78,021 research outputs found

    Spartan Daily, February 19, 1960

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    Volume 47, Issue 75https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/3991/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, October 17, 1949

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    Volume 38, Issue 8https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/11275/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, October 17, 1949

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    Volume 38, Issue 8https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/11275/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, February 25, 1963

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    Volume 50, Issue 74https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/4412/thumbnail.jp

    Pace Energy & Climate Center 2016 Annual Report

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    The Center staff and many allies are deeply involved in the business of electric utility transformation. We live and work in a remarkable time. Decades of steady, thoughtful leadership on clean energy issues is now bearing fruit. Clean energy is not just the right thing to do, it is increasingly recognized as the right choice economically, technically, and for all members of society. Our work, especially in 2016, has been about making sure that we seize the moment and secure the benefits of clean energy use for all communities in New York, the Northeast U.S., across the country, and throughout the world. Never has it been more important that we succeed in our work. The challenges of climate change, the changing path of policy, and the moral imperative of building a clean energy foundation for future generations drive us every day. While we don’t work actively in Washington, D.C., changes there threaten our work. The Center focuses on waging a strong offense at the state and community level, and on effectively communicating the benefits of clean energy development and policy. In 2016, we answered the call for clear-eyed policy leadership in the many New York Public Service Commission’s (“NYPSC”) Reforming the Energy Vision (“REV”) initiative proceedings under way. Our work multiplied as the Commission transitioned from vision to implementation and execution, and so did our impact. See the Appendix for the active NY PSC proceedings in which the Center is engaged! The Center continued its regional leadership as a champion of super-efficient combined heat and power, strong solar energy market policy, and interstate cooperation to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. We expand the reach of our ideas and support through formal regulatory interventions, thought leadership, and good old-fashioned research and writing. The Pace Energy and Climate Center continues to operate as a small, agile, interdisciplinary team of talented and committed individuals, and continues to benefit from the support of the best law student interns anywhere. Our network of collaborators at other organizations has grown over the year, as has our reputation in the media

    Ready for Tomorrow: Demand-Side Emerging Skills for the 21st Century

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    As part of the Ready for the Job demand-side skill assessment, the Heldrich Center explored emerging work skills that will affect New Jersey's workforce in the next three to five years. The Heldrich Center identified five specific areas likely to generate new skill demands: biotechnology, security, e-learning, e-commerce, and food/agribusiness. This report explores the study's findings and offers recommendations for improving education and training in New Jersey

    Spartan Daily, February 10, 1944

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    Volume 32, Issue 77https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/10883/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, November 2, 1965

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    Volume 53, Issue 30https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/4735/thumbnail.jp

    Probe design

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    Outer planetary probe designs consider mission characteristics, structural configuration, delivery mode, scientific payload, environmental extremes, mass properties, and the launch vehicle and spacecraft interface

    Spartan Daily, May 2, 1960

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    Volume 47, Issue 118https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/4034/thumbnail.jp
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