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Archive for April, 2007

Community Milestones

Winston-Salem Journal
Kandace Davis of Winston-Salem has received the John and Jan Thomas Leadership Scholarship for Appalachian Upperclassmen at Appalachian State University.   Read full story

Think Your Job Is Tough?

Boitshepo Giyose Discusses Food and Africa

High Country Press
The next time you open your mouth to gripe about your job, take a moment to consider the challenges that Boitshepo “Bibi” Giyose faces every day and you might not be so quick to complain. Giyose, a 1989 Appalachian State University grad, is the senior food and nutrition security advisor for the African Union’s New Partnership for Africa’s Development, and she coordinates nutrition activities and provides policy direction for the African continent. Read full story

Smokies offers summer teacher programs

Asheville Citizen Times
Ozone Bio-monitoring” is a one-day seminar on June 1 that will train teachers how to monitor the effects of ground level ozone on native plants. The training will be taught by Dr. Howie Neufeld of Appalachian State University and other park experts.   Read full story

Appalachian State Energy Center and Nuvera Fuel Cells to Co-host Third International Hydrail Conference

Fuel Cell Works
Appalachian State University Energy Center and Nuvera Fuel Cells will co-host the Third International Hydrail Conference June 25-26 in Bergamo, Italy.   Read full story

Shootings prompt schools to re-evaluate plans

Winston-Salem Journal

Campuses in N.C. have a plan but are looking at what else they can do. Read full story

Bill expands DSS job training

Asheville Citizen-Times
Social work students in some North Carolina colleges who commit to starting their careers in child protective services can get up to $5,000 each semester from the state. Advocates of the Child Welfare Collaborative want to triple the program’s reach and nearly triple its cost, an expansion that would make it available to more Appalachian State University students and, for the first time, Western Carolina University students. Read full story

Western N.C. economy grew a bit in February

Winston-Salem Journal
The economy in Western North Carolina expanded slightly in February, primarily through job gains, according to an index that measures business activity in the 25-county region.

The Western N.C. Economic Index rose by 0.9 basis points to 118.1. The index has reported an increase in regional economic activity in nine of the past 12 months. The index includes Alleghany, Ashe, Watauga and Wilkes counties.

“The region stumbled at the start of the year, but it recovered a bit in February,” said Todd Cherry, an economics professor at Appalachian State University and one of the index’s authors.   Read full story

ASU to host forum on liveable communities

Asheville Citizen-Times
The Mazie and Harold Jones Levenson Program on Growth and Change in Western North Carolina will host the High Country Forum on Livable Communities Wednesday, April 18, from 6:30-9 p.m. at Appalachian State University’s Broyhill Inn and Conference Center.

The forum will feature a presentation by award-winning planners from the Town of Davidson as well as an opportunity for community members to express their preferences about certain Smart Growth strategies.   Read full story

Community Milestones

Winston-Salem Journal
The Appalachian State University Foundation has received a $1 million gift from Ron Harper of Charlotte. The gift, which was made in honor of his wife, Katherine, will support the flexography education program, student scholarships and other needs of the department of technology. The portion of Kerr Scott Hall that houses the majority of the department of technology’s academic programs and administrative offices will be named for Mrs. Harper.   Read full story

ASU astronomer looks for new planets

Asheville Citizen-Times
When Richard Gray looks at the stars, he sees more than just interesting bits of light in the night sky.

Gray, a professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Appalachian State University, is part of an 11-member team looking for new planets. They have determined that planets may exist around twin or binary stars.

“We used to think that planets could only be found around single stars,” Gray said. “This is an interesting discovery because up until now, people have been skeptical about the possibility of planets with double stars. This project has shown is that it is possible for planets to exist around binary stars as well as single stars.” Read full story

Growth rates vary throughout WNC

Asheville Citizen-Times
Recent estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau say several WNC counties have seen fairly rapid growth since 2000 while others have trailed state and national rates.

Numbers for the region as a whole for the period from April 2000 to July 2006 don’t exactly confirm the image some have of out-of-control growth. The growth rate for 18 WNC counties was 5.8 percent, less than the 6.4 percent rate the United States saw and North Carolina’s 10.1 percent growth rate.

Buncombe and Henderson counties continue to be attractive to people looking to move for quality-of-life reasons. Counties along the Tennessee line and those that have experienced mass job losses saw much slower growth.   Read full story

“If they don’t have the jobs for kids when they graduate from high school, they’re going to go somewhere else,” said Garry Cooper, a professor of community and regional planning at Appalachian State University.

NASA Telescope Finds Planets Thrive Around Stellar Twins

Science Daily
NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope have observed that planetary systems – dusty disks of asteroids, comets and possibly planets – are at least as abundant in twin-star systems as they are in those, like our own, with only one star. The research appears in the April 1 issue of the Astrophysical Journal. Authors on the paper include Richard Gray of Appalachian State University. Read full story

ASU gets $1 million gift for new technology

Asheville Citizen-Times
Appalachian State University Foundation has received a $1 million gift from Ron Harper of Charlotte.
The gift, made in honor of Harper’s wife, Katherine, will support the flexography education program, student scholarships and other needs of the Department of Technology.   Read full story

Is This a Soft-Landing?

WRAL TV
Op ed by Harry Davis, professor of banking at Appalachian.

At this point in this recovery, the economy faces several questions. First, is the slowdown in housing and the subprime lending debacle about to end? Second, is the economy headed for a recession in the near term? Third, is the Federal Reserve Board (FED) close to cutting interest rates? Fourth, is the state economy improving?

The answer to the first question is “yes.” The housing market periodically experiences excesses, so this episode was to be expected. New home and existing home sales have fallen from the all-time-record levels of 2005 and housing prices are no longer rising. Sales and starts are at 2003 levels, which were records at the time. Housing sales and starts have about hit bottom and will not be a negative as we go forward.   Read full story

Parker has a change of heart

Founder of Ottawa Marathon backtracks, says running marathons can cause a host of ailments

Ottawa Sun

Ken Parker, one of the founders of the Ottawa Marathon and former coach of the late Emilie Mondor, one of Canada’s greatest distance runners, now finds himself in the unusual position of trying to dissuade people from attempting the event.

Research suggests that the 42-km marathon — which the fastest men complete in just over two hours, but can take amateurs four hours or longer to finish — can cause heart disease, irregular heartbeats, damage to the immune system, and post-marathon cardiac dysfunction in under-trained runners.

Under-trained amateur marathon runners who run less than 64 km per week often show signs of cardiac dysfunction after the race and some of these abnormalities may persist for up to a month after they cross the finish line. On the other hand, putting in longer distances –more than 95 km per week –can also cause problems. Dr. David Nieman at Appalachian State University in Boone, N.C., found that over-training can depress the immune system, doubling athletes’ chances of getting sick in the days and weeks following the race. When the immune system is stressed, inflammation results, and there is a link between inflammation and diseases such as heart disease, cancer and arthritis.   Read full story

NC GlaxoSmithKline Foundation Increases Endowment For Science Scholarships For Undergraduate Women

Carolina Newswire
The North Carolina GlaxoSmithKline Foundation announced at the GlaxoSmithKline Women In Science Scholars Program Spring Conference that it has increased by $725,000 its endowed scholarships for undergraduate women science students across North Carolina at the participating schools. The partner schools include Appalachian State University.   Read full story