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Nov. Issue of ASCB Newsletter ASCB NOVEMBER 2010 NEWSLETTER VOLUME 33, NUMBER 10 Improving Submit Images to Work–Life Satisfaction The Cell: An Image Library Page 15 Published Images and Videos Accepted To further discovery and education, the ASCB’s repository for cellular images and videos accepts Are You First published and unpublished work. According to Caroline Kane, the PI for The Cell: An Image Author or Last? Library, “This new repository of cell images is expertly reviewed and annotated to provide a valuable resource for researchers, educators, and the general public. Access to the database is Page 21 free and open. The Cell aims to advance research and, ultimately, have a positive impact upon human health and education.” The Cell’s expanded licensing options for contributors and users will promote faster growth and enhanced usefulness. The Cell is available as a repository for images in published articles Cell Biology and supplementary materials. It can also serve as an archive for additional images and movies Italian Style that helped lead to discovery. Page 23 Understanding Distribution Rights The Cell welcomes unpublished and previously published images, but contributors must have the distribution rights. Many publishers, like the ASCB, which publishes Molecular Biology of the Cell, allow authors to retain copyright. However, publishers may nevertheless limit distribution Inside of the work. Limitations may relate to intended use (commercial and/or educational), alteration, and attribution. Authors should confirm the distribution rights before selecting the appropriate Public Policy Briefing 3 option when contributing to The Cell. Contributors with appropriate distribution rights might select a public domain license. Annual Meeting Program 6 This license is appropriate for those who own copyright without limitations as well as for those Networking at Annual Meeting 11 submitting images or videos where all authors are U.S. federal employees. Other licensing ASCB Hotel Contest Winners 13 options allow authors and publishers to submit images to The Cell but retain certain rights ARRA Funding 13 related to attribution, commercial use, and modification and reuse. One can even submit images WICB Column 15 to The Cell and retain all rights. Highlights from MBoC 18 Please visit www.cellimagelibrary.org/pages/license for more detailed information or contact Dear Labby 21 David Orloff ([email protected]), Manager, Image Library, with your feedback. The Cell is funded by NIGMS Grand Opportunities grant RC2GM092708 to the ASCB. n International Affairs 23 —David Orloff Letters to the Editor 25 CLS Activities 25 Textbooks for Africa 26 Thank You, ASCB Members ASCB Annual Meeting T-Shirts 26 Annual Meeting Hotel Info 27 In response to an urgent Public Policy Alert, ASCB members sent over a thousand letters Members in the News 29 to Capitol Hill urging the U.S. Congress to take prompt action to address the current legal Member Gifts 29 uncertainties surrounding federally funded human embryonic stem cell research. 2010 Half-Century Fund Donors 29 Such a large response in such a short time is impressive and record-setting. Thank you, ASCB members! Calendar 29 If you have not sent your letters, go to http://capwiz.com/jscpp. n Grants & Opportunities 30 —Kevin M. Wilson Did You Know...? 31 FEI Life Sciences The premier provider of 3D ultrastructural imaging solutions for the life sciences. The Tecnai Spirit TEM With the ease of a light microscope, The Tecnai™ Spirit TEM allows for the imaging of biological systems with the resolution needed to answer crucial biological questions. By automating 2D and 3D image acquisition, reconstruction, and visualization procedures, the Tecnai Spirit TEM ensures repeatable, high-quality results. Visit FEI.com/TecnaiSpirit for more information and a list of specific publications empowered by the Tecnai Spirit TEM. Free Life Sciences Webinars Learn about the latest tools for Life Science research and how FEI’s electron microscopy solutions are being used around the world. Current webinars: Bridging the Gap Between Light Microscopy and Electron Microscopy, High-throughput 3D Cellular Imaging, Cryo Transmission Electron Microscopy, and Introduction to Electron Microscopy in the Life Sciences. Visit FEI.com/Webinars for more information and to register. Negative stain preparation of rota virus. Nerve bioposy from a patient with a peripheral neuropathy. See Beyond at FEI.com/LifeSciences © 2009 FEI Company. Photo credit (left) sample courtesy of Cynthia Goldsmith, Center for Disease Control, Altanta, USA. Photo credit (right) sample courtesy of Dr. Wayne Moore and Ms. Susan Shinn, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada. 09-305_ASCBNewsletter_Ad_FIN.indd 1 8/11/09 10:45 AM The American Society PUBLIC POLICY Briefing for Cell Biology 8120 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, MD 20814-2762, USA Tel: 301-347-9300 Report Shines Light on STEM Fax: 301-347-9310 [email protected], www.ascb.org Strengths and Weaknesses Joan R. Goldberg Executive Director If the U.S. just applied the skills it already government should: Officers n has, many of the problems it faces as a nation Recruit and hire 100,000 STEM teachers Timothy J. Mitchison President could be solved. That is the over the next 10 years Sandra L. Schmid President-Elect opinion of the President’s n Create a STEM master teacher Brigid Hogan Past President Council of Advisors on Science corps to recognize and reward Thoru Pederson Treasurer Jean E. Schwarzbauer and Technology (PCAST) in a the top 5% of U.S. STEM Secretary newly released report, Prepare teachers Council and Inspire: K-12 Education in n Create 1,000 STEM-focused Science, Technology, Engineering, schools over the next 10 years Raymond Deshaies Joan R. Goldberg, ex officio n and Math (STEM) for America’s Develop a DARPA-like Holly V. Goodson Future. program for education (DARPA, Kathleen J. Green PCAST, co-chaired by or the Defense Advanced Inke Näthke ASCB member Eric Lander, Research Projects Agency, is David Spector issued the report outlining what the U.S. Defense Department Paul W. Sternberg Elizabeth Sztul needs to be done to revitalize agency responsible for the JoAnn Trejo the U.S. science, technology, Eric Lander development of new technology Clare M. Waterman engineering, and mathematics for use by the U.S. military) Fiona M. Watt Susan M. Wick (STEM) education system. In a White House n Support the development of state-based, Virginia A. Zakian press release announcing the report, Lander shared educational standards in science and said, “The recommendations in this report have math The ASCB Newsletter great catalytic potential and, if implemented, PCAST also predicts that the federal is published 11 times per year by The American Society could transform STEM education in America.” government could implement many of the for Cell Biology. The report suggests applying many of the U.S.’s recommendations in the report with existing assets in science, mathematics, and engineering funds. Implementation of all of the report’s Joan R. Goldberg Editor W. Mark Leader Editor within the educational system to improve recommendations would cost approximately $1 Elizabeth M. Rich Production Manager STEM education. According to the report, a billion per year. Kevin M.Wilson Public Policy Director revitalization of the educational system would To read the complete report, go to www. John Fleischman Science Writer result in an American economic renewal. whitehouse.gov/administration/eop/ostp/pcast. n Thea Clarke Editorial Manager The report recommends that the U.S. federal —Kevin M. Wilson Advertising The deadline for advertising is the first day of the month preceding the cover date. For information contact Advertising Manager Ed Newman, NIH Center Becomes Institute on [email protected]. ASCB Newsletter Minority Health and Health Disparities ISSN 1060-8982 Volume 33, Number 10 The U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) portfolio, were transferred to the new November 2010 has formally announced the transition of the Institute. © 2010 The American Society for Cell National Center on Minority Health and In announcing the change, NIH Director Biology. Copyright to the articles is held Health Disparities (NCMHD) to the Institute Francis Collins said, “This change by Congress by the author or, for staff-written articles, by the ASCB. The content of the ASCB on Minority Health and Health Disparities. reflects the importance of studying the issue of Newsletter is available to the public under The change was mandated in the healthcare health disparities with an even greater intensity. an Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike reform legislation passed by Congress earlier We need to learn much more about what causes Unported Creative Commons License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ this year. disparities—including the role of society, the by-nc-sa/3.0). Under the new law, all of the environment, and genes—and to find effective Postmaster: Send change of address to: responsibilities of the Center, including the ways of overcoming or changing them.” n ASCB Newsletter The American Society for Cell Biology coordination of the NIH’s health research —Kevin M. Wilson 8120 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, MD 20814-2762, USA NOVEMBER 2010 ASCB NEWSLETTER 3 U.S. Senate Approves Next NSF Head Don’t believe everything you read in the Obama on April 20, 2009, to be Under newspaper; the U.S. Congress can get things Secretary of Commerce for International Trade, done quickly. In June 2010, U.S. President is still waiting to be confirmed by the Senate.) Obama nominated Subra Suresh, dean of the Suresh succeeds Arden Bement, who served Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s (MIT) as NSF head from 2004 to 2010. The NSF School of Engineering, to be the next director Director term is six years. Suresh becomes of the U.S. National Science Foundation director at a good time for the NSF. Despite (NSF). Four short months later, the U.S. difficult economic times and efforts to control Senate unanimously confirmed Suresh, with the growth of federal spending, the NSF has no debate and no hearings.
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