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State Tipoffs Involving Ohio Newsletter for 2025-04-22 ( 4 items ) |
BW Engineering Club Launches to Empower Future Innovators (10)
BEREA, Ohio, April 22 -- Baldwin Wallace University issued the following news:
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BW Engineering Club launches to empower future innovators
Four students have stepped up to lead a newly reimagined student organization that aims to be a vital peer resource. Their story demonstrates how student leaders support and benefit from more than 100 student clubs and organizations on the BW campus.
The Baldwin Wallace University Engineering Club is getting a reboot.
After two years of inactivity, more PR
Cedarville University: Student-Created Robot Kit Creates Global Impact for Engineering Opportunities (10)
CEDARVILLE, Ohio, April 22 -- Cedarville University issued the following news:
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Student-Created Robot Kit Creates Global Impact for Engineering Opportunities
By Benjamin Konuch
Engineering is one of the fastest-growing career fields in the world, but not all countries provide students with a pathway for engineering education. One engineering senior design team at Cedarville University is addressing this need with the development of SafeTown, an affordable, educational autonomous robot k more PR
Miami University Acquires New Third-generation DNA Sequencing Technology, First in Midwest (10)
OXFORD, Ohio, April 22 -- Miami University issued the following news:
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Miami University acquires new third-generation DNA sequencing technology, first in Midwest
Revolutionary system will accelerate research timelines
By Lauren Smetzer
Miami University's Center for Bioinformatics and Functional Genomics (CBFG) has become one of the first institutions in the region to acquire the PacBio VEGA Benchtop System -- a cutting-edge DNA sequencer currently found in only 20 laboratories nationwi more PR
Ohio State: Building 'Cellular Bridges' for Spinal Cord Repair After Injury (10)
COLUMBUS, Ohio, April 22 -- Ohio State University issued the following news:
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Building 'cellular bridges' for spinal cord repair after injury
In mice, programmed cells help regenerate axons, restore leg function
Capitalizing on the flexibility of tiny cells inside the body's smallest blood vessels may be a powerful spinal cord repair strategy, new research suggests.
In mouse experiments, scientists introduced a specific type of recombinant protein to the site of a spinal cord injury wh more PR
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