Peter Stearns on public and private higher ed here in Virginia

Mason’s Provost, Peter Stearns,  has a very interesting blogpost on the increasingly ambiguous boundary between public and private institutions here.

The key point is that private non-profit institutions are often viewed as tremendous assets by states (Harvard immediately jumps to mind). Note that in Massachusetts, the flagship public, UMass Amherst, has often struggled.

We certainly live in interesting times….

Russian Billionaires and their Toys

I’m back…flew in from St. Kitts last night. I’m enclosing a picture from St. Barthes though. These are two of the six boats owned by the same Russian Billionaire. The one that appears to be a submarine is particularly stunning. It covered the distance from where I took the picture to over the horizon is what appeared to be 20 minutes.

As for me, I’d rather have a two-photon microscope.

Thanks to patient and loyal readers for their patience. Now back the world of science….

Onto the Caribbean….

We dodged the proverbial bullet here in Washington DC as the monster blizzard does what it has to do to vast swaths of the rest of the US. The upshot is that I’ll be able to leave town tomorrow for a week’s vacation. Email access will be minimal, but if I happen onto any blog-worthy ideas, I’ll probably manage to post them at some point.

Speaking directly

Today I spent a while on the phone with our public relations folks trying to put into words a concept that really, on reflection, was quite simple: the Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study is a national scientific gem and that’s evidenced everywhere, from our Nobel laureate scientific DNA to the way we win our scientific respect: competitively with the likes of Harvard, Yale and Caltech–not by our Washington connections.

Sometimes it’s better to just say what you have to say directly and not beat around the bush.

Concussion Injury in the NFL: The New Yorker

Ben McGrath’s piece in this week’s New Yorker is here.

Money quote from our friend and colleague Geoff Ling:

Colonel Geoffrey Ling, a neurologist with the Defense Department, had come to the InterContinental to share some of the government’s research with the N.F.L.’s medical brain trust. (Concussions among the men and women returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, one doctor told me, could be “the next Agent Orange.”) “If you look historically, what really hurts our soldiers from blasts is artillery shells, mortar shells,” Ling said. “The combat helmet was designed particularly for mitigation of fragments. It does have some ballistic protection. You could shoot at the thing point blank with a 9-millimetre pistol, and you won’t penetrate it. That’s pretty doggone good. I’m surprised New York City policemen aren’t wearing the doggone thing. But, like, I wouldn’t play football with the thing. It ain’t that good.”

NIH revolt

ScienceInsider has the latest news on the growing insurgency among biomedical researchers reacting to the news that NIH plans to break up National Center for Research Resources (NCRR). My former colleague at FASEB, Howard Garrison is quoted “It seems wasteful and destructive without a vision of why.”

NCRR has played a very important historical role in the history of the National Institutes of Health. We’ll have to see how this plays out.