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Waste management and valorization : alternative technologies

Location: Engineering Library- TD793.9.W367 2015




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Geology of the Dixville quadrangle, New Hampshire.

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE139.A28 no.1




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The geology of the Manchester quadrangle, New Hampshire.

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE139.A28 no.2




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The geology of the Ossipee Lake quadrangle, New Hampshire.

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE139.A28 no.3




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The geology of the Peterborough quadrangle, New Hampshire,

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE139.A28 no.4




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The bedrock geology of the Haverhill fifteen minute quadrangle, New Hampshire.

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE139.A28 no.5




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Geology of the Gorham Quadrangle : New Hampshire-Maine

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE139.A28 no.6




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The bedrock geology of the Holderness Quadrangle, New Hampshire

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE139.A28 no.7




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The bedrock geology of the Hillsboro quadrangle, New Hampshire

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE139.A28 no.8




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Chemical analyses of rocks and rock-minerals from New Hampshire,

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE139.A34 pt.19 1965




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Guide to the geology of northeastern North Dakota : including Cavalier, Grand Forks, Nelson, Pembina, and Walsh Counties

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE149.E37 no.2 1972




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Geology along North Dakota Interstate Highway 94

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE149.E37 no.1 1972




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Guide to the geology of North-Central North Dakota : including Benson, Bottineau, Eddy, Foster, McHenry, Pierce, Ramsey, Rolette, Sheridan, Towner, and Wells counties

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE149.E37 no.7 1974




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Guide to the geology of Northwest North Dakota : including Burke, Divide, McLean, Mountrail, Renville, Ward, and Williams Counties

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE149.E37 no.8 1975




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Guide to the geology of northwestern North Dakota : Burke, Divide, McLean, Mountrail, Renville, Ward, and Williams Counties

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE149.E37 no.8 1980




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Guide to the geology of southwestern North Dakota : including Adams, Billings, Bowman, Dunn, Golden Valley, Grant, Hettinger, McKenzie, Mercer, Morton, Oliver, Sioux, Slope, and Stark Counties : an earth science guide for North Dakota school students

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE149.E37 no.9 1975




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Guide to the geology of southwestern North Dakota : Adams, Billings, Bowman, Dunn, Golden Valley, Grant, Hettinger, McKenzie, Mercer, Morton, Oliver, Sioux, Slope, and Stark Counties

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE149.E37 no.9 1980




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Geology along North Dakota Interstate Highway 94

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE149.E37 no.16 1983




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Guide to the geology of northeastern North Dakota : Cavalier, Grand Forks, Nelson, Pembina, and Walsh counties

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE149.E37 no.17 1988




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Guide to the geology of north-central North Dakota : Benson, Bottineau, Eddy, Foster, McHenry, Pierce, Ramsey, Rolette, Sheridan, Towner, and Wells counties

Location: Sciences Library Library- QE149.E37 no.19 1988




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The Stillwater igneous complex and associated occurrences of nickel and platinum group metals

Location: Sciences Library Library- TC824.M9P4 no.7




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Distribution of sedimentary rocks in Montana and the northwestern Great Plains

Location: Sciences Library Library- TC824.M9P4 no.8




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Study on the Optimal Allocation of Water Resources Systems and the Comprehensive Utilization of Water Resources in Arid-Semiarid Multiple Mining Areas

Location: Electronic Resource- 




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The Sekanirdeśa of Maitreyanātha (Advayavajra) with the Sekanirdeśapañjikā of Rāmapāla : critical edition of the Sanskrit and Tibetan texts with English translation and reproductions of the MSS

Location: Main Oversize- BQ3080.S455S45 2014




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Hydrogeomorphic Risk Analysis Affecting Chalcolithic Archaeological Sites from Valea Oii (Bahlui) Watershed, Northeastern Romania An Interdisciplinary Approach

Location: Electronic Resource- 




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Environmental Resource Management and the Nexus Approach Managing Water, Soil, and Waste in the Context of Global Change

Location: Electronic Resource- 




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Quick Steps; What are they and why should you use them?

I’ve heard about Quick Steps before and see them on the Ribbon in Outlook but I’ve never used them before.

What exactly are Quick Steps and how can they help me with managing my emails?




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Where did it go? Disable Hardware Graphics Acceleration

I’m getting some weird graphics anomalies with my screen when using Outlook.

For instance, the screen suddenly turns completely black or white, and when I move over those spaces with my mouse, the Outlook UI starts to appear again but only in those places.

At other times, text in the Ribbon and Folder Pane overlap or folders appear empty even when they are not.

Restarting Outlook fixes it temporarily but I’d like to fix it permanently.

I was recommended to “disable hardware graphics acceleration” but I can’t find that option anywhere.

How do I solve this issue?




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How to install and run the New Outlook and Classic Outlook side by side

Now that the New Outlook is available in the various Office Channels and also is replacing Windows Mail and Calendar soon, I really want to try it out but don’t want to use it as my daily driver just yet.

Is there any way that I can install and run the New Outlook and the current Outlook at the same time?




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Blocking spam emails with hidden or missing From address

Recently, I’m getting more an more spam in my Inbox with no email address.

The From field only shows a name but no email address. Also, when I hover over the name or right click on it, it doesn’t open a Contact Card with more info.

Right clicking on the message in the message list doesn’t allow me to block it either.

How can I block this new type of spam?




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Saving emails as eml or msg-file in the New Outlook or OWA

I regularly save individual emails as msg-file from Outlook into a folder on my computer to more conveniently group it with other related documents.

Now that I’ve switched to the New Outlook, I seem not be able to do that anymore. There is no File command anymore either. This is where the option used to be in Classic Outlook.

Can I no longer save individual emails as msg-files anymore in the New Outlook?




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Find and open the installation folder of New Outlook (olk.exe)

I just installed New Outlook on my computer and wondered where exactly it got installed.

I don’t see it in the Office installation folder (where outlook.exe is as well), nor anywhere else in Program Files. The shortcut doesn’t reveal anything either.

How can I determine where New Outlook is installed and open the installation folder?




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Need Password but no login screen shown in Outlook

One of my accounts in Outlook went from “Trying to connect” to “Need Password” in the Status Bar.

However, pressing on the “Need Password” icon doesn’t bring up the dialog to enter my username and password. The dialog isn’t hidden behind Outlook either, although sometimes it looks like it opens and closes really fast again.

No dialog comes up either when clicking on the "Type Exchange Password & Connect" button nor when the Notification comes up that Outlook needs your password.

How do I get myself in a Connected state again?




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View HTML source code of an email in New Outlook

In Classic Outlook, you were able to view the HTML source of an email. As a designer of templates and newsletters, this is particularly helpful to see how the HTML of an email got through when things don’t line up as expected.

Within New Outlook, I don’t see this feature anymore.

Is the “View Source” command coming to New Outlook as well or will it be removed?

Is there another way to see the HTML tags of an email in New Outlook?




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The human cost of ghost networks

He tried to find a therapist who would take his insurance. He did not succeed.




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Only about 1/5 of large companies cover drugs for weight loss

A survey of employers finds that only about a fifth of large companies cover drugs like Wegovy for weight loss. A majority of companies that do cover the medicines have requirements.




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The Biden Administration wants health insurance to cover all OTC contraception

The Biden Administration has proposed a rule to require private health insurance to cover over-the-counter birth control pills, spermicide, condoms and plan B.




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Medicaid can now pay for care given on sidewalks. It could help mitigate homelessness

Medicaid can now pay for medical and mental health care delivered on the sidewalk. This will transform how care for unhoused people can be given in the states that take advantage of the policy change.




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Minnesota clinics are figuring out how to best care for out-of-state trans patients

Doctors and clinics in Minnesota are building up capacity to care for out-of-state trans patients who are traveling for care. Some clinics have added testifying at the state house to their job duties.




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Why do hospitals keep running out of generic drugs?

There's something strange going on in hospitals. Cheap, common drugs that nurses use every day seem to be constantly hit by shortages. These are often generic drugs that don't seem super complicated to make, things like dextrose and saline (aka sugar water and salt water).

So what's going on? The answer, as with anything in healthcare, is complicated.

On today's show: why hospitals keep running out of generic drugs. The story behind these shortages tells us a lot about how these drugs are made, bought and sold–and, it shows us how these markets can falter without the proper care.

This episode was hosted by Sally Helm and Alexi Horowitz-Ghazi. It was produced by Willa Rubin, with help from James Sneed and Sam Yellowhorse Kesler. It was edited by Martina Castro. Fact-checking by Dania Suleman. Planet Money's executive producer is Alex Goldmark.

Help support
Planet Money and hear our bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney.




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Veneers are rising in popularity. Why you should trust doctors over technicians

NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks with Dr. Nicole Cheek, a dentist in Washington, D.C., about the risks of getting dental veneers by a non-dentist.




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DACA recipients can now buy health insurance through Obamacare

Undocumented immigrants brought to the U.S. as kids, who have legal status as DACA recipients, can buy subsidized health plans through Obamacare starting Nov. 1. But 18 states are suing to stop it.




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AI has been used in healthcare for decades now. Some say they want more regulation

NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks with U.S. FDA Commissioner Robert Califf about the agency's process for regulating artificial intelligence in healthcare.




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Trump’s win could accelerate the privatization of Medicare

The former president's pending return to the White House could alter the very nature of Medicare, the nearly 60-year-old federal health care program.




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'How Wild' podcast explores the history of the wilderness and its future

A new podcast from KALW, explores the history of wilderness and its future.




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Scuba divers in Minnesota tackle problem of freshwater lake garbage

Every year, millions of pounds of garbage pollute freshwater lakes across the U.S. In Minnesota, scuba divers took a deeper look at where all the underwater trash is coming from and how to prevent it.




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NASA's Crew-8 mission members return to Earth on SpaceX capsule

Three NASA astronauts and a Russian cosmonaut splashed down off the Florida coast early Friday, capping a nearly eight-month science and research mission to the International Space Station.




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Asteroids will swing close to Earth in a drive-by show




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China launches new crew to its space station as it seeks to expand exploration

China declared a “complete success” after it launched a new three-person crew to its space station early Wednesday as the country seeks to expand its exploration of outer space.




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Did life start on the ocean floor — and what does that mean for alien life?

How did life start on Earth? The answer is a big scientific mystery scientists are actively investigating. After talking with many scientists, host Regina G. Barber found that an abundance of water on Earth is most likely key, in some way, to the origin of life — specifically, in either deep sea hydrothermal vents or in tide pools. It's for this reason some scientists are also exploring the potential for life in so-called "water worlds" elsewhere in the solar system, like some of the moons of Jupiter and Saturn. This episode, Regina digs into two water-related hypotheses for the origin on life on Earth — and what that might mean for possible alien life.

Have another scientific mystery you want us to cover on a future episode? Email us at shortwave@npr.org — we might feature your idea on a future episode!