CBD oil bill takes second step in N.C. Senate Winston-Salem JournalA second state Senate committee has approved a bill that would expand the use of medicinal CBD oil in North Carolina. Read more https://www.journalnow.com/news/elections/local/cb …
UPJ celebrates opening of new engineering building WJAC JohnstownThe University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown has officially opened its new Chemical Engineering Building. The university held a ribbon-cutting for the building ... Read more http://w …
NC bill would allow more children to use CBD oils CBS17.comI attribute Bethany being here today to CBD,” North Carolina mom Abby Childers says. Read more https://www.cbs17.com/news/health-alert/nc-bill-would-allow-more-children-to-use-cbd-oils/1 …
Power/Performance Bits: Mar. 11 SemiEngineeringReading qubits faster; capturing carbon; DNA computing. Read more https://semiengineering.com/power-performance-bits-mar-11/
Drone Wars: Gremlins Versus the Kremlin ENGINEERING.comWeapons engineers at Kalishnikov develop build and releases low-cost kamikaze drones for international military use while DARPA's gremlins swarm into ... Read more https://www.engineering.co …
Engineering Village to move to Sullivan, increasing opportunity for students N.C. State University Technician OnlineThe Engineering Village will move from Metcalf and Bowen to Sullivan Residence Hall in the 2019-20 academic year. Read more http …
Palm oil industry expansion spurs Guatemala indigenous migration Al Jazeera EnglishDeath of Jakelin Caal in US custody highlights how land conflicts and displacement fuel flight from indigenous villages. Read more https://www.aljazeera.com/news/ …
Harvesting hemp for CBD oil grows in popularity WSOC CharlotteHemp is growing in popularity for its oil and other byproducts, and farmers of the crop believe it may be the future of North Carolina agriculture. Read more https://www.wsoctv.com/ne …
CBD OIL NORTH CAROLINA: Harvesting hemp for CBD oil grows in popularity WSOC CharlotteHemp is growing in popularity for its oil and other byproducts, and farmers of the crop believe it may be the future of North Carolina agriculture. Read more …