3,271 research outputs found

    Influence of Stauffer Chemical Company on fluoride distribution in the Silverbow Montana area

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    CEG 2350: OS Concepts and Usage

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    Provides introduction to Linux and Windows operating systems and system administration. Covers files and directories, ownership and sharing, programs and processes, system calls, libraries, dynamic linking, command line shells, scripting, regular expressions and secure network protocols

    Aristotle\u27s Accounts of Motion in Physics II and VIII

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    Aristotle’s disparate accounts of natural change appearing in Physics II and VIII are not incompatible if we realize they answer separate questions about distinct developmental systems. He works in two paradigms. In this paper, the author reviews and evaluates numerous opinions/arguments from commentators about how best to understand what Aristotle means by his potentially contradictory theories of self-change and energia, as well as how to critically assess the consistency and success of Aristotle’s body of work on the subject. The author argues that Daniel W. Graham offers a more accurate assessment of the way Aristotle’s later views on motion (energia, the unmoved mover) interact with his earlier more developed theory of self-change. The earlier theory, conceptualized well in De Caelo and Organon, tries to be simple and intuitive. Its incarnation in Physics II reads as awkward but not exactly logically inconsistent with the hylomorphic agenda elsewhere in the Physics

    Blighting of field and garden peas, chiefly due to seed infection; Powdery mildew of the pea

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    Caption title.Mode of access: Internet

    Resolving Conflicts Between Farmers and Creditors: An Analysis of the Farmer-Creditor Mediation Process

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    Also PCMA Working Paper #26.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/51202/1/435.pd

    Britain and the French Resistance 1940-1942 : a false start

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    During the Second World War, the French Resistance failed to unify or work effectively with Charles de Gaulle, the movement\u27s symbolic leader. The Resistance maintained a troublesome relations with Great Britain. Neither side overcame a series of conflicts, battling egos, and internal confusion. As a result, Britain and the Resistance never developed a mature relationship that could aid the Allied invasion of French North Africa in November 1942 (Torch) and Normandy in June 1955 (Overlord). The British lacked a unified policy toward the French Resistance. Acting out a sense of desperation and isolation, the British clung to de Gaulle in the early days after the German Blitzkrieg but later came to question their support. Building up de Gaulle while keeping other options open, the British pursued conflicting goals, confusing not only policy toward de Gaulle and the Resistance but also fostering internal disagreements within the offices of the prime minister and foreign secretary. Wartime conditions, inexperience, personal vendettas, and political competitions precluded both a unified and effective Resistance and a cohesive and consistent British policy toward the Resistance
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