
Menlo College
Articles
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Oct 9, 2024 |
openpr.com | Menlo College
Menlo College Receives Record-Breaking U.S. Department of Education Grant to Support Student SuccessAtherton, California, October 1, 2024 - Menlo College has been awarded $2,979,409 from the U.S. Department of Education for its "From Hispanic-Enrolling to Hispanic-Serving: Improving Outcomes for Hispanic and Low-Income Students at Menlo College" project under the Department of Education Title V Developing Hispanic-Serving Institutions Program.
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Jan 18, 2024 |
thepanamanews.com | Wei Gordon |Menlo College |Nadav Ahituv
Fruit bats have honed their sweet tooth through adaptive evolution. Keith Rose/iStock via Getty Images PlusWhy don’t fruit bats get diabetes? New understanding of how they’veadapted to a high-sugar diet could lead to treatments for peopleby Wei Gordon, Menlo College and Nadav Ahituv, University of California, San FranciscoPeople around the world eat too much sugar. When the body is unable to process sugar effectively, leading to excess glucose in the blood, this can result in diabetes.
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Jan 14, 2024 |
malaysia.news.yahoo.com | Wei Gordon |Menlo College |Nadav Ahituv
People around the world eat too much sugar. When the body is unable to process sugar effectively, leading to excess glucose in the blood, this can result in diabetes. According to the World Health Organization, diabetes became the ninth leading cause of death in 2019. Humans are not the only mammals that love sugar. Fruit bats do, too, eating up to twice their body weight in sugary fruit a day. However, unlike humans, fruit bats thrive on a sugar-rich diet.
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Jan 9, 2024 |
msn.com | Nadav Ahituv |Wei Gordon |Menlo College
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Jan 9, 2024 |
yahoo.com | Wei Gordon |Menlo College |Nadav Ahituv
People around the world eat too much sugar. When the body is unable to process sugar effectively, leading to excess glucose in the blood, this can result in diabetes. According to the World Health Organization, diabetes became the ninth leading cause of death in 2019. Humans are not the only mammals that love sugar. Fruit bats do, too, eating up to twice their body weight in sugary fruit a day. However, unlike humans, fruit bats thrive on a sugar-rich diet.
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