1,151 research outputs found

    Utah Science Vol. 29 No. 3, September 1968

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    New USU President takes office - as of July 1 63 Food retail price differences, Roice H. Anderson 63 The green belt amendment and its probable impact on assessed values, taxes and mill levies in Salt Lake County, Rondo A. Christensen and Fred Degiorgio 64 New rules for an old game - bioclimatology - a practical science, Lois M. Cox, Gaylen L. Ashcroft, and E. Arlo Richardson 69 Growth rates for dairy herd replacements, Robert C. Lamb and Lamon L. Perkes 75 New publications 79 Research - the solid base of agriculture and industry, Director K. W. Hill 80 Hungry? Just plug it in 83 The art and science of relocating birds - ecology in action, Wayne H. Bohl and Lois M. Cox 84 Mining water in Iran, Allen LeBaron and Malek Mohtadi 88 Range resources and watershed management - a need for research, Gerald F. Gifford 9

    Драма-сказка Е. Н. Чирикова «Колдунья»: послесловие к сценической истории

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    Полякова Юліана Юріївна, театрознавець, головний бібліограф Центральної наукової бібліотеки Харківського національного університету імені В. Н. КаразінаВ статье сделана попытка жанровой характеристики драмы-сказки Е. Н. Чирикова «Колдунья» в контексте развития русской драматургии начала ХХ века и русской драматической традиции. Рассматривается сценическое воплощение пьесы режиссером К. А. Марджановым и анализируются причины успеха пьесы и спектакля у зрителей и критики, обусловленные социально-исторической ситуацией и обостренным вниманием к любовно-бытовой проблематике. This article presents an attempt to characterize the genre peculiarities of Ye. N. Chirikov’s fairy-tale drama “The Sorceress” within the context of the early 20th-century Russian dramaturgy as well as the Russian drama traditions. The author analyzes the play’s stage realization by director K. A. Mardzhanov, and the reasons of the performance having been so successful with both the public and the critics. The author sees that success as caused mainly by the social and historic situation as well as by enormous popularity of love stories and everyday life presented on stage of that period

    Utah Science Vol. 27 No. 3, September 1966

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    Station receives new director 87 Range weed can cause deformities 87 What is the Agricultural Experiment Station - editorial, by Director K. W. Hill 88 Farm ponds and plastic liners, by C. W. Lauritzen 90 Destructive animals in Utah fruit orchards, by David R. Walker, J. LaMar Anderson, and Anson B. Call, Jr. 93 Inexpensive methods for measuring soil moisture, by S. A. Taylor 98 New head appointed for Plant Science Department 103 Nitrogen - carbon dioxide kill insects 103 Maintaining quality in processed fruits, by D. K. Salunkhe, C. Y. Lee, and F. S. Nury 105 Best fruit varieties - for processing, by D. K. Salunkhe 107 Stamping out brucellosis - Western States 109 What about birdsfoot trefoil - upgrading irrigated pastures, by Keith R. Allred 110 Calcium:phosphorus ratios for dairy cows, by George E. Stoddard 113 Hog cholera can pass to unborn pigs 115 Contributions to research 116 New publications 11

    Utah Science Vol. 27 No. 4, December 1966

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    The Station serves us all - editorial, Director K. W. Hill 119 Food is a science at USU, Lois Cox 120 New tanning helps golfers 123 How to develop and use water - Utah\u27s life blood, Alvin Bishop 124 Climate - the pulse of life, Gaylen l. Ashcroft, George W. Reynolds, and E. Arlo Richardson 129 Ornamentally yours, Bernard G. Wesenberg 132 Droppings, saliva spread leukosis 134 The mysteries of nutrition, Ethelwyn B. Wilcox 135 Where and why does Mrs. Murphy buy? Roice H. Anderson 136 New yearbook of agriculture now printed 137 Plant science and space exploration, Frank B. Salisbury 138 Contributions to research 143 Meat for an expanding population, James A. Bennett 144 Utah\u27s range resources and their management, L. A. Stoddart 147 Feed-lot lighting helps cattle gain 150 Paper pulp waste product prevents insect development 151 Natural chemical speeds leaf drop 15

    Development of coronary stents using advanced results of materials science and technology

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    Stents are high tech endovascular implants. K&M Inc. is the single Eastern European stent producer company. The market needs more biocompatible devices as the trend of the stent development all the producers have to react. The other members of a R&D consortium is research institutions deals with diamond-like and drug-eluting coatings for decade. These biocompatible coatings can avoid the metallic stent surface to directly contact to the living tissues. This way a biologically active drug connected to the surface can be delivered directly to the diseased vessel wall. The Cardiovascular Institution has the clinical facility to test the new products. This group of applicants is obliged to develop, test and put on the market the new generation biocompatible coated stents

    Barnes Hospital Record

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    https://digitalcommons.wustl.edu/bjc_barnes_record/1093/thumbnail.jp

    Palmer & Harvey: A Case of Governance and Audit Failure

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    Palmer & Harvey (P&H) is a recent example of a UK corporate failure which raises questions about current corporate governance practice, the quality and integrity of audit reporting, and the “sugar coating” of Annual Reports. P&H is but one example of UK firms currently struggling to survive, or failing. The paper presents some details about the P&H case, and then considers questions about corporate governance practice, and whether it is designed to truly safeguard the interests of stakeholders; it raises questions about conventional audit reporting, and whether it is too limited in its analysis and reporting. The paper recommends a strengthening of corporate governance guidelines and practice within the terms of the current Financial Reporting Council (FRC) review, and a wider adoption of forensic accounting practice and reporting, in part taking account of the impact of behavioural factors in management practice. A wider study is proposed to take this analysis and discussion further

    LINERs as Low-Luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei

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    Many nearby galaxies contain optical signatures of nuclear activity in the form of LINER nuclei. LINERs may be the weakest and most common manifestation of the quasar phenomenon. The physical origin of this class of objects, however, has been ambiguous. I draw upon a number of recent observations to argue that a significant fraction of LINERs are low-luminosity active galactic nuclei.Comment: Invited review to appear in The 32nd COSPAR Meeting, The AGN-Galaxy Connection (Advances in Space Research). LaTex, 10 pages including embedded figure
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