2,809 research outputs found

    Faculty Excellence

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    Each year, the University of New Hampshire selects a small number of its outstanding faculty for special recognition of their achievements in teaching, scholarship and service. Awards for Excellence in Teaching are given in each college and school, and university-wide awards recognize public service, research, teaching and engagement. This booklet details the year\u27s award winners\u27 accomplishments in short profiles with photographs and text

    Faculty Excellence

    Get PDF
    Each year, the University of New Hampshire selects a small number of its outstanding faculty for special recognition of their achievements in teaching, scholarship and service. Awards for Excellence in Teaching are given in each college and school, and university-wide awards recognize public service, research, teaching and engagement. This booklet details the year\u27s award winners\u27 accomplishments in short profiles with photographs and text

    Faculty Excellence

    Get PDF
    Each year, the University of New Hampshire selects a small number of its outstanding faculty for special recognition of their achievements in teaching, scholarship and service. Awards for Excellence in Teaching are given in each college and school, and university-wide awards recognize public service, research, teaching and engagement. This booklet details the year\u27s award winners\u27 accomplishments in short profiles with photographs and text

    National Garrett Morgan Sustainable Transportation Symposium, MTI Report 08-02

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    The Mineta Transportation Institute brought together experts in surface transportation and students from middle and high schools to discuss sustainable transportation topics on April 1, 2008. The goal was to introduce the students to transportation-related careers and to inspire them to pursue the academic curricula that would lead to success in those careers. Students from California, Maryland and Virginia participated in a videoconference, during which they heard a keynote statement from US Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters. The students also presented project proposals for innovative transportation alternatives during the videoconference. The presentations were followed by a moderator-led question period featuring discussions of the students’ perceptions of critical transportation issues and their interest in transportation careers. This publication is an edited summary of the March 27, 2007 event

    MasterChem: Cooking 2D-polymers

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    2D-polymers are still dominated by graphene and closely related materials such as boron nitride, transition metal sulphides and oxides. However, the rational combination of molecules with suitable design is already showing the high potential of chemistry in this new research field. The aim of this feature article is to illustrate, and provide some perspectives, the current state-of-the-art in the field of synthetic 2D-polymers showing different alternatives to prepare this novel type of polymers based on the rational use of chemistry. This review comprises a brief revision of the essential concepts, the strategies of preparation following the two general approaches, bottom-up and top-down, and a revision of the promising seminal properties showed by some of these nanomaterials.Financial support from Spanish MINECO (MAT2013-46753-C2-1-P and MAT2013-46502-C2-2-P). D. R. thanks the Spanish MECD for a FPU gran

    Spartan Daily, May 8, 1989

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    Volume 92, Issue 63https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/7853/thumbnail.jp

    volume 3, no. 5 (Fall 1999)

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    South Dakota Farm and Home Research

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    Comments from the lab Guest editorial is from the coordinator for Corn Utilization Council sponsored studies. He warns that the European Community is far ahead of us in ag research funding. [p] 2Corn check-off Its money stays here in South Dakota for research and market development, says Corn Utilization Council administrator. Better corn prices will come when we keep the corn here, too. [p] 3In\u27 plastic bags: Cornstarch Three scientists from three different research areas work on biodegradable plastic film. One makes the film; another encourages his bacteria to eat it; the other measures their success. [p] 5In oiI wells, papers, clothing, medicine: Pullulan This microbial gum could increase recovery from low-producing wells, make textiles water resistant, help texture of foods and beverages. It is already a blood plasma substitute. [p] 13On winter roads: CMA Salt\u27s not all that cheap if you add up the rust, road repair, and harm to the environment it causes. We\u27ll all benefit if this corn derived product reaches the manufacturing stage. [p] 16In feedlots: WDG A great feed if you live near an ethanol producing facility, but it spoils rapidly in summer and freezes solid in winter. SDSU researcher improves its shelf life by adding oat hulls. [p] 19Not In cornfields: Foxtail No more automatically using herbicides beforehand for foxtail problems that may not even exist. Now there\u27s proof that postemergence herbicides, used only if, when, and where needed, work as well or better. [p] 22https://openprairie.sdstate.edu/agexperimentsta_sd-fhr/1149/thumbnail.jp

    Inside UNLV

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