Olympus Announces Global Image of the Year Award Winners
A record number of entries celebrate art and science through microscopy
WALTHAM, Mass., April 07, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) Olympus unveiled the winners of their second Global Image of the Year Life Science Light Microscopy Award, an annual competition that recognizes the best in life science imaging. The winning images were selected from a record number of entries nearly 700 submissions from 61 countries.
Global Winner
Werner Zuschratter from Germany was selected as the global winner for his eye-catching image of a whole rat embryo captured with a confocal microscope. For the grand prize, Zuschratter will receive an Olympus SZX7 stereo microscope with a DP27 digital camera.
Olympus unveiled the winners of their second Global Image of the Year Life Science Light Microscopy Award, an annual competition that recognizes the best in life science imaging. The winning images were selected from a record number of entries nearly 700 submissions from 61 countries.
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Trasell Underwood doesn t know how hard it will be yet.
Underwood adopted her son when he was 5 months old; she says his birth mother was using drugs during pregnancy, and she was concerned from the outset about his potential disabilities. When her son was in prekindergarten, she felt her toddler was even more hyperactive than toddlers typically are, and had him independently tested for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). She brought the results to the special education staff at Pecan Springs Elementary, who concurred. But diagnoses change as kids grow and develop, and sometimes that growth highlights new needs to be addressed by parents and teachers. That s why the law requires reevaluation for special education students every three years.
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The millennial senator-elect’s incessant posting shows us the future of public life.
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Derek Robertson is the digital editor for Indianapolis Monthly. Follow him on Twitter @derek j rob.
Perusing the first few years of Georgia Senator-elect Jon Ossoff’s Twitter feed, I felt something that must have been akin to what Baby Boomers felt when Bill Clinton used Fleetwood Mac’s “Don’t Stop” as his 1992 campaign anthem:
sweet, sweet representation.
The 33-year-old Ossoff is a prime millennial, far closer in age to Taylor Swift (and your author) than the current youngest U.S. Senator (Josh Hawley, who at 41 is on the cusp of Gen X). As such, the depths of his Twitter timeline are jam-packed with true 90s-kid cultural referents: “The Sandlot,” Outkast, “Grand Theft Auto.” Even more significant than those time-stamped cultural touchpoints, however, is what his endless stream of tweets represents: the impending swearing-in of our first