Dear Faculty,
This will be my last blog post for Lighthouse in the Basement. I hope you enjoy reading the information I have posted and benefit from the new books I have selected to apprise you of.
Sincerely,
Barbara Howser
Dear Faculty,
This will be my last blog post for Lighthouse in the Basement. I hope you enjoy reading the information I have posted and benefit from the new books I have selected to apprise you of.
Sincerely,
Barbara Howser
Congratulations to Dr. Yvette Weatherton, a senior lecturer in the civil engineering department. She has contributed a chapter to a textbook Climate Change and Sustainable Development, published in March 2010. Dr. W eatherton wrote the chapter, titled “An Examination of Air Temperatures and Soil Temperatures in the United States Gulf Coast and Implications Related to Nitrous Oxide Emissions from Soil,” with Edith Womack-Richardson of Southern University.
Congratulations also to Dr. Melanie Sattler. “Civil Engineering Assistant Professor Melanie Sattler is coordinating the “Engineering Sustainable Engineers” program, which is being underwritten by a $150,000 grant by the National Science Foundation. Her collaborators include Drs. Yvette Weatherton and Stephen Mattingly from Civil Engineering, Kambiz Alavi from Electrical Engineering, and Victoria Chen and Jamie Rogers from Industrial & Manufacturing Systems Engineering.”
Courtesy / College of Engineering News
You may remember earlier this year (April 2010), the eruption of Iceland’s Eyjafjallajökull volcano, which caused airlines to cancel many flights into & out of European airspace. I have a friend who cancelled a trip to Europe because of the situation. A Math Department faculty member was in Russia for a conference and could not depart afterward due to the cancelled flights.
You may be interested in reading this article on Bloomberg.com Europe Airspace Shutdown Worsened by Lack of Research. The article implies a lack of research on the effects of volcanic ash on jet engines and over reliance on computer modeling.
I came across this article in an electronic open access library journal, Issues in Science and Technology Librarianship. I thought it was an interesting piece and wanted to share with you all. The article is a viewpoint about how students writing master’s theses know to cite their sources and how to not plagiarize when paraphrasing.
http://www.istl.org/10-summer/viewpoint.html
Civil Engineering & Environmental Engineering
Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering
Industrial Manufacturing and Systems Engineering
Of Interest
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