22 research outputs found
Factories of the Future
Engineering; Industrial engineering; Production engineerin
Northern Light, volume 16, number 29
Distance education dream in jeopardy By: Melissa Eichholz (1)
Gun toter returns to claim his weapon By: Melissa Eichholz (1)
Students discuss world peace while lounging by the pool By: Jill Shaw (1)
Regents join in the spirit of planning By: Unknown (2)
Comics By: Herblock (2)
Comics By: Non Sequitur (2)
Letters to the editor (3)
Alaska is dean candidate’s dream By: Mary Crego (4)
Local professor interested in dean position By: Mary Crego (4)
Community college union elects new officers By: Northern Light Staff (4)
Campus Scanner (5)
Explosion leaves campus in the dark By: Northern Light Staff (5)
Regents vote on fee increase By: Jamie Tanner (6)
Lack of funding punches hole in library offerings By: Tara Sexton (7)
Student government elections draw low turnout By: Jennifer Shapley (8)
Regent committee maps plan for future By: Melissa Eichholz (10)
Native American speaker challenges ‘world view’ of land By: Jamie Tanner (10)
‘Enemy’ doesn’t live up to its potential By: Unknown (11)
Suspense, good directing make ‘Saint’ a winner By: Michael Marcella (11)
UAA clubs offer outlet from studies By: Jason Rand (12-13)
Top Ten the EDGE KRUA 88.1 FM (14)
Campus Calendar (14)
Control stress, don’t let it run your life By: Daryl Young (14)
Sax player returns to Jazz Week By: William M. Stenzel (15)
Small-town Texas life gives favor to ‘Liar’s’ By: Rose Cox (16)
Cheap beer and tasty pizza worth drive to Eagle River By: Debbie Taylor (16)
Classified (17)
Reality Check By: Dave Whamond (18)
Dilbert By: Scott Adams (18)
ICK By: Rich Moyer (18)
Rubes By: Leigh Rubin (18)
Between classes (UAA) By: Derek Armstrong (18)
Answers to Crossword (18)
Crossword (19)
Mother Goose & Grimm By: Mike Peters (19)
Astrological Guru (19)
Cigarettes are evil (do you happen to have one?) By: William K. Wolfrum (20)
Debate team members earn more than 120 awards By: Rachel M. Grenier (20)
UAA student skis freely By: William K. Wolfrum (21)
College aged stars causes shift in sports By: William K. Wolfrum (22)
Hockey players honored By: William K. Wolfrum (23)
Tkacheva wins first two UAA national titles By: William K. Wolfrum (24)
UAA announces finalists for Athlete of the Year By: Chris Curtis (24)
Men’s basketball team announces signing of two recruits By: Chris Curtis (24
Recommended from our members
Y-12 Plant decontamination and decommissioning technology logic diagram for Building 9201-4. Volume 3: Technology evaluation data sheets; Part A: Characterization, dismantlement
The Y-12 Plant Decontamination and Decommissioning Technology Logic Diagram for Building 9201-4 (TLD) was developed to provide a decision-support tool that relates decontamination and decommissioning (D and D) problems at Bldg. 9201-4 to potential technologies that can remediate these problems. The TLD uses information from the Strategic Roadmap for the Oak Ridge Reservation, the Oak Ridge K-25 Site Technology Logic Diagram, the Oak Ridge National Laboratory Technology Logic Diagram, and a previous Hanford logic diagram. This TLD identifies the research, development, demonstration, testing, and evaluation needed for sufficient development of these technologies to allow for technology transfer and application to D and D and waste management (WM) activities. It is essential that follow-on engineering studies be conducted to build on the output of this project. These studies will begin by selecting the most promising technologies identified in the TLD and by finding an optimum mix of technologies that will provide a socially acceptable balance between cost and risk. This report consists of the characterization and dismantlement data sheets
Southern Accent September 1996 - April 1997
Southern Adventist University\u27s newspaper, Southern Accent, for the academic year of 1996-1997.https://knowledge.e.southern.edu/southern_accent/1072/thumbnail.jp
Folklore and the Internet: Vernacular Expression in a Digital World
Folklore and the Internet is a pioneering examination of the folkloric qualities of the World Wide Web, e-mail, and related digital media. It shows that folk culture, sustained by a new and evolving vernacular, has been a key, since the Internetýs beginnings, to language, practice, and interaction online. Users of many sorts continue to develop the Internet as a significant medium for generating, transmitting, documenting, and preserving folklore. In a set of new, insightful essays, contributors Trevor J. Blank, Simon J. Bronner, Robert Dobler, Russell Frank, Gregory Hansen, Robert Glenn Howard, Lynne S. McNeill, Elizabeth Tucker, and William Westerman showcase ways the Internet both shapes and is shaped by folklore.https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/usupress_pubs/1034/thumbnail.jp