Weinberg News Archive

See the Weinberg News page for the latest articles.

2011

Nine Seniors Honored for Outstanding Achievement

Great Expectations for Artificial Molecular Machines

More Promising Natural Gas Storage?

Former Professor, Writer Gets His Literary Due

So Many Proteins, So Much Promise

Professor Consults on Discovery's "I, Caveman"

Student Art Exhibit Kicks Off

Obama Taps Statistics Professor for Key Post

Hold Chicago History in Your Hand

New Materials Could Promote Easier Detection of Nuclear Weapons

Weinberg Professor Honored by Linguistic Society

Science Through Artists' Eyes

Students Pick Up Paddles to Delve into Geology

Resisting Peer Pressure Not Impossible, Study Shows

Nanostructure Promotes Growth of New Blood Vessels

Brady Scholars Participate in "Help a Neighbor Day"

Donors' Gift to Advance Nanotechnology, Life Sciences Research

Worm's Regenerative Capabilities Under Scrutiny

Award-winning Chemist Delivers Public Lecture

In Memoriam: Professor Jonathan Widom

Prominent Molecular Bioscientist and Chemist Jonathan Widom Dies

Two Weinberg Faculty Honored with CAREER Award

Three Weinberg Professors Recognized with University-wide Teaching Excellence Awards

Some Extrasolar Planets Spin in Unexpected Ways

Economics Professor Receives Nobel Prize

87 Weinberg Students Awarded Research Grants

Conference Honors Nobelist Dale Mortensen

Three Professors Named AAAS Fellows

Weinberg Students Among Those Living Green at GREEN House

Weinberg Duo National Debate Tournament Champions

Two Weinberg Faculty Named Guggenheim Fellows

Faculty Experts Discuss Libya

Japanese Display Calm and Cooperation in Face of Extraordinary Loss

Findings Challenge Conventional Wisdom of How Neurons Operate

Statement by President Schapiro Regarding Psychology Class Controversy

Chemist Tobin Marks Receives Top Honor

Two Weinberg Faculty Among Five Named to AAAS

2010

Recent Weinberg Graduate Awarded $50,000 for Idea to Boost American Savings Rate

Choir of Electric Fish Debuts at Netherlands Festival

Northwestern a Top Ten Producer of Fulbright Scholars

Chemist to Receive Presidential Award

Chemist Awarded Prestigious Fellowship, 5-year Grant

Rapping About Racism, Desi-Style

National Academy "Triple-Play" for Chemist

Incredibly, Edible Gas Storage Containers

Three Chemists Honored for Outstanding Scholarship

Universe Chaotic From Day One

Nanopatterning Method Utilizes Shrinky Dinks Plastic

Building "Green" Brings Home the Gold

Research Team Draws with 15,000 Beams of Light

Chemistry Professor Awarded Royal Medal

Six Students Named Department of Energy Fellows

Emeritus Professor of Philosophy David Hull Dies

Two Catalysts Better Than One

English Professor Revisits Civil War Diary

New Arsenic-Based Nanoparticle Blocks Aggressive Breast Cancer

Spaghetti Highway for Cells

Working for Peace, Five Fellows at a Time

A New Role for an Ancient, Internal Clock

Undergraduate Humanitarian Honored

Geochemist Receives NSF Early Career Award

Senior Publishes First Novel

Cultural Beliefs May Influence How Children Reason About Biology

Northwestern President and Four Other Faculty Named AAAS Fellows

Two Weinberg Chemists Receive Top Scientific Honor

Chemist Named Materials Research Society Fellow

Gift to Center Enables 'Intensive' Graduate and Undergraduate Research

Writer Eula Biss Wins National Book Award

Three Faculty Honored by American Chemical Society

Bonnie Honig presents "Antigone, Interrupted: Greek Tragedy and the Future," her inaugural lecture as the Sarah Rebecca Roland Professor in Political Science VIDEO

Research Explores the Carbon Cycle Before Humans

Physicist and Economist Named Sloan Fellows

John Franks presents "What Mathematicians Actually Do," his inaugural lecture as the Henry S. Noyes Professor in Mathematics VIDEO

Geologist Awarded Medal, Elected to Academy

Weinberg Researcher Named Top-Ranked Chemist

New Material is a "Venus Flytrap" for Nuclear Waste

Earth and Planetary Sciences Assistant Professor Receives Presidential Award

Nanodiamonds Found to Boost MRI Sensitivity

X-rays Drive Formation of New Crystals

Study Finds 'No Child Left Behind' Raises Math Achievement

2009

Keeping Kids Squeaky Clean May Be a Bad Idea

Close Partners Sculpt One Another's Traits and Skills

Freshman seminar explores history and impact of Chicago waterways

Historian Counters Myths About the Holocaust

Antidepressants Can Change Patients' Personalities

Three Faculty Writers Featured in International Literary Magazine

Recently Dedicated Silverman Hall to Encourage Medical Discoveries

Research Sheds Light on Workings of Anti-Cancer Drug

Some Earthquake Aftershocks Two Centuries Old

Exploring How Women with HIV Cope Financially

Northwestern Center to Open New Directions for Cancer Research

Western, Individualistic Cultures More Prone to Depression

Researchers Develop Tool for Prostate Cancer Testing

Weinberg Freshmen Learn the Ropes

Weinberg Professor's Book Chosen for "One Book, One Chicago" Program

Brian Odom Awarded Packard Fellowship

Late-Night Snacks: Worse for Us Than We Thought?

Weinberg Alumni Among Eighteen Honored for Service to Society and Northwestern

Chemistry Professor Helps Map Sculptures' 'DNA' VIDEO

English Professor Tackles a 'Moral Revolution' in Inaugural Lecture VIDEO

Why Saints Sin and Sinners Get Saintly

New 'Cancer Trap' Could Tame Metastasis

Women No Pickier Than Men When Choosing a Mate?

Former Weinberg Associate Dean Dies

Chad Mirkin Awarded the Lemelson-MIT Prize

Noted Economist Marcus Alexis Dies at Age 77

Chemists' Sponge-Like Invention Performs Triple Feats

Mercouri Kanatzidis presents "First Comes the Synthesis: Pursuing the Unimaginable," his inaugural lecture as the Charles E. and Emma H. Morrison Professor in Chemistry VIDEO

Five Weinberg Faculty Honored for Teaching Excellence

Babies Brainier Than Many Imagine

Book Explores South Asian American Teen Culture

Northwestern Freshman Class Has Record SAT Scores and Class Ranking

Tobin Marks was honored with the Nelson W. Taylor Award

Charles Manski was named to the National Academy of Sciences

Chad Mirkin was named to the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology

Samuel Weber Honored with the Palmes Académiques

Tobin Marks Has Received the Herman Pines Award

Weinberg Senior Named USA Today All-Star

A Cause of Losing That Loving Feeling After Marriage?

Imbalances in Gender and Economic Power Impact HIV/AIDS Vulnerability

Lecture Suggests Medieval Source for Modern Scandal

Richard Silverman Awarded the Perkin Medal

Research Suggests Fault System May Shut Down

Nanotechnology Could Play Key Role in Fighting Cancer

Two Faculty Members Named Sloan Fellows

Compounds Protect Against Cerebral Palsy

Institute for Policy Research Celebrates 40th Anniversary

Chemists Offer New Hydrogen Purification Method

Weinberg Professor Receives Mellon Foundation Honor

Honors and Achievements

Physics and Astronomy professor Jim Sauls has been awarded the Bardeen Prize for his work on superconductivity.

Art Theory & Practice MFA candidate Rachel Niffenegger has been accepted into the two-year, De Ateliers residency program in Amsterdam.

Sarah Jacoby, assistant professor of Religious Studies, has been awarded an ACLS Grant for 2012-2013.

The History Department's Dyan Elliott and Melissa Macauley were offered fellowships at the National Humanities Center for 2012-2013.

Krista Thompson, associate professor of Art History, has been awarded an ACLS fellowship for 2012-2013.

Chemistry professor Tobin Marks received the 2012 National Academy of Sciences Award in Chemical Sciences.

Mentions in the Media

Michelle Obama, Paradox
"Michelle Obama is a genuine paradox," said Darlene Clark Hine, a professor of African American studies and history at Northwestern University. Hine's lecture, part of a black studies conference at the university last week, argued that the first lady is a "transformative, liberationist" figure -- despite her interest in domestic issues and the long list of magazine cover stories focused on topics such as Obama's approach to motherhood or the importance of healthful eating. washingtonpost.com April 16, 2012 Full story

Seismic hazards: Japan earthquake and other tectonic surprises challenge scientific assumptions
"It's almost impossible to make a sensible earthquake hazard map," argues Northwestern University geophysicist Seth Stein.... "We call this the 'whack-a-mole model' of earthquake hazard mapping. The mole will come up the same hole that it went down," Stein said. And that's rarely the case. washingtonpost.com March 9, 2012 Full story

May 9, 2012