526 research outputs found
Research in Canning
Miss Gertrude Sunderlin, H. Ec. \u2719, and Miss Gail Redfield, H. Ec. \u2725, are the senior and junior fellows under the Ball Brothers Industrial Fellowship. The fellowship is a grant of $4,500 to be used over a period of two years. Miss Sunderlin is working to establish time tables for the processing of non-acid vegetables and meats. Miss Redfield is determining the rate of heat penetration in glass in home canning
Reviews
Managing Change in Higher Education: A Learning Environment Architecture by Peter Ford and eight other authors, Buckingham: Society for Research into Higher Education and the Open University Press, 1996. ISBN 0â335â19791â4. 161 pages, paperback. No price indicated
Reviews
Computers and Typography edited by Rosemary Sassoon, Oxford, Intellect, 1993. ISBN: 1â871516â23â4
The Iowa Homemaker vol.6, no.10
Table of Contents
V-E-I-S-H-E-A by Gladys Parker, page 1
Is the Home Economics Graduate the Best Homemaker?, page 2
The Season Suggests a Sewing Machine by Cleo Fitzsimmons, page 3
How Shall We Keep Our Food Cold? by Helen Bishop, page 4
4-H Clubs, page 6
Iowa State Home Economics Association Page, page 8
Editorial, page 9
Whoâs There and Where, page 10
Research in Canning by Betty Barker, page 11
Vodvil Puts $350 in MacKay Loan Fund by Marcella Alton, page 11
Art Students Compete by Jane Rhoads, page 11
New Meat Course by Helen Goeppinger, page 11
Eternal Question, page 12
Movement to End Waste in Textile Industry, page 13
Analyzes 100 Brands of Sheeting by Mary Moser, page 1
The Iowa Homemaker vol.5, no.11
Table of Contents
Choosing the Profession of Homemaking by Anna E. Richardson, page 1
Opportunities Offered in Hospital Dietetics by Grace Magee, page 2
Selecting Your Spring Wardrobe by Betty Barker, page 2
Soft Water for the Housewife by Arthur W. Turner, page 3
Do You Have a Tea Room Complex? by Gladys Branson, page 4
The Designer â Her Place by Helen Dahl, page 4
Girlsâ 4-H Page, page 5
With the Iowa State Home Economics Association, page 6
Editorial, page 7
Whoâs There and Where, page 8
Marketing as a Business Proposition by Ruetta Day Blinks, page 9
The Eternal Question, page 10
Are You Furnishing Your Home?, page 11
The Heart of the Home by Frances Jones, page 1
A Holocene sequence from Walufeni Cave, Southern Highlands Province, and its implications for the settlement of the Great Papuan Plateau, Papua New Guinea
This paper presents preliminary results from the 2019 excavations at Walufeni Cave, at the eastern end of the Great Papuan Plateau (GPP) in western Papua New Guinea. Preliminary dating and analysis of the unfinished excavations at Walufeni Cave span the Holocene and probably continue into the Late Pleistocene, confirming the presence of people on the Plateau from at least the Early Holocene and potentially much earlier. The data presented here offer a site-specific model of early intensive site use from at least 10,000 years ago, then ephemeral use, followed by a sustained Late Holocene occupation. Although there are significant changes in the quantity of material discard over time, there is little evidence for significant change in the subsistence base or technology, reflecting a degree of relative homogeneity until the Late Holocene, when we see the introduction of pig, a change of focus in the plant economy and the presence of marine shell from the southern coast
Effects of antiplatelet therapy on stroke risk by brain imaging features of intracerebral haemorrhage and cerebral small vessel diseases: subgroup analyses of the RESTART randomised, open-label trial
Background
Findings from the RESTART trial suggest that starting antiplatelet therapy might reduce the risk of recurrent symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage compared with avoiding antiplatelet therapy. Brain imaging features of intracerebral haemorrhage and cerebral small vessel diseases (such as cerebral microbleeds) are associated with greater risks of recurrent intracerebral haemorrhage. We did subgroup analyses of the RESTART trial to explore whether these brain imaging features modify the effects of antiplatelet therapy
First Dark Matter Constraints from a SuperCDMS Single-Charge Sensitive Detector
We present the first limits on inelastic electron-scattering dark matter and dark photon absorption using a prototype SuperCDMS detector having a charge resolution of 0.1 electron-hole pairs (CDMS HVeV, a 0.93 gram CDMS HV device). These electron-recoil limits significantly improve experimental constraints on dark matter particles with masses as low as 1 MeV/c2. We demonstrate a sensitivity to dark photons competitive with other leading approaches but using substantially less exposure (0.49 gram days). These results demonstrate the scientific potential of phonon-mediated semiconductor detectors that are sensitive to single electronic excitations
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