| February 2005
Volume 47 Number 2 |
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It’s All Water by Peter J. Censky, Executive Director, WQA New leads! New customers! New opportunities! New markets!.. read more Large or Small: WQA Aquatech USA 2005 Has Something for Every Dealer by Nate F. Searing The expanded focus of WQA Aquatech USA 2005, including new exhibitors in the industrial process water, ultrapure and chemical markets... read more A Unique Partnership between Europe and North America by Ids Boersma, Director International Exhibitions, Amsterdam RAI The reason to expand Aquatech to the USA is that a general exhibition like Aquatech representing the full spectrum of the water industry, from drinking water to wastewater to process water simply did not exist here... read more WQA Aquatech 2005 Attendees List WQA Aquatech USA 2005 Exhibitor Schedule... read more |
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| Features | ||
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Water Reuse with Membrane Technologies -- An Update by Peter S. Cartwright, P.E., CWS-VI For the last 30 years, protection of the environment has been steadily moving up on the priority list of concerned citizens... read more Recertification Quiz: February 2005 In cooperation with the Water Quality Association (WQA), WC&P offers water treatment professionals an opportunity to earn Continuing Professional Development (CPD) credits toward recertification as Certified Water Specialists... read more High Performance Turbidity Filter by Fred Tepper, Leonid Kaledin and Catherine Hartmann Turbidity in water is caused by suspended and colloidal matter such as clay, silt, finely divided natural organic matter (NOM), inorganic matter and plankton plus other microscopic organisms, according to Standard Methods 2130... read more Superior Water for Utah Classrooms by Nate F. Searing When Mark Lambourne’s son came home from elementary school four years ago complaining about the taste of the water coming out of his classroom drinking fountain... read more Basic Ion Exchange for Residential Water Treatment, Part 1 by Michael C. Keller W hen dealing with residential water treatment there are two basic classifications of water: groundwater and surface water... read more Corona California Wastewater Treatment Goals Become a Reality by Karen R. Smith The city of Corona, California made the commitment to water reclamation several years ago, opting to treat wastewater to a level of quality where it would be suitable for a variety of beneficial non-potable uses... read more Weak Acid Cation and Its Potential in Latin America by David J. Swiderski Through my seven years traveling in Latin America I have discovered that weak acid cation is under-utilized and presents one of the best solutions to very common drinking water problems... read more |
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| Columns | ||
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Tsunami Relief
by read more Viewpoint: Patricia Steiner read more Drinking Water Meets Marine Biology Hague Quality Water of Greater Philadelphia by Nate F. Searing read more Drinking Water Dollars: Profiting from Water by Neil D. Berlant read more Making Waves Ed Giordano of Hydro Systems International by Nate F. Searing read more Conformance to the NSF/ANSI DWTU Standards of Complete Systems Versus Components by Rick Andrew read more Waterborne Disease Outbreaks following Tsunami Disaster by Kelly A. Reynolds, MSPH, Ph.D. read more One Tough Broad: Patricia F. Steiner -- August 20, 1949 – December 29, 2004 by Kurt C. Peterson read more |
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