Berkshire County, Mass., funds by National Science Foundation
Listing $1,234,030.00 in stimulus funds from National Science Foundation for Berkshire
Note: For some programs where states do not report where money will be distributed across the state, we do not have the allocation for individual counties. Those programs include: Medicaid, unemployment benefits and food stamps. Those amounts are included in the totals for where the state agency receiving that money is located.
Amount refers to both the amount of stimulus funding going toward the project and the face value of the loan.
Recipient | Amount | Description | Federal Dept./Agency | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PRESIDENT & TRUSTEES OF WILLIAMS COLLEGE | $415,330 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support Bacteria frequently cause disease in plants or animals by using secretion systems to deliver protein or DNA factors that manipulate normal cell functions and/or subvert host defenses. The soil bacterium Agrobacterium tumefaciens transports both protein a | National Science Foundation | 7/16/2009 |
PRESIDENT & TRUSTEES OF WILLIAMS COLLEGE | $400,000 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support This grant will address issues with using mobile computing environments. Application management frameworks have previously helped software developers address challenges in conventional, wired Internet settings, but no such framework exists to tackle the | National Science Foundation | 7/25/2009 |
PRESIDENT & TRUSTEES OF WILLIAMS COLLEGE | $303,300 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support The award will be used for an AFM system for use by multiple research groups in multiple departments at Williams College. There are a number of ongoing research projects that will be enhanced by the acquisition of an AFM; in addition, a number of new col | National Science Foundation | 8/20/2009 |
PRESIDENT & TRUSTEES OF WILLIAMS COLLEGE | $115,400 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support The purpose of the grant is to support research in particle theory at Williams College, with a particular focus on understanding how different models of particle physics can be tested at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Involving undergraduates in this r | National Science Foundation | 5/28/2009 |