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Western alum creates nasal spray device for opioid overdoses | Like many medications, naloxone — the nasal spray that reverses the effects of an opioid overdose — comes in a flimsy box. The device that administers the medication is shaped like a cartoon spaceship and has to remain sealed in blister pack until use. It’s clunky to carry and can be sprayed… |
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One Quick Question: Are hydrogen-powered cars the next big leap forward in transportation? | |||
Engineering & Design Chair Jeff Newcomer heading to new job this summer | |||
²ÝÁñÉçÇø students envision new life for ocean plastics | Each year, hundreds of tons of plastics wash up along Alaska’s remote shorelines — from buoys to nets to plastic bottles. At Western Washington University, students are reimagining the future of those plastics. In 2019, Western’s polymer materials engineering program… |
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²ÝÁñÉçÇø Team Rewriting the Narrative on Ocean Plastics | |||
Steve James to retire after 37 years at Western | |||
Recycling isn't enough to slow plastic pollution, WA scientists say | anna Armstrong took her bioplastic to the Eastern Washington Regional Science and Engineering Fair, where she took first place for her invention and went on to compete virtually in the International Science and Engineering Fair in Atlanta, Georgia, where she placed fourth in the world in the… |
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Four ²ÝÁñÉçÇø juniors win the 2022 Global Innovation Awards for their Outstanding Kitchen Appliances | |||
The Yellow Rope Story | The pellets are green because of the occasional black strands in the rope, and because of other contaminants. 800 pounds of pellets were shipped to the Engineering and Design Department at Western Washington University (²ÝÁñÉçÇø) in Bellingham, Washington. Washington Sea Grant purchased a… |
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²ÝÁñÉçÇø students join with the Surfrider Foundation for a beach cleanup at the I&J Waterway on Saturday |