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Clarkson University News (press release), New York - Apr 15, 2009
Clarkson University Environmental Team Takes First Place in Six members of the 28-member student team travelled to New Mexico State University for the competition. They set up and demonstrated a bench-scale version of their treatment and energy recovery system and used oral and poster presentation formats to
With operations in the United States, Canada, Europe, China and Mexico, Best Buy is a multinational retailer of technology and entertainment products and services with a commitment to growth and innovation. The Best Buy family of brands and
Jewelry CEO Susan Eisen is among 8 honoredMucha, president and owner of Powell-Mucha Consulting Inc. in El Paso, beat out other home-based businesses in five states -- Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana -- for the honor. Mucha's consulting business serves the electronics
Rio Rancho economic outlook upbeatInsigniam Innovation Discovery Center also will use Encanto to simulate models to improve health care delivery and plans to hire 65 employees. UNM and Central New Mexico Community College have broken ground on campuses in Rio Rancho’s City Centre.
Tri-State to Reevaluate Long-Term Resource PlanningTri-State will identify the appropriate resources required to affordably and reliably meet the future needs of its 44 member rural electric distribution systems in Colorado , Nebraska , New Mexico and Wyoming . In its near-term resource planning,
Clarkson University Environmental Team Takes First Place in ... - Clarkson University News (press release)
15.04.09
The Clarkson University Remediation Engineers (CURE) student team won first place for their zero waste solution at the 19th Annual Environmental Design Contest last week in Las Cruces, N.M.
The team is part of the University’s SPEED (Student Projects for Engineering Experience and Design) program.
The CURE team received a trophy and a $2,500 prize for their combined treatment processes and off-site recycling/reuse options that resulted in the desired zero waste criteria for the competition. Their processes aimed specifically at the recovery of reusable solvents, energy and water, which is a scare commodity in the desert southwest.
Six members of the 28-member student team travelled to New Mexico State University for the competition. They set up and demonstrated a bench-scale version of their treatment and energy recovery system and used oral and poster presentation formats to communicate their process to judges.
The students received two gallons of a corrosive solvent waste stream that they treated by distillation to recover high purity water. They worked late into the night and were the only team that successfully treated the entire volume of waste.
What will be the long term solutions that the USA will undertake to deal with the illegal immigration problem?
Jul 11, 2007 by "Kh a a a a a n n" ! ! | Posted in Immigration
I predict that we will see new legislation in the coming years. There may be several bills that will fail before they come up with something that works. Also, I think you will see new technologies used to screen for illegal immigrants, as well as to keep them from crossing the border. There may be very large fences built in the coming years, but then there will also be virtual and electronic walls between the USA and Mexico. It will be monitored through means that are not available to us right now. But future innovations will make the fence impossible to get by without being detected.
At this moment there are legistlators that are trying to pass laws that would require police officers to inquire about suspects (and perhaps other citizen's) immigration status. They want to make other professionals, such as medical service providers, do the same thing.
Some of these things are a bit scarry, and there will certainly be no end to the contraversy.
What do you think?
What I don't understand is why they are not moving forward with the security or full scale enforcement of the laws on the books. It's as if since they we caught them in a lie, they aren't going to do anything. Well either they will do something or the BRAND NEW Congress will do it. They have been given their marching order and I really don't think they should test the American peoples resolve on this issue.
Sweetpea | Jul 11, 2007
Reforms: Strength ties with Mexico, intensify the blockade against Cuba, bilingual education, & smart borders?
Aug 10, 2008 by Ivan Talibari | Posted in International Organizations
Right on ! I Orale ! We need indeed changes, amendments, innovations, reforms and democracy!
OBAMA '08
You ask this same question every two days. You have asked this question again and again. Why don't you come clean and explain why you are doing this?
Jayne says READ MORE BOOKS | Aug 11, 2008
When slavery was abolished, did people fret over who would pick their crops for free?
Sep 04, 2006 by BrianthePigEatingInfidel | Posted in Immigration
I ask this not because I am trying to draw some equivalency between the institution of slavery and migrant farm workers.
But I hear frequently from the apologists from illegal immigration that we benefit from cheap labor. That justification is fraught with many ethical problems. First, by maintaining the status quo, it only ensures that the problems with Mexico's economy will remain and become more entrenched. I wonder who is willing to justify the continued economic and political poverty of the average Mexican in Mexico by saving a few cents on their bell peppers.
Another difficulty is this: by keeping a ready and available supply of cheap labor, it stifles innovation and advances in technology. Some on here have pointed out that the agriculture business would go bankrupt. Well, what happened after slavery was abolished? They lost the supply of cheap labor then, but the industry adapted. In fact, the inventor of the internal combustion engine started out building machines
to replace manual labor, which was considerably more expensive over time than a one-time investment in a diesel tractor. So, when the price of labor went up, the market responded with new inventions and innovations that kept costs low. Having a source of cheap labor only ensures that that innovation never takes place.
Additionally, what do the proponents of illegal immigration expect the migrants to do? Remain illegal forever? That is the only way to ensure that they will only work for cheap. Once they become citizens, they'll demand greater pay and better working conditions. Their cheap labor is entirely dependent upon their status as illegals. So how does that cheap bell pepper taste now?
Once the illegals become citizens, that will only drive up the cost of food and create a renewed demand for illegal immigrant labor.
We've been sold a Bill Of Goods on this whole immigration business. It's more money for mexico if we employ their people, simple as that. The law and so forth really don't concern them, it's all about money, and american taxpayers I guess are supposed to stand there and smile through the whole thing.
Well, joke's on us, I guess, our 'representation' doesn't listen to the voters and citizens, or if they do, it's with a tin ear. When we've got clinics set up in our country where OUR citizens can go and be seen for free, when our labor laws are followed and americans are being employed instead of people that have no business being inside our border to begin with, then we'll know they're on the right track. But, up until then, I think it's the right position to ask questions and discuss this thing. Every year, they drive our country further in debt, it's '16 tons' on a national scale.
Hyper-inflation of our prices, all kinds of other governmental 'fun', now this business with importing hordes of illegal immigrants,
gee, aren't YOU enjoying all of this? LOL
Immigration's a good thing. LEGAL immigration. But, what we've got NOW is a joke. Good story today in the news, some lady's 3 year old kid had his social security number stolen by an illegal immigrant. Talk about stealing candy from a baby! I think that's as good an illustrative example of the depth, breadth, and seriousness of the problem. If they'd do that to a 3-year old, it's time to start thinking about deportations, imagine what'd happen if they got YOUR credit card, etc., empty out your account without batting an eye.
This IS a law enforcement issue, and the law needs to be enforced at our borders, at our workplaces, in our cities and neighborhoods as applies to sending illegal aliens home. Help is one thing, standing there like an idiot while someone takes off in your car is something else.
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