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Damon Keith Center for Civil Rights grand opening

Wayne State University's Law School today is set to celebrate the grand opening of the Damon J. Keith Center for Civil Rights. The Keith Center honors the life and legacy of Keith, a federal judge, civil rights figure and 1956 Wayne Law alumnus. "Part of the new building is a permanent version of our 'Marching Toward Justice' exhibit telling the story of the 14th Amendment, and it's been designed to be a public destination site," professor Peter Hammer told WWJ Newsradio 950. The two-story, 10,000-square-foot building features classrooms, conference rooms, student organization space and a lecture hall.

Wayne State University opens Judge Damon J. Keith civil rights center

Numerous media outlets reported the dedication and opening of the Damon J. Keith Center for Civil Rights at Wayne State University. An overflow audience in the university\'s 600-seat Community Arts Auditorium stood to applaud when Damon J. Keith, 89, took the stage. Those attending included political leaders, federal, state and local judges. The two-story, 10,000-square-foot addition to Wayne State University\'s Law building on the west edge of the midtown campus will serve not only as the center for education in the laws of civil rights, but will also house programs to stimulate debate and action toward social justice and connect with area residents through legal clinics exploring laws for immigration and asylum, the disabled, the environment, small business and nonprofits. A photo gallery and video are included in the Detroit Free Press story. WJR talk show host Mitch Albom, who was a featured speaker at the grand opening ceremonies, mentioned the event at the top of his 5 p.m. show.

Experts want stronger message: Babies need to sleep on their backs and alone

A renewed call to encourage putting babies to sleep on their backs and discourage co-sleeping were among the solutions suggested by a panel of doctor-academics at a statewide summit in Ypsilanti called to curtail infant mortality in Michigan. The state MDCH in May appointed an 11-member team of doctor-academics to begin to address the issue. The group asked itself, "What can have the greatest impact in the shortest amount of time?" said Dr. Valerie Parisi, dean of Wayne State University's School of Medicine. While "Back to Sleep" or "Safe Sleep" campaigns have been underway since the early 1990s, the panel recognizes that not everyone is getting the message.
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Wayne State University professor gets $1.7 grant to help prepare girls for math, science

Sally Roberts, Wayne State University assistant professor of mathematics education, was awarded a $1.7 million grant to help prepare high school girls for success in math, science, technology and engineering, and boost the number of female students studying those disciplines in college. The National Institute of Health awarded the five-year grant to Roberts, who is planning programming in Metro Detroit targeting high school girls for science and math disciplines, including a summer academy, events for parents and students during the academic year and mentoring from WSU students.

Auto union UAW approves controversial Ford contract

Mike Smith, labor historian at Wayne State University, commented in a story about the influence of the United Auto Workers (UAW) over the years. UAW membership dropped significantly from the heyday of the automotive industry decades ago. Members tallied 1.5 million in 1979, but today that number is close to 355,000, one-third of which works in the auto industry, says Smith. The two-tier system in 2007 was "a massive philosophical change for the UAW" and signified the organization was becoming more willing to cooperate with the domestic automakers in order to keep their membership numbers solvent and prevent further labor cuts. "The whole game has changed. The main issue for bargaining now is job security," Smith adds. Marick Masters, director of the Douglas A. Fraser Center for Workplace Issues and Labor@Wayne, also was quoted in the piece. Even when the economy improves, UAW workers should not expect a return to the earlier era when they were guaranteed certain pay and benefit packages and were not necessarily forced to share in the long-term success of the company, says Masters. "What you're going to see is a continuing effort to reward a leaner workforce in a way that doesn't balloon the fixed costs of the company."

Dr. Roberto Romero, NIH Principal Investigator Of PREGNANT Study, Co-Sponsored By Columbia Laboratories, Honored With John Dingell Hero For Babies Award By March Of Dimes

Dr. Roberto Romero, chief of the Perinatology Research Branch of the Division of Intramural Research of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), was awarded the 2011 John Dingell Hero for Babies Award by the March of Dimes Michigan Chapter. Romero was honored for his work in preterm birth at the Perinatology Research Branch (PRB) including the PREGNANT study, which was conducted collaboratively under a Clinical Trials Agreement between Columbia and the PRB/NICHD/NIH and of which Dr. Romero was the NIH Principal Investigator.

Staebler Appointed to Development Authority

At its Oct. 17 meeting, the Ann Arbor city council voted to appoint Ned Staebler to fill an open four-year term on the local development finance authority board. Staebler took a position starting in the summer of 2011 as vice president of economic development for Wayne State University, after previously serving with the Michigan Economic Development Corp. Staebler currently serves on the city's Housing and Human Services Advisory Board, which was established in 2007 to replace two other bodies.

YPSILANTI: Gov. Snyder, health experts discuss infant mortality issues at summit

Dr. Valerie Parisi, dean of Wayne State University's School of Medicine, comments in a story highlighting the 2011 Michigan\'s Call to Action to Prevent and Reduce Infant Mortality Summit held Monday in Ann Arbor. According to Parisi, despite all of the research and attention devoted to the matter, the problem has continued to get worse. \"It was almost like we ignored the problem all of these years,\" she said. Parisi said the committee recommended a number of ways to combat pre-term births, which accounts for 70 percent of the state\'s infant mortality rate. She added that premature births cost the U.S. nearly $26 billion per year.

MEGA board OKs tax break for WSU medical office building

The Michigan Economic Growth Authority board Tuesday approved a $408,647 tax break to support construction of a new five-story medical office building in Detroit to house Wayne State University School of Medicine\'s Department of Psychiatry. The $18 million project on 2.7 acres at 3901 Chrysler Service Drive includes construction of a 62,840-square-foot building and parking lot with 139 spaces. The medical school\'s psychiatry department will be the main tenant and lease space from developer Queen Lillian LLC, according to the Michigan Economic Development Corp.

Wayne State gets licenses for breakthrough approaches to vision restoration

RetroSense Therapeutics LLC, a Michigan-based company, announced that it has executed its exclusive, worldwide option and signed a license agreement for novel gene-therapy approaches for treating blindness developed at Wayne State University's School of Medicine. Zhuo-Hua Pan, professor of anatomy and cell biology in the School of Medicine, along with colleagues at Salus University in Pennsylvania, developed the breakthrough therapy and follow-on approaches that offer promise to people suffering with incurable blindness caused by age-related macular degeneration and retinitis pigmentosa - retinal degenerative disorders that are currently incurable. "This license agreement with RetroSense is an exciting example of how critical research is to making discoveries, then getting those discoveries to the market," said Hilary Ratner, vice president for research at Wayne State University.
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Wayne State University students help care for remains at Oak Hill Cemetery in Pontiac

An article highlights the work of Wayne State University anthropology students and faculty who are donating space and time to help save Pontiac's Oak Hill Cemetery. Teddi Setzer, a physical anthropologist and lecturer, volunteered to assist with removing the bodies after The Oakland Press contacted the university's Department of Anthropology seeking assistance. The remains will be properly sorted through and housed at Wayne State University until the sites are properly secured. Records from the cemetery offices will assist in identifying the people in the disturbed crypts. Photos and video are included.

$1.7 million NIH grant to Wayne State prepares girls to study for health-related fields

Wayne State University faculty are collaborating on a federally funded effort to minimize health disparities nationwide by increasing the number of local high school girls, particularly those of color, who enter college prepared to study health-related science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) disciplines. Leading that effort is Sally K. Roberts, assistant professor of mathematics education in Wayne State\'s College of Education, who recently received a $1.7 million, five-year grant from the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities of the National Institutes of Health. She is planning a three-pronged approach that aims to increase the interest of metropolitan Detroit area girls in health-related STEM disciplines. Roberts, faculty adviser for WSU\'s Gaining Options-Girls Investigate Real Life (GO-GIRL) program, has developed an intervention that will draw seventh-grade participants from that initiative. Organizers say GO-GIRL, originally funded through a grant from the National Science Foundation, has enriched the academic experiences of more than 600 adolescent girls since the first class completed the program in 2002.
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Detroit physician's mentoring work goes into new regional education center

An article highlighting Mohammed Arsiwala, an internist on the board of the Michigan State Medical Society who has been mentoring high school students for more than 10 years, notes that the doctor has a chance to expand his health care mentoring program sixfold through the Michigan Area Health Education Center intended to encourage underprivileged K-12 students to go into medicine. In 2010, Wayne State University received a two-year, $900,000 grant from the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration to develop the first of two training centers in Detroit and central Michigan. Three other regional centers will be developed to cover the state\'s 82 counties.
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Wayne State University to open Damon J. Keith Center for Civil Rights this week

Wayne State University\'s Law School will hold a grand opening Wednesday for the new Damon J. Keith Center for Civil Rights. Its namesake, Judge Keith, serves on the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals and is a graduate of the law school. \"By developing programs and opportunities that promote his vision of equality and justice under the law for all people, the Keith Center will advance learning at Wayne Law, encourage community engagement, and promote civil rights in one of the most culturally rich and diverse cities in the United States,\" the school said in a news release. Professor Peter Hammer, director of the Keith Center, said the facility will be a major contributor to civil rights education and will have programs of scholarly legal study, community outreach, public interest law and lectures by prominent civil rights leaders. \"Judge Keith is truly an icon in the historic march toward equality and justice for all in this country,\" Hammer said. \"We are fortunate to have his wisdom and experience to guide us.\" National and local dignitaries will attend the 10 a.m. grand opening. RSVP information is provided.
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Anita Hill still looking to make a difference

Jocelyn Benson, associate director of the Damon Keith Center for Civil Rights at Wayne State University's School of Law, comments in a feature story about Anita Hill, professor and senior adviser to the provost at Brandeis University, who 20 years ago, testified that then- Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas sexually harrassed her. She has just released a new book titled "Reimagining Equality: Stories of Gender, Race, and Finding Home." "Her standing up was a powerful step forward in improving the way sexual harassment was discussed and dealt with in the workplace,\" said Benson.
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New group's plan: Link Detroit to Halifax, future mega-ships

A new nonprofit wants to transform Detroit\'s logistics assets into an inland port linked by rail to the deepwater facility in Halifax, Nova Scotia, to take advantage of the newest generation of massive cargo ships. Organizers of the Great Lakes Global Freight Gateway say Halifax is one of just two ports on the East Coast -- the other is Newport, Va. -- that can handle the \"Ultra Post-Panamax\" container ships that will ply the seas by 2014. The group believes it can convince logistics providers, maritime operators and manufacturers that it\'s cheaper and faster to ship goods to the Midwest through the Detroit-Halifax link. \"In the end, they all want the lowest price,\" said Michael Belzer, an economics professor at Wayne State University and CEO of Great Lakes Global Freight Gateway. \"Detroit has never sold itself as an inland port before. It has all the assets.\"

Recent weather proves climate crisis, Gore says at Wayne State

ýFormer Vice President Al Gore brought his message on the \"climate crisis\" Thursday to a crowd of more than 500 at Wayne State University. Gore drew parallels between the regional fight to restore the health of the Great Lakes to the global efforts to deal with climate change. Gore\'s appearance at the university coincides with the events of Great Lakes Week - a four-day gathering in Detroit of environmental groups from around the region. The week\'s events include meetings of the International Joint Commission and the Great Lakes Commission.