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Tag: Science

A breakdown of the research from Dr. LJ Pilaz’s lab

Posted on October 10, 2024November 3, 2024 by Felix Boots
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Concordia receives gift for science complex from Sanford Health

Posted on March 10, 2016March 9, 2016 by The Concordian

Concordia College, Moorhead, Minn., will receive a major gift from Sanford Health in support of its integrated science complex renovation. Sanford Health has announced a match of 10 percent of capital gifts to the project, up to a total of $3 million. “Sanford Health is impressed with the efforts and results of the Science Center…

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Biology department gets mixed reviews about time cuts in lab

Posted on November 5, 2015November 4, 2015 by Contributing Writer

Challenge of the semester for biology students: Learn four months’ worth of material in only three. Nov. 24 marks the date of when all biology labs will come to an end for the semester. The demolition of Jones and Ivers, the two buildings that science majors have come to call home, is set to begin over Concordia’s Thanksgiving break. This will result in…

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Creator of Lay’s Oven Baked Potato Crisps comes to Concordia

Posted on October 8, 2015October 7, 2015 by Tyler Aldous

Creator will teach students how to find their passions On Oct. 31, Dr. Jeffrey Stamp, the chief storyteller at Bold Thinking Inc. and creator of Lay’s Oven Baked Potato Crisps, will host a visioning workshop at Concordia for high school and college students. The workshop is designed to teach people how to think boldly and…

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Edible landscaping: Established and expanding

Posted on October 8, 2015October 7, 2015 by Anna Erickson

The raspberries outside of Olin are not just there for looks, they are also available for students to pick and eat as a part of an edible landscape initiative, a strategy to incorporate food-producing plants within Concordia’s landscaping for the benefit of students. Last fall, during the 2014 Faith, Reason and World Affairs Symposium, a…

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Flexibility required among science students during building renovations

Posted on September 17, 2015September 16, 2015 by Katelyn Kasella

The sprucing up of the new Jones and Ivers buildings has not yet begun, but the adjustments to accommodate the construction have been unpleasant for some students and faculty. Construction begins after Thanksgiving break, which means science professors must be finished with typical full-semester labs within Jones and Ivers by late November — an inconvenient…

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Space, dinosaurs, and robots

Posted on April 13, 2012April 11, 2012 by Patrick Ross

With deadline approaching and writer’s block and just a few hours of sleep clouding my mind, I was trying to find my way back to that golden road of righteousness: productivity. I was doing what anyone would do when facing impending due dates: I was reading the webcomic XKCD (Fine, maybe only nerds do this….

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They blinded me with science

Posted on February 10, 2012February 9, 2012 by Katelyn Henagin

Hey Cobbers! Let me ask you a simple question: what building do you spend the most time in? Now, like most Cobbers, you have your major (or majors), and they require that you stick to a few specific buildings. Humanities reside in Old Main and the appendages of Knutson; Science kids dwell in Ivers/Jones…you get…

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Rocket man

Posted on February 10, 2012February 9, 2012 by Patrick Ross

I’ve been wondering lately where the best spot for the 51st state would be. If I were Newt Gingrich, I’d say it was the moon. If you’ve been following the Republican campaigns, or Saturday Night Live, you’d be aware that Gingrich has plans for a permanent moon colony by the end of a second term….

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