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Journals Environment Newsletter for 2026-03-14 ( 8 items )  
Capturing the good in every community (10)
MOUNT PLEASANT, Michigan, March 13 -- Central Michigan University issued the following news: * * * Capturing the good in every community * For decades, Steve Jessmore built a career focused on the moments many people overlook -small acts of kindness, everyday life in local communities and the stories that connect people to one another. Now, the Michigan Journalism Hall of Fame is recognizing that work. Jessmore, a Central Michigan University alumnus and longtime photojournalist who later more PR

EMA Management Board: highlights of March 2026 meeting (10)
LONDON, England, March 13 -- The European Medicines Agency issued the following news: * * * EMA Management Board: highlights of March 2026 meeting * EMA annual report 2025 The Management Board adopted EMA's annual report for 2025, marking another strong year for medicines regulation in the European Union. EMA delivered 104 positive recommendations for new medicines for human use, including 38 containing a new active substance. The Agency also issued 30 recommendations for new veterinary m more PR

How Stress Disrupts the Brain's Navigational System (10)
BOCHUM, Germany, March 13 -- The University in Bochum issued the following news release: * * * How Stress Disrupts the Brain's Navigational System * Persons under stress may have a harder time spatially orienting themselves. Researchers in Bochum have discovered why. The stress hormone cortisol disrupts the brain's navigational system. It impairs the function of the grid cells that play a crucial role in orientation. This has been verified by researchers from Ruhr University Bochum, Germany more PR

New gel-based system allows bacteria to act as bioelectrical sensors (10)
HOUSTON, Texas, March 12 -- Rice University posted the following news release: * * * New gel-based system allows bacteria to act as bioelectrical sensors * Microbial bioelectronic sensors use living bacteria that can create an electrical signal in response to the presence of a target substance, or analyte. These types of sensors offer many advantages over other types of biosensors based on proteins and enzymes: The bacteria can perform multiple functions, survive in a variety of environments more PR

Queen Mary: Improving the Drug Development Pipeline (10)
LONDON, England, March 13 -- Queen Mary University of London issued the following news: * * * Queen Mary: improving the drug development pipeline Professor Amrita Ahluwalia is the Dean for Research in Queen Mary University of London's Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, a pharmacologist and Professor of Vascular Pharmacology. She is also the former editor-in-chief of the British Journal of Pharmacology and inaugural Chair of the Basic and Translational Committee for the International Union of  more PR

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Air Force Gen. Dan Caine Hold a Press Briefing (10)
WASHINGTON, March 13 -- The U.S. Department of War issued the following transcript: * * * Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Air Force Gen. Dan Caine Hold a Press Briefing * SECRETARY OF WAR PETE HEGSETH: Good morning. UNKNOWN: Good morning. SECRETARY OF WAR PETE HEGSETH: I'll start as we often do here at the Department of War, with the bottom line up front, for the world to hear and the press to actually admit, that the United States is decimating the radic more PR

Targeting two flu proteins sharply reduces airborne spread (10)
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pennsylvania, March 13 -- Pennsylvania State University posted the following news: * * * Targeting two flu proteins sharply reduces airborne spread * UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -A long-running debate in vaccine design revolves around whether a vaccine should be optimized to prevent the virus from replicating inside an infected host or prevent the virus from transmitting to others. New research led by Penn State scientists suggests there may not have to be a tradeoff. The study i more PR

UM team discovers aggregation-induced emission of DNA fluorescence as marker for cell death, senescence and sepsis (10)
MACAU, China, March 13 -- The University of Macau posted the following news: * * * UM team discovers aggregation-induced emission of DNA fluorescence as marker for cell death, senescence and sepsis * A research team led by Associate Professor Liu Tzu-Ming in the Faculty of Health Sciences (FHS) at the University of Macau (UM), in collaboration with Professor Yehuda G. Assaraf at the Technion - Israel Institute of Technology and Chief Physician Zeng Ning at Zhujiang Hospital of Southern Medic more PR