Geneticist Andrew Zinn to lead UT Southwestern Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences

Newswise DALLAS Aug. 1, 2013 Geneticist Dr. Andrew R. Zinn, professor in the Department of Internal Medicine and the Eugene McDermott Center for Human Growth and Development, has been named the eighth dean of UT Southwestern Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, effective August 1.

Dr. Zinn brings years of experience in discovery research, graduate and medical education, and administration to this position, said Dr. David W. Russell, vice provost and dean of basic research, and professor of molecular genetics at UT Southwestern Medical Center.

The graduate school, ranked in the top 20 programs in the nation for biological research, has nearly 650 students enrolled in one of more than a dozen programs leading to doctor of philosophy, master of science, or combined doctor of medicine-doctor of philosophy degrees for biomedical scientists, counselors, engineers, and communicators. The school also includes postdoctoral training.

I look forward to this opportunity to provide leadership at the school, which offers a proud tradition of training some of the worlds top leaders in biomedical research, said Dr. Zinn, a UT Southwestern alumnus. We plan to develop novel initiatives in graduate education that include the use of online learning, while continuing to recruit top-notch students, develop an office of career development for graduate students and postdoctoral fellows, and work towards increasing contacts with our esteemed alumni.

Dr. Zinn will continue to direct the Medical Scientist Training Program, which annually enrolls about 10 outstanding M.D./Ph.D. dual-degree students from around the world who have substantive experience in laboratory investigations and a strong desire to pursue a research career related to medicine.

Dr. Zinn graduated Phi Beta Kappa and with highest honors from the Plan II honors program at UT Austin, and began his research career there working in protein synthesis before earning his M.D. and Ph.D. degrees from UT Southwestern. He was inducted to the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society as a medical school student, and also received the 1988 Nominata Award, the highest honor bestowed on a student by the graduate school.

He completed internships and residency in internal medicine at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, and postdoctoral training in human and mouse genetics as a Damon Runyon-Walter Winchell Cancer Research Fellow at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

He returned to UT Southwestern in 1993 as an independent postdoctoral fellow in the Program for Excellence in Postgraduate Research and joined the faculty in 1996, earning an international reputation as a human geneticist. He and his laboratory colleagues made important contributions to our understanding of human sex chromosome disorders, discovered the genetic basis of the most common form of inherited obesity (mutations in the SIM1 gene), and most recently identified a novel cause of a rare skin and immunodeficiency disorder.

The graduate school trains future scientists to investigate basic life processes from the molecular level to the whole animal and allows them to pursue majors in the laboratories of some of the world's most distinguished researchers. The goal of the graduate school is to provide students with a foundation for successful careers as leaders in biomedical research and education. Its alumni can be found at top research institutions throughout the world. The graduate school was established in 1972 when UT Southwestern was reorganized as a medical center with three components, the medical school, graduate school and health professions school. It has since awarded about 2,700 degrees.

The graduate school offers 11 doctoral programs including biological chemistry, cancer biology, cell regulation, genetics and development, immunology, integrative biology, molecular biophysics, molecular microbiology, and neuroscience in the basic sciences, and doctorates in clinical psychology and biomedical engineering, a joint program with UT Arlington and UT Dallas.

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Geneticist Andrew Zinn to lead UT Southwestern Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences

Canada’s Catamaran to buy private pharmacy benefit manager for $409 million

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Canada's Catamaran to buy private pharmacy benefit manager for $409 million

Developer gets down to business on Victoria Ave.

By the summer of 2014, a new financial institution and professional medical centre should be open for business on a prime piece of land along Victoria Avenue.

Construction is slated to begin this fall on a major portion of the former Fleming School property (now called Sioux Valley High School), which is owned by local developer Kirk Brugger.

My wife Robyn and I are very happy that were finally moving forward on this, Brugger said. Im very happy that Im working with Brandon University, Im past alumni president so Im very happy about working with them on getting their part of it done as well.

Bruggers commercial plan includes two separate, two-storey buildings. On the eastern side of the property at Victoria Avenue and 23rd Street will be a 15,000-square-foot financial institution.

On the western side near Victoria and 25th Street will be a roughly 30,000-square-foot medical centre.

There will be a number of businesses in the professional centre, but the financial institution on the eastern half will be just one entity, Brugger said.

The project has been a few years in the making. Back in 2011, Bruggers attempt to rezone a parcel of the property into commercial land was rejected by the Brandon and Area Planning District board. At the time, many people in the neighbourhood spoke out against rezoning the green space into commercial property. Mayor Shari Decter Hirst was a vocal opponent, due to the desperate need for affordable housing in Brandon.

Later that year, Brandon City Council approved a proposal from Brugger to develop the land along Victoria Avenue for commercial use on the condition that the remaining available land be used for affordable housing projects.

Brugger continued on with his vision, which evolved to include an affordable housing portion for mature Brandon University students.

In 2012, the university signed a memorandum of understanding with Brugger and the City of Brandon to develop non-profit housing on 2.2 acres of the property.

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Developer gets down to business on Victoria Ave.

McKeesport Area, alumni group plan revamped homecoming

Published: Saturday, July 27, 2013, 1:46a.m. Updated 9 hours ago

McKeesport Area High School and its alumni association are revamping the district's homecoming celebration.

Alumni, students and district residents are invited to take part in a full day of activities promoting Tiger pride on Sept. 7 as the McKeesport Area Tigers football team takes on the Woodland Hills Wolverines at 1 p.m. at Weigle Schaeffer Memorial Stadium.

The 2013 season will mark the return of George Smith as the Tigers coach. Smith left his position three years ago after a long and successful career on the McKeesport sidelines. He recently was inducted into the Western Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame.

The football program has such a rich history in our school district, McKeesport Area communications specialist Kristen Giran said. We are planning a day of activities that will bring people together from all five of our district communities (McKeesport, White Oak, Dravosburg, Versailles and South Versailles Township). We want the whole community to feel welcome in our schools.

District officials and the McKeesport High School Alumni & Friends Association are planning a catered tailgate picnic from 10:30 a.m. to noon at the high school's inner courtyard. Tickets $6 for adults and $2 for children can be purchased in the athletic office. Tickets are limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis.

The district's homecoming parade will make a comeback before the Saturday afternoon game. Students will be on hand to lead tours of the high school, and there will be Kids Zone activities on the reserved side of the stadium during the game for the youngest Tigers-to-be.

We hope the entire community comes out to visit our high school, Superintendent Timothy Gabauer said. If you graduated or your children graduated 20 or even just 10 years ago, you will be amazed at the changes in the educational facility provided to our students today.

A special halftime salute will honor members of the school's 1994 and 2005 state championship football teams, current Hall of Fame members, and the new inductees.

This is something different, athletic director Charley Kiss said. It will be exciting to have people here from past Tiger teams, past champions. With this being an afternoon game, we hope more alumni and more people from the community can attend.

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McKeesport Area, alumni group plan revamped homecoming