WEEKLY
MEMO, May 19, 2008
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1. ANNOUNCEMENTS
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1.1 Last
Thursday’s town hall meeting covered a variety of issues including:
• BNC Support
Survey
• Facility
Reminders
• Change in BNC
Acid Supplier
• New
Photoresist Storage Policy in the Cleanroom
• Recent
Additions to the BNC Equipment
Please see the
attached slides or view the information on the BNC website
(www.nano.purdue.edu).
1.2:
Ira Young (BNC Procurement Officer) will be on vacation next week (May 26th
– May 30th). Standard chemical stocking will be maintained as
normal. But please plan ahead for equipment stocks (beakers, tweezers, etc.).
1.3: CARD
READERS 2nd FLOOR EAST: The BNC card reader system installation
is
continuing on the **2nd Floor EAST** wing (BRK 20XX) this week. Some cutting
and grinding can be expected as conduit and the card readers are mounted in the
galley and on each lab door (BRK 2031, 2037, 2043, 2077, 2081, & 2087). Note,
work on BRK 2043 & 2087 BSL2 labs are scheduled for Thursday and Friday
(05/22-05/23) Researchers can expect to see electricians in their labs and in
some cases may be asked to briefly suspend experiments as door strikers are
installed.
If you have any issues
or concerns please contact Mary Jo Totten (61173) or Mark Voorhis (43036).
1.1: Summer Project .
. . Birck gets waxedJ: Is still on hold.
1:2: There will be
some people around the building this week washing windows. They will be doing
both inside and outside in the public area.
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2.
TOURS/VISITORS
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2.1:
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3.
SEMINARS
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3.1:
The Student Leadership Council (SLC) of NCN is pleased to announce a Student
Research Symposium for the first time. This year we will have research talks by
students from theoretical and experimental groups working on nanotechnology at
**NCN
Student Research Symposium (NSRS), 2008**
DATE:
Tuesday, May 27 2008
VENUE:
SCHEDULE:
Powerpoint
Research Presentations (morning session): 10:00 am - 12:00 noon Lunch and
Poster Presentation: 12:00 noon - 1:30 pm Powerpoint Research Presentations
(afternoon session): 1:30 pm - 3:30 pm
The
Symposium will feature 8 research talks by experimentalists and 8 by
thoereticians, each 15 min long (including questions).
CALL
FOR POSTERS: You are invited to present a poster during the extended lunch
session. You do not necessarily have to prepare a new poster. A poster that you
may already have and would like to present is most welcome. It will be a great
opportunity to share your research work with others and get feedback.
Please
let Alicia Goodman, goodman@ecn.purdue.edu, know that you will be attending and
your meal preference if you are a vegetarian by end-of-business Wednesday May
21, so that she can ensure you don't go hungry. Also let her know by the same
day if you wish to present a poster during the NSRS lunch session and we will
have a poster stand ready for you. All you have to do is bring the poster with
you to the symposium.
Please
email any individual queries you may have to apalaria@purdue.edu
We
sincerely hope you will be able to join us for this most exciting event and
perhaps also present a poster with some of your exciting research work.
Sincerely,
Amrit Palaria (SLC, NCN@Purdue)
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4.
OPPORTUNITIES
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4.1: “UPDATE
ON NSF STC COMPETITION”
THIS MESSAGE IS BEING SENT ON BEHALF OF CHRISTINE KING:
Dear Deans, Department Heads, and
Following up on the message below, this morning I spoke with Joan Frye at NSF,
who will be the new program director for the STC competition. Dr. Frye stated
that the new RFP for the STC will not be released in May, and that she’s
hoping for early June. Also, when I asked about the eligibility
limitations, she suggested the possibility that the institutional limitation on
preproposals may be fewer than the five allowed for the last competition. Also,
FYI, I’ve attached Arden Bement’s comments re: the STC in his
February NSF FY2009 Budget Request to Congress.I hope this information helps a
bit in your planning for this competition.
Bement’s budget comments on Feb. 4 re: STCs
Interdisciplinary research is alive and well at NSF, not only in the
nature of the grants we fund, but also in our organizational structures and
cross-Foundation partnerships. The 2009 budget request gives particular
emphasis to interdisciplinary programs, centers, and multi-investigator grants.
In 2009, we plan to establish five to seven new Science and
They speed the transfer of concepts for new technologies to the private sector.
And, critically, they integrate research with the education of those who will
be tomorrow's teachers and leaders in discovery and innovation.
At the beginning of my presentation, I emphasized the potential economic
returns that can accrue from NSF investments.
However, there are other, vitally important returns: namely, those that serve
national and global needs in energy, health, security and environment, and
those that increase human understanding and wonder about the universe in which
we live, from the smallest to the largest scales.