's European Field Studies program, as part of the

Undergraduate Commencement set for May 10 at McGuirk Alumni Stadium

Undergraduate Commencement will take place at McGuirk Alumni Stadium on May 10, according to Nancy Buffone, executive director of External Relations and University Events.
 
Although some construction work is scheduled at the stadium, Buffone says the ceremony will remain the same except the stage is being shifted to the south end of the field, a change that was already planned.
 
More details will be announced in the weeks before the ceremony. In the meantime, questions about Commencement can be directed to Buffone or External Relations and University Events at 577-1101.
 
 
 
 
 
 

New bike repair stands put cyclists back on the road

Aiming to make the campus more bike-friendly, Physical Plant recently installed bicycle repair stands at the bike shelters outside of the Student Union and Integrated Sciences Building.
 
According to Pam Monn, assistant director of Physical Plant for Building and Grounds Services, the repair stands were recommended last fall in a report by the League of American Bicyclists.
 
The Fixit Bike Repair Stands are equipped to hold a bike and are outfitted with various wrenches and screwdrivers and an air pump, all attached with sturdy cables and tamper-proof fasteners.

Biostatisticians identify genes linked to heart disease

Recently, large studies have identified some of the genetic basis for important common diseases such as heart disease and diabetes, but most of the genetic contribution to them remains undiscovered. Now campus researchers led by biostatistician Andrea Foulkes of the School of Public Health and Health Sciences have applied sophisticated statistical tools to existing large databases to reveal substantial new information about genes that cause such conditions as high cholesterol linked to heart disease.
 
Foulkes says, “This new approach to data analysis provides opportunities for developing new

Yearlong series of events, programs to mark campus' sesquicentennial

The campus' 150th birthday celebration features a yearlong series of events and activities that will reflect on the contributions of a once-tiny agricultural college that now enrolls 28,000 students and ranks among the nation’s top public research universities.
 
“UMass Amherst has been a driving force for individual opportunity and economic development dating back to the time of Abraham Lincoln and the creation of land-grant colleges,” said Chancellor Kumble Subbaswamy.

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