734,731 research outputs found

    54/07/06 (4) 7:55pm, Dr. Richard N. Sheppard

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    Sam Shepard\u27s brother, Dr. Richard N. Sheppard, stated that he was awakened by a phone call from Mayor Houk around 6am on July 4. Mayor Houk informed him that Sam had been hurt and Marilyn might be dead. Richard relayed this information to his wife, who called other family members. Upon arriving at the Sheppard home, Richard entered and saw Sam sitting and holding his neck and head. He raced upstairs to help Marilyn, but found that she was dead and had been dead for at least 15 to 20 minutes. He noted the blood spatter in the room, the position of the body, and the clothing on the body. After determining that there was nothing he could do for Marilyn, he went downstairs to help Sam and found that his other brother, Dr. Stephen Sheppard, had arrived. Richard and Stephen went upstairs and viewed the body. Richard then told Stephen to take Sam to the hospital. Richard checked on a sleeping Chip, gathered some of Chip\u27s things, and asked his wife to bring him to their house. After going to the hospital and learning that Sam was in stable condition, he and Stephen returned to the Sheppard home and looked around until they were asked to leave. When he returned to the hospital, Richard was present for part of Dr. Gerber\u27s questioning of Sam. Richard also stated that Sam and Marilyn were a devoted couple, and that Koko was neither vicious nor a guard dog

    Spiders

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    Reviewed by Tamra Reall (Field Specialist in Horticulture)"Spiders belong to the order Araneae of the class Arachnida. They are most closely related to scorpions, ticks and mites. Spiders have a body composed of two regions called the cephalothorax (head) and abdomen (body). They have eight legs, no antennae or wings, and an unsegmented abdomen. Four, six or eight eyes are located at the front of the cephalothorax. Also located at the front of the cephalothorax are the pedipalps, appendages used for handling food. Spinnerets are located on the posterior tip of the abdomen. These structures are used to produce silk. Silk is used by spiders to make webs, construct egg sacs, line nests, wrap captured prey, or construct 'balloons' with which to travel on air currents over large distances."--Page 1.Richard M. Houseman (Department of Entomology) Reviewed by Tamra Reall (Field Specialist in Horticulture)New 11/90, Revised 3/03/5M

    The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 2006-12-08

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    Published on December 8 of 2006, this edition of the College of Wooster\u27s student ran newspaper is eight pages long. When residents of Babcock returned back to campus from Thanksgiving break they were informed of the graffiti found in the stairwell leading to the attic. Kittredge was transformed into a Las Vegas Casino last Saturday evening hosted by Pam Pierce\u27s FYS. Assistant Professor of Chemistry Dr. Melissa M. Schultz presented for the Chemistry Department Seminar. Railroads across the United States are offering trips to the North Pole via the Polar Express. One student, Meredith Wilson \u2709, has created website about sex called Head. Vice President for Academic Affairs Iain Crawford and Gingrich Professor of German emeritus Richard Figge will be revamping the tradition of reading A Christmas Carol, which was previously done annually by Professor Delbert Lean. The athletic updates for the week are on page seven and eight.https://openworks.wooster.edu/voice2001-2011/1154/thumbnail.jp

    Serbo-Croat Clitics and Word Grammar

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    Serbo-Croat has a complex system of clitics which raise interesting problems for any theory of the interface between syntax and morphology. After summarising the data we review previous analyses (mostly within the generative tradition), all of which are unsatisfactory in various ways. We then explain how Word Grammar handles clitics: as words whose form is an affix rather than the usual ‘word-form’. Like other affixes, clitics need a word to accommodate them, but in the case of clitics this is a special kind of word called a ‘hostword’. We present a detailed analysis of Serbo-Croat clitics within this theory, introducing a new distinction between two cases: where the clitics are attached to the verb or auxiliary, and where they are attached to some dependent of the verb

    Aspects of career development and information management policies at the Bank of Japan - a frank interview with a former central banker

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    Relatively little empirical research has been published on the internal affairs of central banks. Secrecy is a key aspect of central banking, and this has posed a major obstacle to researchers. In this paper, an experienced and senior former Bank of Japan official is interviewed concerning the personnel management and information management policies, as well as the informal ‘guidance’ at the Bank of Japan. A number of surprising details emerge concerning the personnel management and information management policies of the Japanese central bank.<br/

    Volume 24, Issue 2: Full Issue

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    Leadership in the British civil service: an interpretation

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    This article is essentially a polemic. The argument is that when politicians and officials now talk of ‘leadership’ in the British civil service they do not use that word in the way in which it was previously used. In the past leading civil servants, acting in partnership with ministers and within constitutional constraints, exercised leadership in the sense of setting example, inspiring confidence and encouraging loyalty. The loosening of traditional constitutional patterns, the marginalization of senior officials in the policy process and the emergence of business methods as the preferred model for public ­administration have led to a political and administrative environment in which leadership in the British civil service is now about encouraging patterns of behaviour which fit in with these changes. Leadership skills are now about ‘delivery’; they are not about motivation. It is time for politicians, officials and scholars to be open about this

    Candor & Ebb: Searching For My Truth Through Solo Performance

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    This thesis is an examination of autobiographical solo performance. It explores the use of personal trauma and illness in the dramatic form. In addition to investigating how other solo performing artists utilize their medical conditions in their work, this thesis gives some historical context to the author’s own process and development. The thesis culminates in the author’s solo performance script and a desire for its audience to find solace and compassion through the experience of witnessing it being performed

    Barnes Hospital Bulletin

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    https://digitalcommons.wustl.edu/bjc_barnes_bulletin/1006/thumbnail.jp
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