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SCIENCE & IT
Home > Latest News > Science & IT New test for doping in racehorses 20 Mar 2000
Charles Sturt University researchers have scored a world first with the development of a test for drug abuse in horses. Environmental concern high on public agenda 23 Feb 2000
Metropolitan and regional residents and landholders in western NSW have shown they have a significant interest in preserving one of the State's most fragile wetland environments. Information records under threat 22 Feb 2000
A global crisis is looming in information management that threatens the accuracy, safekeeping and authenticity of vital electronic data. Premier's award for HSC On-Line 08 Dec 1999
The productive partnership between Charles Sturt University and the Department of Education and Training to create HSC On-line, has been recognised with a bronze award in the Premier's Public Sector Awards for 1999. CSU cheese hits supermarket shelves 07 Dec 1999
The Charles Sturt University Cheese Factory is set to quadruple production with a deal that will see the farmhouse cheeses available in every Safeway supermarket throughout Victoria. Wallabies salute Wagga Wagga mascot 22 Oct 1999
Australia's Rugby Union team the Wallabies has applauded Charles Sturt University's latest geoglyph exercise as "the best support we've received from home - certainly the most unusual". UN conference puts Bathurst on the map 18 Oct 1999
An information technology conference will be run in conjunction with a United Nations workshop being held at Charles Sturt University on 19-22 October. Giant wallaby heads for the Wagga Wagga hills 12 Oct 1999
An extraordinary show of support for the Australian Wallabies Rugby World Cup team will be emblazoned across the countryside near Wagga Wagga tomorrow (Wednesday 13 October). 13 Aug 1999
Budding researchers will be heartened by a $100, 000 injection by Charles Sturt University into funding for research into science, agriculture and information technology. Genetically controlled food: breeding Frankenstein mentality 03 Aug 1999
As Australian and New Zealand ministers meet in Canberra today to discuss food-labelling options, Charles Sturt University's Centre for Applied Ethics lecturer Dr Andrew Brien believes the development of genetically modified food products has created a Frankenstein mentality and is perverse. |

