CaesNews

Where Science Meets Society

CaesNews

Where Science Meets Society

News and Notes – July 2020

July 27, 2020

|

Sang joins NIH Study Section

Shengmin Sang, Ph.D.

Shengmin Sang, Ph.D., a professor of functional foods and human health in A&T’s Center for Post-Harvest Technologies, has been chosen to serve as a member of the Integrative Nutrition and Metabolic Processes Study Section of the National Institutes of Health’s Center for Scientific Review, a great honor for scientists in this field.

His term as a member of the study section began July 1 and runs through June 30, 2024. Members are selected on the basis of their demonstrated competence and achievement in their scientific discipline as evidenced by the quality of research accomplishments, publications in scientific journals, and other significant scientific activities, achievements and honors.

Membership on the study section provides a unique opportunity for Sang to contribute to the national biomedical research effort. Study sections review grant applications submitted to the NIH, make recommendations on these applications to the appropriate NIH national advisory councilor board, and survey the status of research in their fields of science.

Cooperative Extension LiT program builds teen leaders

Thirteen eager teenagers from seven North Carolina counties participated in the 2020 4-H Leaders in Training (LiT) program, held virtually June 15-18.

LiT, a Cooperative Extension program that gives 4-H youth from limited resource communities the chance to learn leadership tactics and strategies, offered one-of-a-kind experiences for participants even though they couldn’t meet on campus this year, said Shannon Wiley, Ph.D., Extension 4-H youth development specialist.

Features of this year’s program included “Clover Night Live,” during which the teens participated in improvisational skits about civic engagement; computer coding using Scratch, which allows students to code animations and games; and Ag Chat, where the group discussed technology, careers in agriculture, and healthy lifestyles. LiT participants also developed “plans of action” to be used in their hometowns and counties.

Extension at A&T launched LiT in 2018, and 57 teens have completed the program.

Ibrahim, co-authors write COVID-19 article

Professor Salam Ibrahim, Ph.D., and Rabin Gyawali, Ph.D., of N.C. A&T and Hafize Fidan of the University of Food Technologies in Bulgaria have published a paper on the importance of good nutrition to maintain a healthy immune system to fight back in case of exposure to COVID-19.

The paper, “Self-Defense: A Practical Approach to Combatting COVID-19,” was published in the July edition of Acta Scientific Nutritional Health.

The authors provide an overview of why good nutrition is important for the immune system to function properly. They also offer their informed opinions on the role of human microbiota in creating a natural immunological defense system for combating COVID-19. The paper seeks to inspire scientists from other fields, such as nutrition immunology, to help provide consumers with a more global approach to fighting the pandemic.

Read more CAES News

‘Just what we need’The University Farm’s new Pavilion is the centerpiece of expanded programming.

‘Just what we need’The University Farm’s new Pavilion is the centerpiece of expanded programming.

Initially, it was just a collection of lines, measurements and artist renderings drawn on white broadsheets, some of them coffee-stained, curling at the corners and developing small tears along the edges from being flipped back and forth. But after years of hard work, focus and dedication, the new 17,000-square-foot CAES Extension and Farm Pavilion is now complete.
Taylor Mitchell ’22 heads to U.S. House Ag Committee as inaugural 1890 Universities Foundation intern

Taylor Mitchell ’22 heads to U.S. House Ag Committee as inaugural 1890 Universities Foundation intern

Taylor Mitchell, a 2022 graduate of the environmental studies program in the College of Agriculture and Environmental Science, will spend the summer as the inaugural 1890 Universities Foundation intern on the U.S. House Agriculture Committee.
November news and notes

November news and notes

Anthony Hooks spent Nov. 6, his last day as coordinator of the University Farm's Poultry Unit, in the most fitting way possible: sharing his passion for agriculture with students in an animal science lab. He is retiring after more than 30 years of service to the university and its students.
Troxler Shares Vision for Future of American Agriculture

Troxler Shares Vision for Future of American Agriculture

U.S. agriculture faces serious challenges from climate change, trade issues and the pandemic, but we can stay ahead of these issues by adopting a forward focus, N.C. Commissioner of Agriculture Steve Troxler told his audience of students and faculty in a recent virtual forum with the CAES.
No results found.

Never Miss an Issue


By submitting this form you agree to receive emails from the College of Agriculture and Environment Sciences at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Recent Articles

Extension Exhibit Puts Kids on Speedway to Healthy

N.C. A&T’s Free Lactation Clinic Moves into The Resurgent

N.C. A&T-Led Student Success and Workforce Development Center Holds 2026 Symposium