UNIVERSITY of OKLAHOMA Office Of

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

UNIVERSITY of OKLAHOMA Office Of UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA Office of Research Administration REJECTION REPORT Proposal Rejections - October, 1998 Amount 98S0091 Adedeji Badiru, Industrial Eng. $232,601.00 National Science Foundation A New Intelligent Database Search Technique Using Trisectioning and Modal Concentration 98S0496 Le Gruenwald, Computer Science $195,042.00 National Science Foundation Supporting Migration and Disconnection in Mobile Database Systems 98S0568 Miguel Bagajewicz, Chemical Eng. & Materials Sci. CEO $202,315.00 National Science Foundation Design and Retrofit of Crude Fractionation Units 98S0576 Arthur Breipohl, Electrical & Computer Eng. $499,898.00 Gary Emery, Business Administration Dean's Office Fred Lee, Electrical & Computer Eng. National Science Foundation Innovative Curricula for the Emerging Electrical Energy Market Proposal Rejections - October, 1998 Amount 98S0577 Randall Kolar, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. $363,465.00 S Lakshmivarahan, Computer Science Sudarshan Dhall, Computer Science David Sabatini, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. Leslie Fink, II, Instructional Development Claude Duchon, Meteorology Jeffrey Harwell, Chemical Eng. & Materials Sci. Baxter Vieux, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. National Science Foundation Modeling Environmental Systems: A Project Driven, Team Approach to Theory and Application 98S0578 Shivakumar Raman, Industrial Eng. $500,000.00 Mary Court, Industrial Eng. Pakize Pulat, Industrial Eng. Craig Harvey, Industrial Eng. Nandkumar Nayar, Business Administration Dean's Office National Science Foundation Integrated Product Development and Enterprise Modeling 98S0602 Kevin Smart, Geology & Geophysics $108,946.00 National Science Foundation The Role of Outcrop- and Smaller-Scale Processes in the Deformational History of the Ouachita Mountains Frontal Zone 98S0643 Roger Young, Geology & Geophysics $247,387.00 John Castagna, Geology & Geophysics Gerilyn Soreghan, Geology & Geophysics U.S. Department of Energy High-Resolution 3D Geophysical Characterization of Turbidite Reservoir Analogs 98S0646 Faruk Civan, Petroleum & Geological Eng. $168,978.00 U.S. Department of Energy Formation Damage Effects in Reservoir Simulation Proposal Rejections - October, 1998 Amount 98S0649 Michael Mc Inerney, Botany & Microbiology $657,932.00 Ralph Tanner, Botany & Microbiology Roy Knapp, Petroleum & Geological Eng. Veronica Worrell, Botany & Microbiology U.S. Department of Energy Microbial Water Immobilization Process to Improve Oil Recovery 98S0668 Craig Harvey, Industrial Eng. $143,773.00 National Science Foundation The Effects of Distance Collaborative Technology on Engineering Decision Making 98S0701 David Deming, Geology & Geophysics $125,760.00 Youngmin Lee, Geology & Geophysics National Science Foundation The Thermal Conductivity of Sedimentary Rock at High Temperature 99S0021 M.V. Gowda, Science & Public Policy $194,307.00 Jeffrey Fox, Science & Public Policy U.S. Department of Justice, National Institute of Justice Information, Technology and Risk Management in Community Policing: The Utility and Effect of Sex Offender Notification under Megan's Law Proposal Rejections - October, 1998 Amount 99S0060 Anant Kukreti, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. $261,266.00 Gerald Miller, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. Jess Everett, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. Md Zaman, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. David Sabatini, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. Leslie Fink, II, Instructional Development Thomas Bush, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. Bruce Russell, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. Benjamin Wallace, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. Hermann Gruenwald, Management Information Systems Michael Mooney, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. Baxter Vieux, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. Randall Kolar, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. Kurt Gramoll, Aerospace & Mechanical Eng. Kanthasamy Muraleetharan, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. Robert Knox, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. U.S. Department of Education Sooner City--Design Across the Curriculum TOTAL PROPOSALS REJECTED $3,901,670.00 October, 1998.
Recommended publications
  • HKS Magazine
    HARVARD + CONCERNED CITIZEN KENNEDY WHO ARE YOUR PEOPLE? SCHOOL THE ADVOCATE magazine winter 2020 EARLYBIRD PRICING NOW AVAILABLE! 1_HKSmag_wi20_cvr1-4_F2.indd 3 1/14/20 2:48 PM THE SIXTH COURSE FOR ONE EVENING IN NOVEMBER, the Forum was remade into the White House Situation Room. The imagined scenario: a crisis in 2021 as North Korea fires a test missile far into the Pacific Ocean, with experts convinced this advance in the country’s capabilities was funded by a new Chinese digital currency. The assembled group, which included former Cabinet members and presidential advisers such as Lawrence Summers, Meghan O’Sullivan, and Ash Carter, dove deeply into the substance of the matter. Just as valuable, their firsthand knowledge of how personalities, agendas, and imperfect information play vital roles in decision making. PHOTO BY MIKE DESTEFANO winterwinter 20202020 | harvard kennedy school 1 2 HKSmag_wi20_IFC2-11_F2.indd 2 1/14/20 12:13 PM 2 HKSmag_wi20_IFC2-11_F2.indd 1 1/14/20 12:14 PM EXECUTIVE SUMMARY IN THIS ISSUE WHEN I SPEAK TO PEOPLE ON MY TRAVELS, or to people who are visiting Harvard Kennedy School Associate Dean for from across the United States and around the globe, they often ask me what we are doing to Communications and Public Affairs strengthen democracy and democratic institutions at a time when they appear to be under Thoko Moyo threat. In this issue of the magazine, we offer some answers to that important question. Managing Editor Many of our faculty, students, alumni, and staff are committed to making democracy Nora Delaney count. We have efforts underway to increase civic participation, strengthen democratic Editor institutions, train leaders to be more responsive to their citizens, and improve accuracy in the Robert O’Neill media and the public sphere.
    [Show full text]
  • Hard Work, Clear Vision and a Passion for the Institute Defined President David Deming’S Tenure
    Founded in 1882, The Cleveland Institute of Art is an independent college of art and design committed to leadership and vision in all forms of visual arts education. The Institute makes enduring contributions to art and education and connects to the community through gallery exhibitions, lectures, a continuing education pro- Link gram and The Cleveland Institute of Art Cinematheque. SPRING/summer 2010 NEWS FOR ALUMNI AND FRIENDS OF THE CLEVELAND INSTITUTE OF ART HARD WORK, CLEAR VISION AND A PASSION FOR THE INSTITUTE DEFINED PRESIDENT DAVID DEMING’S TENURE OUTGOING PRESIDENT RETIRES JUNE 30 One of David Deming’s favorite STUDENT YEARS: HARD WORK memories from his student days at AND HAPPY MEMORIES The Cleveland Institute of Art was Deming flourished as a student at The the day he got his first C. Cleveland Institute of Art in the 1960s, The year was 1962; the class was studying sculpture under Bill McVey ’28, first-year Life Drawing taught by Frank John Clague ’56 and Jerry Aidlin ’61; Meyers ’50. “It was the first time he working for John Paul Miller ’40 in the graded us and I got a C+. I don’t think CIA gallery for four years, and soaking I’d ever earned less than an A on any art up new ideas in Franny Taft’s art assignment. The other students all looked history classes. very upset and we compared notes at McVey, in particular, became a valued break time. It turned out I had the best mentor. “I had the privilege of working grade. So I immediately thought, ‘OK, I for Bill on a number of projects out at understand what’s going on; he’s raising his studio and one of the things I recog- the bar.’ I was OK with it.
    [Show full text]
  • UNIVERSITY of OKLAHOMA Office of Research Administration
    UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA Office of Research Administration PROPOSALS NOT FUNDED Proposals Not Funded - June, 2000 Amount 00S0010 Karel Schubert, Botany & Microbiology $353,161.00 National Science Foundation Biochemical and Molecular Regulation of IMP Dehydrogenenase from Glycine max 00S0031 Ronald Halterman, Chemistry & Biochemistry $576,835.00 National Science Foundation Synthesis and Reactivity of Substituted Metallocenes 00S0043 Eric Abraham, Physics & Astronomy $459,465.00 National Science Foundation CAREER: Ultracold Atomic Studies Using Laser Fields 00S0110 Morris Foster, Anthropology $1,191,403.00 Charles Butler, African & Afro-American Studies U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health African American Community Review of Genetic Research 00S0174 Anant Kukreti, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. $261,717.00 Md Zaman, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. Thurman Scott, Rock Mechanics Institute National Science Foundation Micro and Macro Damage Mechanics of High Performance Mechanics: Experiments and Modeling 00S0198 Tomasz Przebinda, Mathematics $30,133.00 U.S. Department of Defense, National Security Agency Nilpotent Orbits and Moment Maps Associated With Real Reductive Dual Pairs. Proposals Not Funded - June, 2000 Amount 00S0210 Tomasz Przebinda, Mathematics $86,361.00 Murad Ozaydin, Mathematics Victor De Brunner, Electrical & Computer Eng. U.S. Department of Defense, National Security Agency Applications of Group Representation Theory to Discrete Signal Processing 00S0212 Andy Magid, Mathematics $43,947.00 U.S. Department of Defense, National Security Agency Deformations of Representations; and Prounipotent Groups in Differential Galois Theory 00S0213 Charles Mankin, Ok. Geological Survey $491,202.00 U.S. Department of Energy Applications of Petroleum Technologies on Non-allotted Native American and Alaskan Native Corporation Lands 00S0237 Roger Harrison Jr, Chemical Eng.
    [Show full text]
  • Random Assignment of MBA Peers And
    Friends with (Wage) Benefits: Random Assignment of MBA Peers and Reallocation to the Financial Industry Isaac Hacamo and Kristoph Kleiner∗ Indiana University, Kelley School of Business April 29th, 2016 Abstract We study one channel that links peer effects to lifetime earnings: workers can more easily trans- fer industries with peer support, resulting in long-term wage benefits even after the interaction de- clines. By incorporating a random assignment of MBA students into small-sized teams matched with employee-employer linked data, we first document that individuals in the same team are more likely to work in the same industry after graduation; yet the results are exclusively driven by the financial sector. We estimate that having a peer in the financial industry increases the chance a low-wage- industry worker can transfer to the financial industry by 5%. The results are strongest when (i) a worker intends to enter the industry after MBA graduation and (ii) during high industry growth. Interestingly, peer effects are inexistent during recession times. At a lower-bound, having a peer in the financial industry increases five-year compensation by $8,192 for all students and $40,964 for intended finance majors. Overall, professional networking plays a valuable role in the allocation of MBA graduates to the financial sector, and more broadly explains how past peer networks affect lifetime earnings. ∗Department of Finance, Indiana University, 1309 East 10th Street, Bloomington, IN 47405. Email: [email protected]. We thank Nandini Gupta for helpful comments. 1 1 Introduction Economists have long been interested the determinants of life time earnings, especially in the char- acteristics of high-wage workers [Abowd et al., 1999].
    [Show full text]
  • UNIVERSITY of OKLAHOMA Office of Research Administration
    UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA Office of Research Administration PROPOSAL REPORT Proposal Submissions - May, 1998 Amount 98S0654 Claude Duchon, Meteorology $20,183.00 U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration July 1, 1998 - August 15, 1998 Support of Cooperative Agreement NA67RJ0150, TASK III, Theme III 98S0657 Robert Schlegel, Industrial Eng. $69,413.00 Craig Harvey, Industrial Eng. Randa Shehab, Industrial Eng. U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration May 9, 1998 - September 30, 1998 National Weather Service Operational Support Facility 98S0659 Ajay Agrawal, Aerospace & Mechanical Eng. $56,000.00 Subramanya Gollahalli, Aerospace & Mechanical Eng. NASA - Lewis Research Center June 2, 1998 - November 30, 1998 Effects of Energy Release on Near Field Flow Structure of Gas Jets 98S0660 Subhash Shah, Petroleum & Geological Eng. $35,439.00 Mobil June 1, 1998 - July 31, 1998 Proppant Plug in Horizontal Wells 98S0661 Peter Lamb, C I M M S CIMMS $60,000.00 Joseph Ray, CIMMS U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration May 18, 1998 - December 31, 1998 Forecast Improvements Through Effective Use of WSR-88D Products Proposal Submissions - May, 1998 Amount 98S0662 Mark Nanny, Civil Eng. & Environmental Sci. $12,300.00 National Science Foundation June 1, 1998 - May 31, 1999 REU Supplement: Molecular-Level Characterization of Bonding and Bioavailability of Monoaromatic Pollutants Associated with Dissolved Organic Carbon 98S0663 William Reed, Economics $65,000.00 State of Oklahoma, Department of Finance August 1, 1998 - December 31, 1999 A Study of Welfare Reform Proposals for the State of Oklahoma 98S0664 Michael Morrison, Physics & Astronomy $5,000.00 National Science Foundation June 1, 1998 - August 31, 1998 Research Experience for Undergraduates Supplement: Scattering Processes Involving Low-Energy Electrons 98S0666 Edwin Tucker, Chemistry & Biochemistry IASR $113,612.00 John Scamehorn, Chemical Eng.
    [Show full text]
  • The Next 40 Years of Environmental Law
    University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law DigitalCommons@UM Carey Law Faculty Scholarship Francis King Carey School of Law Faculty 2013 Looking Backward, Looking Forward: The Next 40 Years of Environmental Law Robert V. Percival University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.law.umaryland.edu/fac_pubs Part of the Environmental Law Commons Digital Commons Citation 43 Environmental Law Reporter 10492 (2013). This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Francis King Carey School of Law Faculty at DigitalCommons@UM Carey Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Scholarship by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UM Carey Law. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Copyright © 2013 Environmental Law Institute®, Washington, DC. Reprinted with permission from ELR®, http://www.eli.org, 1-800-433-5120. he one thing we know about predictions for the Looking future of environmental law is that most of them are likely to be wrong . Uncertainty is a funda- Tmental feature of environmental challenges, and the track Backward, record of humans in forecasting future environmental challenges is not one that inspires confidence . In an edi- tion of The Weekly Standardthat went to press on April 16, Looking Forward: 2010—four days before the Deepwater Horizon offshore oil platform exploded, precipitating the worst oil spill in The Next 40 U .S . history—a fellow at the American Enterprise Insti- tute wrote: “Improvements in drilling technology have greatly reduced the risk of the kind of offshore [oil] spill Years of that occurred off Santa Barbara in 1969 .
    [Show full text]
  • MINUTES of the ANNUAL MEETING the UNIVERSITY of OKLAHOMA MAY 10, 2012 MINUTES Page Regular Meeting Held March 28-29, 2012
    MINUTES OF THE ANNUAL MEETING THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA MAY 10, 2012 MINUTES Page Regular meeting held March 28-29, 2012 ....................................................................33055 ROGERS STATE UNIVERSITY REPORT OF THE CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD ................................................................33055 REPORT OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY ......................................................33055 Substantive Program Changes ......................................................................................33056 Naming of the Rogers State University Pryor Campus ................................................33060 Campus Master Plan of Capital Projects ......................................................................33060 Mutual Aid Agreement .................................................................................................33061 Traffic Code Amendments ............................................................................................33062 Retiree Medical and Life Insurance Trust for Rogers State University ........................33066 Rogers State University’s Membership Application for NCAA Division II ................33066 Nonsubstantive Program Changes ................................................................................33066 33067 Curriculum Changes .....................................................................................................33066 33067 Quarterly Report of Purchases ......................................................................................33066
    [Show full text]
  • Examining Climate Change and the Media Hearing
    S. HRG. 109–1077 EXAMINING CLIMATE CHANGE AND THE MEDIA HEARING BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON ENVIRONMENT AND PUBLIC WORKS UNITED STATES SENATE ONE HUNDRED NINTH CONGRESS SECOND SESSION DECEMBER 6, 2006 Printed for the use of the Committee on Environment and Public Works ( Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.access.gpo.gov/congress.senate U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 52–324 PDF WASHINGTON : 2009 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Internet: bookstore.gpo.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512–1800; DC area (202) 512–1800 Fax: (202) 512–2104 Mail: Stop IDCC, Washington, DC 20402–0001 COMMITTEE ON ENVIRONMENT AND PUBLIC WORKS ONE HUNDRED NINTH CONGRESS SECOND SESSION JAMES M. INHOFE, Oklahoma, Chairman JOHN W. WARNER, Virginia JAMES M. JEFFORDS, Vermont CHRISTOPHER S. BOND, Missouri MAX BAUCUS, Montana GEORGE V. VOINOVICH, Ohio JOSEPH I. LIEBERMAN, Connecticut LINCOLN CHAFEE, Rhode Island BARBARA BOXER, California LISA MURKOWSKI, Alaska THOMAS R. CARPER, Delaware JOHN THUNE, South Dakota HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON, New York JIM DEMINT, South Carolina FRANK R. LAUTENBERG, New Jersey JOHNNY ISAKSON, Georgia BARACK OBAMA, Illinois DAVID VITTER, Louisiana ANDREW WHEELER, Majority Staff Director KEN CONNOLLY, Minority Staff Director (II) CONTENTS Page DECEMBER 6, 2006 OPENING STATEMENTS Bond, Hon. Christopher S., U.S. Senator from the State of Missouri ................. 15 Boxer, Hon. Barbara, U.S. Senator from the State of California ........................ 10 Inhofe, Hon. James M., U.S. Senator from the State of Oklahoma .................... 1 Jeffords, Hon. James M., U.S. Senator from the State of Vermont .................... 5 Lautenberg, Hon. Frank R., U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • 1989 Journal
    OCTOBER TERM, 1989 Reference Index Contents: Page Statistics n General m Appeals in Arguments in Attorneys in Briefs iv Certiorari iv Costs v Judgments and Opinions v Miscellaneous v Original Cases v Parties vi Records vi Rehearings vi Rules vi Stays vi Conclusion vn (i) II STATISTICS AS OF JUNE 28, 1990 In Forma Paid Oripnal Pauperis Total Cases Cases Number of cases on docket 14 2,416 3,316 5,746 Cases disposed of 2 2,051 2,879 4,932 Remaining on docket 12 365 437 814 Cases docketed during term: Paid cases 2,032 In forma pauperis cases 2,885 Original cases 1 Total 4,918 Cases remaining from last term 828 Total cases on docket 5,746 Cases disposed of 4,932 Number of remaining on docket 814 Petitions for certiorari granted: In paid cases 100 In in forma pauperis cases 19 Appeals granted: In paid cases 3 In in forma pauperis cases 0 Total cases granted plenary review 123* Cases argued during term 146 Number disposed of by full opinions 143 Number disposed of by per curiam opinions 3 Number set for reargument next term 0 Cases available for argument at beginning of term 81 Disposed of summarily after review was granted 1 Original cases set for argument 1 Cases reviewed and decided without oral argument 79 Total cases available for argument at start of next term 57 Number of written opinions of the Court 129 Opinions per curiam in argued cases 3 Number of lawyers admitted to practice as of October 1, 1990: On written motion 4,623 On oral motion 1,173 Total 5,796 *Includes 74, Original.
    [Show full text]
  • Important Developments on Global Warming in 2006 E
    Important Developments on Global Warming in 2006 E. Calvin Beisner Despite continued alarmist claims in the mainstream media, by advocacy groups, and by some scientists, actual scientific and economic developments related to the global warming debate during 2006 point toward the collapse of the catastrophic human-induced global warming (CHIGW) dogma. Here’s a brief summary: • IPCC Reduces Warming Projections. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) draft 2007 Fourth Assessment Report (FAR) reduces projected temperature impact of human-induced climate change by 25 percent versus the previous (Third Assessment Report, 2001 [TAR]) assessment.1 Other research puts the most likely effect of E doubled CO2 on global average temperature at 3 C or less and says no evidence supports estimates of 4.5E or more.2 • IPCC Reduces Estimate of Human Contribution. The FAR’s Table of Forcings reduces human contribution to energy absorption in the atmosphere by 35 percent from the TAR’s. The FAR also reduces the IPCC’s estimate of the overall effect of human action on global temperature since the Industrial Revolution in light of increasing understanding of the cooling effect of aerosols and oceanic heat absorption.3 The estimated roles of variations in solar energy and solar wind output in climate change have risen greatly, with recent studies attributing nearly all or even all observed climate change to them, leaving little warming role left for human action.4 • IPCC Reduces Projected Sea Level Rise. The FAR reduces high-end projected twenty- first century sea level rise by 50 percent, from 34 to 17 inches.5 The more credible International Union for Quaternary Research’s Sea Level Commission projects twenty- first century sea level rise of only 0 to 7.88 inches (0 to 0.79 inch per decade).6 Studies indicate no statistical correlation between sea level changes and atmospheric CO2 concentration.7 • IPCC Abandons Discredited Hockey Stick Graph.
    [Show full text]
  • Following Sea
    Celebrating over one million miles sailed FOLLOWING SEA 2008-2009 Annual Report Issue Winter/Spring 2010 INSIDE I Plastics at SEA I Annual Report 2008-09 TABLE OF CONTENTS Winter/Spring 2010 Cover Story Plastics@SEA Collection of plastic marine debris in the Atlantic results in dedicated plastics expedition . .1 Features The Hallstein Fellowship John Wigglesworth and family establish a fund to support medical training of shipboard staff and crew . .18 In Every Issue Passages Events and news of general interest . .5 Science Corner Introducing SEA’s new science team . .20 Currents Alumna Sally McGee, C-134 . .21 Special Report 2008-2009 Report to Donors From the desk of Board Chair, Linda Cox Maguire . .6 Annual Report . .7 Following SEA Winter/Spring 2010 Editor: Jan Wagner Design: MBDesign, mbdesign-us.com Photography: Colleen Allard, Courtesy Mary Engels, Courtesy Kara Lavender Law, Aislinn Open ocean neuston tow taken from the Martin, Courtesy Sally McGee, Courtesy Giora spreader of the SSV Robert C. Seamans. Proskurowski, Courtesy Jeff Schell, Courtesy Justin Smith, Tracy Sylvester, Courtesy Nate Twichell, John Wigglesworth Following SEA is available online. If you’d like your prints, slides, or digital images considered for the next issue contact: Kerry Hannigan, ext. 20 or [email protected]. Sea Education Association, Inc., PO Box 6, Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543 Phone 800-552-3633 Fax 508-457-4673 www.sea.edu Recycled Chlorine-Free Paper / Vegetable based Ink A 22-year record of collecting plastic marine debris in the Atlantic leads to Plastics at SEA: North Atlantic Expedition June/July 2010. Sea Education Association is preparing to conduct the first-ever research expedition dedicated solely to examining the accumulation of plastic marine debris in the North Atlantic Ocean.
    [Show full text]
  • Heartland Climate Scientists List
    U.S. Climate Scientists Mailing List May 29, 2017 Name Contact Information Email Address Qualifications Akasofu, Syun-Ichi International Arctic Research Center Dr. Syun-Ichi Akasofu was director of the International Arctic Research Center of the University of Alaska Fairbanks from its establishment in 1998 until January 2007. As director of the Geophysical Institute (1986-1999), Dr. Akasofu concentrated his effort University of Alaska Fairbanks on establishing the institute as a key research center in the Arctic. Wrote an excellent piece on the “pause in 2013: On the Present Halting of Global Warming,” Open Access Climate, May 3, 2013. Spoke at ICCC-2. Signed Cato’s open letter to Obama. Ph.D. geophysics University of Alaska Fairbanks https://www.heartland.org/about-us/who-we-are/syun-ichi-akasofu Alexander, Ralph B. Former associate professor at Wayne State University (Detroit). Author of Global Warming False Alarm (Canterbury Publishing, El Dorado Hills, CA 2012) Phone: (NOAA Letter Signatory) Ph.D. Physics, Oxford Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ralph-alexander-3624141a Alliegro, Mark Senior scientist, Marine Biological Laboratory, ran for Congress in the 9th Congressional District of Massachusetts in 2016 and lost. A noted cell biologist with a background in biochemistry and molecular biology, Mark has worked as a Senior Scientist at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, and as a Professor of Molecular Biology, Cellular Biology and Biochemistry at Brown University. The author of more than 40 scientific papers, Dr. Alliegro served as a Program Director for Molecular & Cellular Biosciences at the National Science Foundation and as an Instructor of Medical Histology at Harvard Medical School.
    [Show full text]