Webinar to examine remittances' impact on the global economy
Jun. 7, 2021
Western Union President and CEO Hikmet Ersek will present new research on remittances — money sent home by migrants working abroad — and their impact on the global economy in a webinar hosted by Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy on Wednesday.
Popularity runs in families
Jun. 7, 2021
f identical versions of 20 people lived out their lives in dozens of different worlds, would the same people be popular in each world?
Movement at the Moody
Jun. 7, 2021
The June 5 opening reception for “Brie Ruais: Movement at the Edge of the Land” at Rice’s Moody Center for the Arts featured a brief introduction by the artist, Ruais, followed by a preview of an original dance by choreographer Oliver Halkowich.
A farewell to barns
Jun. 7, 2021
Following a final screening of "Last Night at the Alamo" in the Rice Cinema June 4, the Rice Media Center hosted an open house June 5 for friends of the 51-year-old building to say farewell before its scheduled demolition this summer. Its sister structure, the “Art Barn,” was razed in 2014.
Claymation
Jun. 7, 2021
In her final act of installation before the exhibition opening June 5, artist Brie Ruais dug up a handful of damp clay from the lawn outside the Moody Center for the Arts and used it to draw a line across the gallery walls. It leads visitors to the galleries into her full exhibition, which includes abstract ceramic sculptures and large, site-specific earthen mounds among other works.
It's not easy being clean
Jun. 7, 2021
Regular maintenance of James Turrell's “Twilight Epiphany” Skyspace includes spring cleaning, which took place after commencement in May, and requires a cherry picker and a team of pros to ensure the monumental piece of public art remains pristine.
People, papers and presentations Jul 7, 2021
Jun. 7, 2021
Physics and astronomy graduate student Asa Stahl is gaining international attention for his children’s book, “The Big Bang,” illustrated by his collaborator in England, Carly Allen-Fletcher. The book was nominated for the Ezra Jack Keats Award, is a finalist for Japan’s Sakura Medal, won an honor in the 2021 International Literacy Association's Children's and Young Adults' Book Awards and was named an Outstanding Science Trade Book for Students by the National Science Teachers Association and Children's Book Council.
NIH grant boosts computational search for cancer drugs
Jun. 7, 2021
Computer scientist Lydia Kavraki of Rice University’s Brown School of Engineering has won a prestigious National Institutes of Health U01 grant to develop a new approach to model and analyze protein-ligand interactions in cancer research.
Dateline Rice for June 7, 2021 (Weekend Edition)
Jun. 7, 2021
NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL
Biden stays mum on state abortion laws with major test ahead for Roe
Douglas Brinkley, the Katherine Tsanoff Brown Professor in Humanities, is quoted in CNN, and his book review of "Mercury Rising" appeared in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.
CNN (This article also appeared in more than 25 other media outlets.)
http://dateline.rice/june-7-brinkley
Dateline Rice for June 4, 2021
Jun. 4, 2021
NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL
Mexico midterms: Why AMLO still has voters' hopes on his side
Tony Payan, the Françoise and Edward Djerejian Fellow for Mexico Studies and director of the Center for the United States and Mexico at the Baker Institute for Public Policy, is quoted.
The Christian Science Monitor
http://dateline.rice/june-4-payan
Dateline Rice for June 3, 2021
Jun. 3, 2021
NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL
This 2D material is way tougher than graphene, and scientists are excited
An article features Rice research into the strength of hexagonal boron nitride, which has been identified as the toughest among 2D materials. Jun Lou, associate chair and professor of materials science and nanoengineering, is quoted.
MSN (This Science Alert article also appeared in 10 other media outlets.)
http://dateline.rice/june-3-lou