491 research outputs found
How Mexico's Dairy Industry Has Evolved Under the NAFTA - Implications for U.S. Dairy Exporters and U.S. Investors in Mexico's Dairy-Food Businesses
This Discussion Paper shows that the demand for imported dairy products will continue to be strong in Mexico, especially after the 2001-2002 recession ends. However, Mexico's dairy markets have matured under the NAFTA. As part of the maturity, a larger number of strong domestic firms have emerged and powerful European multi-nationals have increased dairy product sales in Mexico. In addition, the expansion of U.S. exports of fluid milk, yogurt, dried whey, and lactose to Mexico will be slow in near future because U.S. market shares of imports of these products are already large. Thus, Mexico's dairy markets no longer represent "low hanging fruit" (if they ever did) for U.S. dairy exporters and direct investorsNAFTA, Maturing Mexican Dairy Markets, U.S. Dairy Exports to Mexico, Demand and Price Analysis, Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, International Development, International Relations/Trade,
"Bitches Ain't Gonna Hunt No Ghosts": Totemic Nostalgia, Toxic Fandom and the Ghostbusters Platonic
In March 2016, the trailer for Paul Feig’s Ghostbusters reboot debuted online
and suffered the unfortunate accolade of being the most disliked trailer
in YouTube history. Popular news media, including professional, pro-am,
and amateur commentators, picked up on the resulting online kerfuffle as
clear indication that there is something rotten in the state of fandom. Feig
himself frequently turned to the echo chamber of social media to denounce
fans as “some of the biggest arseholes I’ve ever met in my life”. Addressing
fans that singled out the reboot as “ruining my childhood,” Feig poured
fuel on the fire by criticising such a perspective as merely the product of
“some whacked-out teenager,” overdramatic, pathological and, perhaps
more pointedly, “toxic”. In so doing, Feig—and, by extension, the cast of
the Ghostbusters reboot—replicated and re-activated traditional stereotypes
of the fanboy—living in his mother’s basement and obsessing over trivial
entertainment
Alien Registration- Proctor, William (Presque Isle, Aroostook County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/33591/thumbnail.jp
A bibliographical and historical study of the first printing of Holy living
Call number: LD2668 .R4 1964 W72
Estimating the Early Postmortem Interval in Domestic Canines
The estimation of time of death (TOD) can be used to aid law enforcement officers in solving criminal cases involving a death. By determining the period from the TOD until the time the body is discovered, forensic investigators can potentially link or rule out a suspect. A great amount of research has been conducted for the purpose of establishing a reliable and accurate means of estimating TOD in humans. In contrast, most animal studies have centered on techniques that might be applied to human forensic cases or to aid wildlife officers in prosecuting criminals who violate conservation laws. However, little research has been conducted concerning the estimation of TOD in companion animals, especially canines. Estimating TOD in companion animals can aid investigators in solving animal abuse cases involving the death of a pet and/or the murder of an owner that coincides with the death of the pet.
The objectives of this study are to take selected TOD measures and apply them for the purpose of expanding the current scientific knowledge concerning TOD determination in canines. Such information should be useful in animal cruelty/abuse investigations by providing a practical and inexpensive quantitative methodology of estimating TOD, maximize the probability that investigators with limited experience will collect useful data, and aid in teaching animal cruelty/abuse investigators proper forensic techniques for handling and collecting data in the field. The measures chosen for this study include postmortem temperature declines in the brain, liver, rectum, and external ear canal and analysis of changes in the concentration of vitreous humor potassium after death. Recording data for these measures are relatively easy, inexpensive, and have been shown in many studies to be the least controversial and most accurate means for estimating TOD. This study documented that body temperature declines measured in the rectum, liver, brain, and external ear canal can be documented using relatively inexpensive and readily available instruments. Further, this study confirms the work of others that changes in K+ concentration in the vitreous humor of the eye is a reliable measure for use in estimation of TOD in dogs.
Keywords: Estimation of time of death; Forensics; Canines; Core body temperature; Vitreous humor; Potassiu
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