Toggle navigation
Home
Search
Services
Blog
Contact
About
Program for High Risk Youth in Washington, DC
Stinchcomb, Lawrence
Community Foundation Greater Washington, Washington, DC, United States
Search grants from Lawrence Stinchcomb
Search grants from Community Foundation Greater Washington
Share this grant:
:
:
Abstract
Funding
Institution
Related projects
Comments
Recent in Grantomics:
Your institution
vs. funders. Who wins?
Read more...
How should you pick the next fundable research topic?
Read more...
Recently viewed grants:
53BP1-dependent pathway in DNA repair
Calpain and Calpastatin Regulation of Reperfusion Injury
Cytoplasmic Motility in Early Development
Regulation of Rrna Synthesis During Cardiac Hypertrophy
The Standardized Revolution of Science: Building Cyberinfrastructure for the Geosciences
Recently added grants:
Characterizing and targeting intra-tumor heterogeneity in triple negative breast cancer chemoresistance and multi-organ metastasis
Developing the evidence base for overdose policies: a multilevel analysis of NHBS
Molecular dissection of acute and chronic menthol interactions
The apical junction complex in cochlear basal cells
The Molecular Regulation of Horizontal Basal Cell Activation in the Olfactory Epithelium
Abstract
Funding Agency
Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Center for Substance Abuse Prevention (CSAP)
Type
Unknown (H84)
Project #
2H84SP001007-03
Application #
3564835
Study Section
(SRCP)
Project Start
1989-09-30
Project End
1992-08-31
Budget Start
1989-09-30
Budget End
1990-08-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
1989
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Institution
Name
Community Foundation Greater Washington
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Washington
State
DC
Country
United States
Zip Code
20007
Related projects
NIH 1989
H84 SP
Program for High Risk Youth in Washington, DC
Stinchcomb, Lawrence / Community Foundation Greater Washington
NIH 1988
H84 SP
Comprehensive Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment
Crawford, Marsha Z. / Community Foundation Greater Washington
Comments
Be the first to comment on Lawrence Stinchcomb's grant