rihlib - October 4, 2005 @ 12:09 pm
· Filed under Grants/funding
Roy Glauber of Harvard and John L. Hall of JILA and Theodor Hansch of
Max-Planck (the latter visited Rowland once upon a time) are the
2005 recipients.
Update (10/5/05): The Boston Globe has an article about Roy Glauber.
rihlib - July 16, 2004 @ 1:20 pm
· Filed under Grants/funding
A Science NextWave article illustrates instances of unexpected funding
sources. Examples include the army funding breast cancer
research. Suggestions on how to tap such sources are
listed.
rihlib - July 7, 2004 @ 10:50 am
· Filed under Grants/funding
The Scientist outlines the grant process in 12 steps.
rihlib - May 5, 2004 @ 12:38 pm
· Filed under Grants/funding
The National Institutes of Health put forward their nanomedicine program and asked the scientific community for input.
rihlib - April 23, 2004 @ 11:57 am
· Filed under Grants/funding
AAAS says research programs are at risk as federal government tries to
get deficits under control. (Source: Science in the News)
rihlib - March 16, 2004 @ 10:13 am
· Filed under Grants/funding
People in Washington are not “out to get” scientists, the House Science
committee chair assures a group at Brookhaven, telling them strategies
for lobbying for more federal monies for the physical sciences.
rihlib - February 25, 2004 @ 6:56 pm
· Filed under Grants/funding
rihlib - February 2, 2004 @ 10:11 am
· Filed under Grants/funding
A series of Chronicle articles explore how NIH funding has doubled in recent years and at the same time how some universities have received less; others question what NIH has gotten for the money. A colloquy on the topic will be held Thursday on the Chronicle’s web site.
rihlib - January 13, 2004 @ 12:00 pm
· Filed under Grants/funding
(access restricted to subscribers). An opinion piece in the Chronicle of Higher Education states that
rihlib - January 9, 2004 @ 10:30 am
· Filed under Grants/funding
(Accessible to Harvard affiliates only). Science magazine tells of preliminary reports suggesting only small increases in budgets for NIH and NSF next year.