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Home-environment expert unsure about Wi-Fi impact Tom Sharpe | The New Mexican Posted: Tuesday, March 09, In more than a decade of testing buildings for mold, chemicals, pollutants and electromagnetic fiel
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Document Date: 2010-05-14 16:35:05


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City

Lyles / Phoenix / Nashville / /

Company

Los Alamos National Laboratory / Motorola / /

Country

Germany / Japan / Russia / United States / Canada / China / /

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Event

Product Issues / Employment Change / /

Facility

Prescott College / Building Biology / /

IndustryTerm

aerospace engineering / portable products / wireless products / telecommunications industry / natural gas / wireless signals / fixed network equipment / wireless access points / energy / wireless opponents / energy exposure / anti-wireless advocates / wireless technology / telecommunications / local anti-wireless movement / online course / communications infrastructure / chemicals / /

Organization

National Research Council of the National Academies / U.S. Department of Health and Human Services / World Health Organization / Food and Drug Administration / Building Biology and Ecology Learning Center / International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection / European Union / Prescott College / Ecology Learning Center / /

Person

Tama McWhinney / Vicki Warren / Michael Conn / Daniel Stih / Tom Sharpe / Bill Bruno / /

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Position

indoor environmental consultant / executive director / electrical engineer / researcher / theoretical biologist and biophysicist at the lab / spokeswoman / engineer / author / /

Product

Santa Fe / house wiring / /

ProvinceOrState

Tennessee / /

Technology

Radiation / mobile phones / wireless technology / Wi-Fi / cellular telephone / wireless access / cell phones / /

SocialTag