LYCOS RETRIEVER Beta Retriever Home  |  What is Lycos Retriever?   
Ohio State University: Studys
built 613 days ago
Ohio State University owns the airport, and a spokeswoman said that the expansion plans should not hurt anyone. Yet experts hired by the city of Worthington conducted a study and said the expansion would hurt the environment.
Source:
Enarson Hall (Original Ohio Union) In a recent study by Harvard University's Graduate School of Education, Ohio State was one of five universities rated as "exemplary" workplaces for junior faculty. In the study, thirty-one universities and eleven liberal arts colleges were evaluated on tenure clarity and fairness, nature of work including workloads, quality of students, and teaching environment, compensation, work and family balance, collegiality and overall satisfaction.[25]
Under: "Airport News" - Also at the meeting, the ongoing battle over noise caused by planes at the Ohio State University Airport inched closed to resolution. Scott Whitlock, a Worthington resident and member of the advisory board for the noise regulation and study at Don Scott Field, said in his report that the university will go ahead with the Part 150 Noise Compatibility Study. The findings of this study could result in noise reduction for the city.
Source:
Kent State University researchers have been awarded close to $900,000 by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to conduct a study looking into patterns and theories of adolescent dating violence. Professors Donna Martsolf and Claire Draucker in the College of Nursing plan to interview young adults ages 18 to 21 in Portage, Summit and Medina counties over the next three years to investigate their past violent relationships, how such relationships affected victims and how to intervene early in the process to prevent future violence.
Source:
A new study conducted by Ohio State University researchers has documented the power of black raspberries to prevent the development of tumors in the esophagus and colon. The study’s findings were presented at the March 2007 national meeting of the American Chemical Society.
Kent State University has received a $900,000 grant from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to study dating violence. The three-year grant will be used to study more than 90 adults ages 18 to 21 in 12 Northeast Ohio communities to find out how they get involved in violent relationships, why they stay in them, how they get out of those relationships, the lasting impact of the violent relationships and the community context in which the violence occurs.
Source:
SEARCH
MORE ABOUT