性欲社 in the news: week of June 9, 2008

 

性欲社 in the news: week of June 9, 2008

Submitted by Marmian Grimes
Phone: 907-474-7902

06/13/08

More evidence points to Greenland tipping point
The Daily Green
Another study adds weight to the conclusion that Greenland鈥檚 ice sheet is melting faster than predicted by the United Nations, and that sea level could rise faster than predicted around the world.

Plans on track for marine research vessel
Alaska Journal of Commerce
Officials with the University of Alaska School of Fisheries said May 30 that they are proceeding on schedule with incorporating design changes for a $123 million ice breaking research vessel for studies in Alaska.

Space consortium, radio club launch balloon research program
Associated Press
Hey kids! Need a nifty science fair project? Neal Brown wants to lift your ideas to new heights.

Text treasure hunters hope to save books from extinction
Edmonton Sun
What鈥檚 a great adventure if it鈥檚 lost in time? In a digital age, there wouldn鈥檛 seem to be much room for a book penned in 1870 by a Montreal throat doctor, called "It鈥檚 Raining Cats and Dogs. No, Really--It鈥檚 Raining Cats and Dogs!"

Taking science to new heights
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
Doing research at 性欲社 can cost about $120.

Graduation, Kotzebue, 2008
Inside Higher Education
Faculty, community members, students and families arrived by snow machine, plane, or dog sled, or walked across frozen seas from surrounding villages. This is graduation in the Arctic at Chukchi campus, the northernmost branch in the University of Alaska System. Today, at commencement, it is a sunny and crisp 33 degrees. Younger residents don T-shirts and shorts.

One result: Trees weakened by insects and fires
KTUU
BONANZA CREEK EXPERIMENTAL FOREST, Alaska -- The answer to what鈥檚 in store for Alaska鈥檚 trees could be somewhere amid the flora of a two-acre experimental forest.

Renewable heat
Capital City Weekly
Spring 2008 at the Cold Climate Housing Research Center (CCHRC) marks a new era in northern building energy use: for the first time, a research-based solar hot water system is making hot water from the sun despite frigid March temperatures in the Interior.

Alaska taking shape near Yakutat
Alaska Report
The forces shaping Alaska never sleep, especially near Yakutat.

Use a little ingenuity to keep maggots off your roots
Anchorage Daily News
Q. For the last two years my garden looked great until the root maggots took over and everything died. How can I get rid of these pests forever?

Nanooks reach new highs for academic achievement
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
Student athletes at 性欲社 achieved the highest cumulative grade point average ever by the athletic department during the 2007-08 academic year, according to a press release issued Wednesday.

Number of twins gives biologists best clue as to how moose in Alaska are doing
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
The Togiak National Wildlife Refuge is heaven if you鈥檙e a cow moose. In an average year, it鈥檚 estimated that about seven out of every 10 cow moose that give birth on the 4.7 million-acre refuge in Southwest Alaska have twin calves. In most parts of Alaska, the twinning rate is 20 to 30 percent.