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8.570228 | 4.300951 | -1 | Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are used to treat
pain, fever, and inflammation. Traditional NSAIDs block COX-1
and COX-2 enzymes that the body uses to manufacture substances
called prostaglandins. Since COX-1 prostaglandins are stomach-
protective, blocking this enzyme is associated with
gastrointestinal toxicity, a known side effect of these drugs.
Newer NSAIDs (called COX-2 inhibitors) block primarily COX-2
prostaglandins associated with pain, fever, and inflammation,
and might be less risky to the stomach. However, this is not
proven, and some COX-2s have been taken off the market due to
excess risk of heart attacks attributable to their use. Drugs in
this family include: - Aspirin, alternatively called
acetylsalicylic acid or ASA (Adprin-B, Anacin, Arthritis
Foundation Aspirin, Ascriptin, Aspergum, Asprimox, Bayer, BC,
Bufferin, Buffex, Cama, Cope, Easprin, Ecotrin, Empirin,
Equagesic, Fiorinal, Fiorital, Halfprin, Heartline, Genprin,
Lanorinal, Magnaprin, Measurin, Micrainin, Momentum, Norw |
-2.127907 | 3.769279 | -1 | ChristianAnswers.Net WebBible Encyclopedia The “conduit of the
upper pool” (Isa. 7:3) was formed by Hezekiah for the purpose of
conveying the waters from the upper pool in the valley of Gihon
to the west side of the city of David (2 Kings 18:17; 20:20; 2
Chr. 32:30). In carrying out this work he stopped “the waters of
the fountains which were without the city” i.e., “the upper
water-course of Gihon”, and conveyed it down from the west
through a canal into the city, so that in case of a siege the
inhabitants of the city might have a supply of water, which
would thus be withdrawn from the enemy. (See POOL OF SILOAM.)
There are also the remains of a conduit which conducted water
from the so-called “Pools of Solomon,” beyond Bethlehem, into
the city. Water is still conveyed into the city from the
fountains which supplied these pools by a channel which crosses
the valley of Hinnom. |
1.857071 | 2.610259 | -1 | by Riley Brockington Over 5.11 million students were enrolled in
public schools in the academic year 2007/2008, a 4.5% decrease
from 2001/2002. This continued a downward trend which has seen
declines every year since 2002/2003. Alberta and Nunavut were
the only two jurisdictions that experienced enrolment increases
since 2001/2002. Alberta’s enrolment was just over 559,000 in
2007/2008, up 2.0% from 2001/2002. Nunavut’s enrolment stood
just over 9,000, up 3.3% from 2001/2002. The only province to
record an enrolment increase from 2006/2007 to 2007/2008 was
Saskatchewan, where enrolment increased 1.2%. With the exception
of Saskatchewan, all provinces and territories experienced
decreases in their enrolment levels between 2006/2007 and
2007/2008. The largest decreases occurred in Prince Edward
Island, 3.9%, Newfoundland and Labrador, 3.0% and the Northwest
Territories, 3.0% (Chart 1.1 and Table A.1). Alberta, which
experienced steady enrolment increases from 2004/2005 through
2006/2007, experienced a slight de |
-2.360304 | 4.270098 | 37 | No one knows for sure since no reason is given in the text (the
T'anach/the Bible). Therefore the question is open to conjecture
within the commentaries and midrashim. @msh210 gives an answer
from the commentaries of Rabbi Moshe Alshich. Another answer: it
was "professional courtesy" -- while Saul was willing to kill
the people, he decided to spare his kingly equivalent, Agag. He
also decided to spare the animals for later use as sacrifices.
(But spoils were not allowed from this battle.) Both decisions
were examples of Saul's lack of commitment to follow Gd's
specific requests. Another example: (From wikipedia) According
to 1 Samuel 10:8, Samuel had told Saul to wait for seven days
after which they would meet; Samuel giving Saul further
instructions. But as Samuel did not arrive after 7 days (1
Samuel 13:8) and with the Israelites growing restless, Saul
started preparing for battle by offering sacrifices. Samuel
arrived just as Saul finished offering his sacrifices and
reprimanded Saul for not obeying his in |
3.662017 | 4.589878 | -1 | fundamentals of physics THE LAW OF INERTIA The tendency of a
body to continue in its state of rest or of uniform motion in a
straight line even when some external unbalanced force is
applied is called Inertia. Mass is the measure of Inertia of a
body. Inertia is of two types namely:- 1. Inertia of rest 2.
Inertia of motion The force which a body possess due to combined
effect of mass and velocity is callled the Momentum. It is
defined as the product of mass and velocity. It is denoted by p
. p=m*v SI unit of Momentum is Kgm/sec NEWTONs LAWS OF MOTION:-
NEWTON,s FIRST LAW OF MOTION It states that a body will continue
in its state of rest or of Uniform Motion in a straight line
unless compelled by some applied unbalanced force to change of
rest or of Uniform motion. NEWTON,s SECOND LAW OF MOTION The
rate of change of Momentum of a body is directly proportional to
the applied unbalanced force and takes place in the same
direction in which the force acts. NEWTON,s THIRD LAW OF MOTION
To every action, There is an |
8.764398 | 4.134856 | -1 | May 6, 1998 ATHENS, Ga. -- When it comes to blood vessels, all
people are not created equal. Blacks have more problems with
cardiovascular disease than whites. Males die from heart attacks
far more often than females. Women suffer from migraine
headaches more often than men. The reasons are complex, and only
now are scientists discovering why. A new discovery by
researchers at the University of Georgia may help explain one
aspect of the tangled problem. Using small pieces of left-over
saphenous vein tissue from heart bypass surgeries, they compared
the veins of white men and women and discovered a startling
difference between them. They demonstrated for the first time
dramatic differences in the density of receptors for a powerful
and naturally occurring blood-borne substance called
endothelin-1. And it's more bad news for white males. "We won't
entirely know the relevance of this study until we do the same
experiments with arterial tissue, but it's an important first
step," said Dr.Adviye Ergul of the Univer |
7.268877 | 3.528159 | -1 | The purpose was to determine if waist placement of the pedometer
affected accuracy in normal, overweight, and obese children,
when attaching the pedometer to the waistband or a belt.
Methods: Seventy-seven children (ages 10-12 years) wore 5
pedometers on the waistband of their pants and a belt at the
following placements: navel (NV), anterior midline of the right
thigh (AMT), right side (RS), posterior midline of the right
thigh (PMT), and middle of the back (MB). Participants walked
100 steps on a treadmill at 80 m · min–1. Results: The RS, PMT,
and MB sites on the waistband and the AMT and RS sites on the
belt produced the least error. Conclusions: Of these sites, the
RS placement is recommended because of the ease of reading the
pedometer during activity. Using a belt did not significantly
improve accuracy except for normal weight groups at the NV
placement site. |
4.113636 | 0.696243 | -1 | A Sustainable Economy Why We Care A sustainable economy is one
in which our resources are not used up faster than nature renews
them and benefits are shared equitably. Profitability is the
product of thriving ecosystems and communities. Our shared
assets are not sacrificed for short term profit. Pursuing
sustainability has grown from the work of a few idealists to
being a mainstream concept. The concept of sustainability has
become a driver for a new generation of products and business
practices. The Oregon Environmental Council envisions Oregon as
a model in developing local, more sustainable businesses and
industries. We believe the concept of sustainability represents
a powerful, emerging innovation platform. Oregon can lead the
way in profitable, exportable technologies in sectors like green
building and renewable energy as well as fields like green
chemistry and engineering. What We Do OEC supports the growth of
Oregon businesses by promoting policies and economic development
strategies that foster susta |
0.221857 | 4.430787 | -1 | At PSFK, Dan Gould posts about Evan Baden, who photographs
people entranced by their electronic gadgets. Baden writes,
“More and more, we are bathed in a silent, soft, and heavenly
blue glow. It is as if we carry divinity in our pockets and
purses.” Baden makes much of the technological innovation of
gadgets and the “wealth of knowledge and communication” they
allow, but it’s worth remembering that the 18th century had the
same reaction to the technological innovation of the day, books.
The site hosting Baden’s work poses this ominous question:
“Their faces, made cadaverous by the artificial light, are
expressionless, suggesting that, as we become more connected by
our electronics, we become less connected to our immediate
surroundings. This leaves us to wonder: do we own our
electronics, or do they own us?” This echoes the society-wide
fears of reading in the 18th century, primarily of women being
preoccupied with books, which were seen as dangerous threats to
their autonomy and education and their presumed |
7.1601 | 2.735138 | -1 | People feel more satisfied after eating healthy foods like nuts
and are less likely to overeat. Eat a Variety of Snacks to Stay
Satisfied When it comes to choosing foods to snack on, many of
us find ourselves stuck in a rut, eating the same foods day
after day. However, those looking to manage their weight would
do well to mix it up a little more, as research suggests that
habitual snacking on the same foods can lead to a decrease in
our sense of satisfaction, potentially leading to overeating. Do
we want what we eat? The study, published in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition, included 118 healthy adults who
were divided into four groups: three groups received equal
calorie snacks—either hazelnuts, milk chocolate, or potato
chips—to eat daily for 12 weeks, while the fourth group, as the
control group, received no snacks. The type of satisfaction the
researchers were trying to measure is called sensory-specific
satiety, which is unrelated to fullness, but rather has to do
with the feeling that a desire |
1.78166 | 4.967872 | -1 | Cultural Adjustment & Transitioning "Culture is central to the
experience of living overseas". Although Robert Kohls, in his
book Survival Kit for Overseas Living (4th ed. 2001), wrote,
"for Americans planning to live and work abroad", international
students in the States certainly share similar experiences of
cultural adjustments and transitioning while pursuing their
studies. No matter how well the international students offices
prepare the incoming students before their arrival, they are
bound to experience some kind of culture shock and, as a result,
find ways to adapt and survive. Even for international students
who have studied the English Language since kindergarten, they
may still have difficulties, at least for a while, in listening
and understanding American English in a cultural context. The
following are some of the feelings and survival tips expressed
and provided by the international students and advisors.
Feelings of Being Overwhelmed The excitement of living in a new
country and environment, m |
7.430587 | 3.193054 | 78 | According to the U.S. Surgeon General, 300,000 Americans die
every year because of obesity. What’s more, obesity is
associated with other health complications like heart disease,
stroke, some types of cancer, type 2 diabetes, arthritis,
breathing problems, and psychological disorders. We don’t fully
understand all of the causes of being severely overweight. And
it’s rare that any one factor is the sole reason for morbid
obesity. However, we do know that there are many factors that
contribute to the causes of obesity. These include family
history (genetics), lifestyle behavior and cultural environment.
There is an identified link between certain genes contributing
to obesity. It is possible that people have a genetic tendency
to gain weight and store excessive fat. However, even people
without this genetic inclination can become obese. An inactive
lifestyle with little or no physical activity can contribute to
weight gain and storing of fat. This lifestyle often results in
unhealthy eating habits and high calo |
0.304318 | 0.496309 | -1 | Skip to content. Updated at 8:50 am on 26 October 2011
Archaeologists have discovered the wreck of a ship that was part
of a fleet sent to invade Japan by the Mongol ruler Kublai Khan,
more than 700 years ago. The wooden ship was found off the
southern island of Kyushu, a metre under the seabed. The hull,
which is almost complete, and the keel are the most intact
remains of a Mongol wreck found in Japanese waters.
Archaeologists say it was part of an invasion fleet carrying
140,000 Mongol soldiers in 1281. Researchers from the University
of the Ryukyus in Okinawa used ultrasonic equipment to detect
the remains of the ship. The wood on the hull was painted
whitish grey and held together by nails. Bricks, weapons and
other instruments were found on board. The BBC reports the
Japanese have always attributed their victory to storms that
wrecked the Mongol fleets during two attempted invasions in 1274
and 1281. They concluded that Japan was protected from invasion
by a divine wind, (Kamikaze), which was invoked in |
4.028879 | 6.306198 | -1 | During the “automation scare” in the 1950s, people were
intrigued yet suspicious about the power of computers. Would
they someday send us into permanent unemployment? Could robots
eventually take over the world? The original goal of artificial
intelligence was to build a person out of silicone. Although
scientists made quick progress in building computers and robots
that amazed us, they never came close to actually replicating
the human brain. “Machine learning” was first introduced 50
years ago. This concept focuses on computers’ ability to “learn”
not through human programming, but through experience and
pattern identification. For example, machine learning allows a
computer to become a masterful chess player by observing good
and bad moves and learning from mistakes. While a computer looks
at every possible move up to 20 to 40 moves ahead, humans use
more conceptual skills to decide how to make moves. In a recent
PBS NOVA documentary “The Smartest Machine on Earth,”
researchers explore powerful new tools i |
5.283077 | -2.40823 | 3 | Just the Facts: The albatrosses are a group of large to very
large birds; they are the largest of the procellariiformes.
Their bills are large, strong and sharp-edged, the upper
mandibles terminating in large hooks. These bills are composed
of several horny plates, and along the sides are the two
"tubes," long nostrils that give the order Beak or Nose? The
tubes of all albatrosses are along the sides of the bill, unlike
the rest of the Procellariiformes where the tubes run along the
top of the bill. These tubes allow the albatros- ses to have an
acute sense of smell, an unusual ability for birds. Like other
Procellariiformes they use this olfactory ability while foraging
in order to locate potential food sources. They Walk the Walk:
The feet have no hind toe and the three anterior toes are
completely webbed. The legs are strong for Procellariiformes, in
fact, almost uniquely amongst the order in that they and the
giant petrels are able to walk well Tasteful Plumage: The adult
plumage of most of the albatrosse |
-0.463596 | 1.764201 | -1 | I don’t think I’ve ever read a book that has ever shed such
light on something that I have worked on in the past. I’ve
written about plenty of men – particularly airmen – who were
lost during the Second World War – and reading about the work of
the Missing Research Enquiry Service has helped me gain a much
better understanding of the process involved in tracing missing
men during and after the war. I guess it’s one of those things
that we don’t tend to think about too much, but how did we get
from the height of the war, with thousands of men being lost in
action – many of fate unknown – to the neatly-kept Commonwealth
War Cemeteries and Memorials to the Missing of today? As the war
was ongoing, the RAF maintained a Casualty Branch that dealt
with information about men lost - either killed, taken prisoner
or missing – over enemy territory. This involved collating
intelligence – in some cases from the enemy via the Red Cross –
to maintain personnel records, and inform next of kin. Many
bereaved relatives of cou |
-2.507131 | 2.005195 | -1 | (Last Updated on : 13/09/2010) The Ravi River flows in India and
Pakistan and is among the five rivers, which give Punjab its
name. It arises in Bara Banghal, a branch of the Dhauladhar
range of Himalayas in the Chamba district of Himachal Pradesh.
It starts in the northwestern direction and then turns to the
southwest near Dalhousie, and after cutting a ravine in the
Dhaola Dhar it enters Madhopur in Punjab. The total length of
the river is about 720 kilometers out of which nearly 158
kilometers flows through Himachal Pradesh. The water of the
river is allocated to India under the Indus Water treaty between
India and Pakistan. The right bank tributaries of Ravi are the
Budhil, Tundahan Beljedi, Saho and Siul while its left bank
tributary is Chirchind Nala. In Sanskrit literature the town was
Iravati. On the right bank of the river there is the beautiful
town of Chamba and on its western bank there is the famous tomb
of Jahangir. Finally the Ravi River flows into Pakistan border
and along it before entering P |
3.983155 | 6.471484 | -1 | Student project makes use of Kinect and Windows Phone to teach
cultural norms Ro Ramtohul is a student, studying at the
University of Dundee, Scotland, who has been working on a
project called "reculture" for the final year of his course
(Digital Interaction Design), and it involves a Windows Phone.
Those who primarily reside in the West (or share the same
stereotypical ignorance towards foreign cultures as the British)
are being targeted by Ramtohul for some interactive education.
The project, as can be witnessed in the above video, is a
Windows Phone app that works with the Kinect for Xbox 360, much
like we've seen with previous concepts. As opposed to learning
the language, or reading blocks of tedious text, Ramtohul's work
will have the user engage physically using gestures. The Windows
Phone app will compliment the Kinect by acting as a type of
'instruction manual'. Users are alerted by a notification when
they're in the proximity of the Kinect and can watch a small
video within the mobile app illustrati |
0.818747 | 3.501076 | 20 | The first International Women's Day In 1869 British MP John
Stuart Mill was the first person in Parliament to call for
women's right to vote. On 19 September 1893 New Zealand became
the first country in the world to give women the right to vote.
Women in other countries did not enjoy this equality and
campaigned for justice for many years. In 1910 a second
International Conference of Working Women was held in
Copenhagen. A woman named Clara Zetkin (Leader of the 'Women's
Office' for the Social Democratic Party in Germany) tabled the
idea of an International Women's Day. She proposed that every
year in every country there should be a celebration on the same
day - a Women's Day - to press for their demands. The conference
of over 100 women from 17 countries, representing unions,
socialist parties, working women's clubs, and including the
first three women elected to the Finnish parliament, greeted
Zetkin's suggestion with unanimous approval and thus
International Women's Day was the result. The very first Inter |
0.504578 | 5.294612 | -1 | The Emergence of the English Native Speaker A Chapter in
Nineteenth-Century Linguistic Thought Series:Language and Social
Processes [LSP] 4 Aims and Scope The native speaker is one of
the central but at the same time most controversial concepts of
modern linguistics. With regard to English, it became especially
controversial with the rise of the so-called "New Englishes,"
where reality is much more complex than the neat distinction
into native and non-native speakers would make us believe. This
volume reconstructs the coming-into-being of the English native
speaker in the second half of the nineteenth century in order to
probe into the origins of the problems surrounding the concept
today. A corpus of texts which includes not only the classics of
the nineteenth-century linguistic literature but also numerous
lesser-known articles from periodical journals of the time is
investigated by means of historical discourse analysis in order
to retrace the production and reproduction of this particularly
important ling |
3.872988 | 4.784054 | -1 | Student athletes everywhere can chalk up another point in the
win column as the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for
Civil Rights has successfully issued a guidance measure that
addresses the rights of children with disabilities to
participate in school athletics and other extracurricular
activities. In an addendum to Section 504 of the Rehabilitation
Act, the proposed guidance adds clarity to the responsibilities
of federally-funded schools for the provision of opportunities
in physical activities and sports participation for students
with disabilities. The United States Government Accountability
Office (GAO) also aided in the initiative by providing a report
stressing the important health and social benefits of access to
and participation in school sports for all students, especially
those with disabilities. The measure calls for schools to
accommodate students with disabilities who choose to join
traditional sports teams by making “reasonable modifications.”
The National Center for Health, Physical Ac |
-0.485332 | 4.70553 | 6 | Everything you need to understand or teach Do Not Go Gentle into
That Good Night by Dylan Thomas. The first tercet introduces the
poem's theme; it also introduces the two recurring refrains that
end alternate stanzas. Although these two lines, the first and
the third, both state Thomas's basic theme about resisting
death, they contrast in several ways. Each of the predominant
words in line one finds its opposite in line three. "Gentle" is
paired with "rage," "good" with "dying," and "night" with
"light." The tone of the two lines also is quite dif ferent.
Line one is subdued; the verbs are deliberately simple, vague.
Thomas uses the predicate adjective "gentle," making it describe
the personality of the individual, rather than the more obvious
choice "gently," an adverb which would only refer to the action
of the verb. "Good night" when it refers to dying becomes a
paradox for Thomas, meaning a good death. Although this line may
be an exhortation to resist death, its entire tone is... View
more of the Do Not |
9.977126 | 0.877741 | 0 | In seeking to understand the remarkably deadly 1918 flu pandemic
which killed at least 20 million people around the planet
scientists have focused on the influenza virus, combing its
genes for clues to its malevolence. But demographer Andrew
Noymer of the University of California at Berkeley thinks people
are overlooking a second culprit: Mycobacterium tuberculosis,
the tuberculosis bacterium. Noymer reached his iconoclastic
conclusion after poring over acres of data on 20th-century death
rates in the United States. One statistic stood out. The rate of
deaths from TB plunged from 157 per 100,000 in 1918 to 103 per
100,000 in 1921, right after the flu pandemic. He found no
similar decrease in mortality from other chronic ailments such
as cancer. That pattern implies that many of those who died from
the flu were already infected by TB. And he notes that M.
tuberculosis carves out cavities in the lung. Those cavities
would have been perfect breeding grounds for pneumonia, which
finished off most flu victims in 1 |
7.217379 | 5.356013 | 79 | A Message from the Executive Director and Chief Science Officer
The aging of the population worldwide is setting the stage for
an epidemic of Alzheimer’s disease. Alzheimer’s disease is a
chronic, progressive, and ultimately fatal neurodegenerative
disease of aging that causes irreversible loss of mental
function, destroying the lives of those with the disease and
disrupting the lives of those who love and care for them.
Alzheimer’s disease was discovered at the turn of the 20th
Century, but despite much progress, effective drugs for
treatment and prevention are still not available. The Alzheimer
Drug Discovery Foundation’s mission is to accelerate the
discovery of new drugs for Alzheimer’s Disease and related
dementias. - The number of people with Alzheimer’s disease in
the U.S. alone is expected to increase from 4.5 million to 16
million by 2050 - Alzheimer’s disease affects 1 out of 4 people
over age 75, 1 out of 3 people over 80, and nearly half of those
over age 85 If we can delay the onset of Alzheimer’ |
-0.658496 | 2.45528 | -1 | JutlandArticle Free Pass Jutland, Danish Jylland, projection of
northern Europe forming the continental portion of Denmark. The
peninsula is bounded to the west and north by the North Sea and
the Skagerrak and to the east by the Kattegat and the Little
Belt. The Chersonesus Cimbrica, or Cimbric Chersonese, of
ancient geography, it was subsequently named for the Jutes (a
Germanic people) and includes, in its larger sense, the German
state of Schleswig-Holstein. Politically, as the result of the
Treaty of Versailles of 1919, Jutland ends southward at
Flensburg (Flensborg) Fjord and includes the islands north of
the Limfjorden. Area 11,496 square miles (29,775 square km).
What made you want to look up "Jutland"? Please share what
surprised you most... |
7.331845 | 2.064547 | -1 | - Carbohydrate composition - Stereochemistry of sugar residues -
Polysaccharide linkage analysis GC is the method of choice for
glycosyl-residue identification (i.e., the sugar components that
make up polysaccharides and oligosaccharides). Two basic
derivitization techniques allow for the necessary volatilization
and ultimate separation of each glycosyl residue that is
released from the polymers by the initial acid hydrolysis. The
standard alditol acetate derivitization (or acetylation)
technique is highly reproducible and enables the identification
of neutral sugar components. A TMS-methyl glucoside techniques
expands the analysis to the acidic components, such as the
galacturonic acid residues that constitute common pectin. A
variation of this second technique is used to determine the d or
l configuration of each sugar component. In addition to
glycosyl-residue identification, the methylation of
polysaccharides prior to acid hydrolysis and acetylation
facilitates the identification of the glycosyl residue l |
1.869046 | 0.402424 | 94 | Fort Hill is a nature preserve containing one of the best
preserved prehistoric hilltop enclosure in North America. The
Hopewell Indians (100 B.C. – A.D. 500) constructed the 1 ½ mile
long earthwork as well as at least two ceremonial buildings and
probably a village in the Brush Creek Valley. Lying at the
western edge of the Allegheny Plateau, immediately south of the
glacial boundary, this hilly area contains an impressive
diversity of bedrock, soils, flora, and fauna. There are 11
miles of hiking trails at the 1200 acre preserve, as well as a
picnic area and latrines. The museum houses exhibits on the
geology and archaeology of the area. Fort Hill has what many
call the best hiking trails in the state. Its fully mature
forests harbor many rare or endangered wildflowers, hundreds of
species of mushrooms a high number of tree species. Birders will
likely be able to check off several hard to find species. You
can hike to a stone and earthen-wall Hopewell hilltop enclosure
at the top of Fort Hill, with a circum |
5.680013 | 0.649777 | -1 | Farmers’ markets have figuratively replaced the town square,
something we have lost over the last decades due to sprawl and
urbanization. In many communities around the country, farmers’
markets are where we chat with neighbors, make new connections
and find out about the issues at play in our communities.
According to the United States Department of Agriculture, there
are 7864 farmers’ markets operating today — a 348% increase
since 1994. Clearly they are providing value to the American
public. The pace of modern American life is such that we want —
maybe even need — to boil complex issues down to essential
truths. Yet isolating a few specific factors and extrapolating
solely from these to proclaim that local food is not eco-
friendly, or not a viable solution, is irresponsible. This is
not to say that measuring a single issue like carbon emissions
as it relates to food production and transportation is not
important; it is vitally important. But, there are many more
factors at play — some very tangible, some |
1.861553 | 3.130369 | -1 | I was just reflecting on the fact that things are so much easier
these days now that there are only 100 pennies in the English
pound. The reason for my ruminations is that, when I was a young
lad, I used to read an electronics hobbyist magazine called
Practical Electronics . One of the articles was called "Take 20"
because of these projects required 20 or fewer components and
cost 20 shillings or less. Now, when I'm explaining things to my
American friends (or to younger folks from England), this is the
point where things start to become a little confusing, because
someone will invariably ask "What's a shilling?" This opens the
door to a mind-boggling discussion on one of the currencies of
yesteryear. Prior to 1971, the British used a currency system
based on “pounds, shillings, and pence.” This was also written
as LSD, where the “L” comes from the Latin word libra and the D
comes from the Latin word denarius , which was a type of coin in
Roman times. The way in which this worked was that there were 12
pennie |
4.057687 | 2.773871 | -1 | Well they are just concept illustrations in the form of graphs,
but of course... L=length -as in distance from the forward
waterline of the board (could draw a picture of the board on the
x axis) And I have another picture, just to show how the
waterline and high pressure area are moving constantly under the
board in response to trim and waves. My idea, which may be
silly, is that the rough or dimpled surface may affect the time
it takes for the high pressure area around the stagnation line
(i.e., just behind the forward waterline) to shift in response
to changes in water surface, board trim and flex (vice versa,
etc....), and how far from the mean stagnation line it shifts,
resulting in different accelerations imparted to the board and
possibly more stable trim and/or less energy lost to flexing the
board.. waterline and presssure .png [ 17.38 KIB | Viewed 854
times ] Normally we think of changing board's modulus, shape, or
other physical properties to make the board react mechanically
in a beneficial way. P |
5.239444 | -2.083673 | 3 | Gardening Articles: Edibles :: Vegetables by National Gardening
Association Editors In the South, you don't have to drive far to
see an armadillo belly up on the side of the road. In fact, you
might find them as far north as Missouri, as their range is
expanding. These prehistoric-looking creatures are about the
size of opossums, and the most common species has 9 movable
rings that look like armor on its back. Armadillos are
nocturnal. They burrow to create homes and in search of food
such as insects, and occasionally, vegetable roots. Their
burrows are often found near wood piles, stumps, and rock piles.
Since armadillos eat many insects, they can be beneficial to
home gardeners. But armadillos may become a nuisance if they dig
up lawns, bulb plantings, or vegetable and flower gardens while
looking for food. Trapping is the best way to remove a problem
armadillo. Because armadillos are nearly blind, place a live
trap near its burrow and place boards as ″wings″ to guide the
animal into the trap. Photograph co |
-0.128612 | 3.028462 | -1 | James Parke, 1st Baron Wensleydale (1782-1868), Judge Sitter in
6 portraits Trained in the law, he was called to the Bar and
rapidly built up a legal practice. In 1828, he was raised to the
King's Bench and in 1834; he was transferred to the Court of the
Exchequer, where he exercised considerable influence as a judge
for almost twenty years until 1855. The government under Lord
Palmerston was keen to have his services as a Law Lord, and he
was made a life peer as Baron Wensleydale in 1856. There was
opposition in the House of Lords, particularly from the
Conservatives, to the notion of life peerages, as they feared
this would enable the government to swamp the House with its
supporters. Palmerston was determined to have him as a Law Lord,
and made Parke a heredity peer. by Sir George Hayter pen and ink
and wash, 1820 Law and Crime |
4.665386 | 4.065615 | -1 | For existing crossings, the safety assessment team has the
responsibility of confirming/verifying the design standards
during the site visit. The technical standards are contained in
RTD 10, the TAC Geometric Design Guide for Canadian Roads and
the TAC Manual of Uniform Traffic Control Devices for Canada. It
should be noted that certain technical standards may be
“grandfathered” or may be delayed “coming into force” (CIF).
Sections 24, 25 and 26 of the Grade Crossing Regulations specify
the requirements regarding applicable enforcement dates. The
following design standards should be confirmed and applied
uniformly by the railway company and the road authority. In
selecting the design vehicle, consideration should be given to
vehicles that are expected to routinely use the grade crossing.
It is not practical to design each grade crossing for all road
vehicles. It is very important that the design vehicle be
established at the beginning of the detailed grade crossing
safety assessment. Table 4-3 in RTD 10 may b |
9.22485 | 5.442702 | 21 | What Is It? The dictionary defines pigeon-toed as "having the
toes turned inward." No such colorful term can be found for feet
that point outward. Both of these foot problems can be caused by
a problem that doctors call torsional deformities. This is when
the long bones of the leg are turned to the inside or outside so
that the toes of the feet do not point straight ahead. Either of
the two main bones in the leg can be affected -- the femur
(between the hip and the knee) or the tibia (the larger of the
two bones between the knee and the ankle). One or both legs can
be affected. Torsional deformities can lead to toes that point
inward (in-toeing) or toes that point outward (out-toeing).
Parents often worry that in-toeing or out-toeing will
permanently interfere with their child's ability to walk and run
normally. However, in most young children, in-toeing or out-
toeing is caused by a torsional deformity that appears for a
short period, and then disappears during the normal stages of
leg development. Most torsi |
6.441224 | -2.27275 | -1 | As is true in many spider species, females of this species grow
to much larger size than males. Adult female body length ranges
from 19 to 28 mm (3/4 to 1 1/8 in.), while males reach only 5 to
9 mm (1/4 - 3/8 in.). In both sexes, the shiny, egg-shaped
abdomen has striking yellow or orange markings on a black
background. The forward part of the body, the cephalothorax, is
covered with short, silvery hairs. Legs are mostly black, with
red or yellow portions near the body. (Dewey, 1993; Milne and
Milne, 1980) Like other orb-weavers (family Araneidae), this
species has three claws per foot, one more than most spiders.
Orb-weavers use this third claw to help handle the threads while
spinning. Also in common with other orb-weaving spiders (and
most, but not all spiders generally), A. aurantia has a venomous
bite that immobilizes prey that is caught in its web. (Dewey,
1993; Milne and Milne, 1980) Other Physical Features:
Ectothermic; Heterothermic; Bilateral symmetry; Venomous Sexual
Dimorphism: Female larger - Mil |
7.358509 | 4.443102 | -1 | En español | During 30 years of running and cycling I'd never
suffered a serious injury. Then, last year, at age 52, I decided
to enter a half-marathon. I bought new running shoes, doubled my
mileage and, within a week, severely strained my Achilles
tendon. I lost the entry fee, a month of training and my
swagger. It was a valuable lesson. Our bodies may change with
age, but we don't need to trade the gym for the bridge table. In
fact, new research shows that exercise can help prevent
Alzheimer's, protect against stroke, increase life expectancy
and even change our DNA so our muscles work more efficiently. As
we get older, though, we need to be smarter about exercise.
Tendons, muscles, joints and reaction times change. We don't
bounce back from injury as quickly. Fortunately, new science
reveals that a few simple actions, done two or three times a
week, can cut your risk of getting hurt. Choose the few that
work best for you. 1. Ease into exercise. One sure way to hurt
yourself is to do too much, too soon. "Y |
2.049515 | 6.688274 | 188 | Do seven words say more than a chart? Some charts need more than
1,000 words. Yet, sometimes, seven words can be more effective
than a chart. Today, we will put an end to the myth that all
charts are pictures – and chatterboxes as well. A short time
ago, I sat and stared at a simple chart for a rather long time.
It showed that venture capital companies are investing a smaller
portion of their money in IT start-ups. To be exact, this
percentage fell from about 60 % in 2005 to under 40 % in 2010.
This chart has minimal labeling. I had to guess the values. To
find if the current reduction is just as strong as it was in the
beginning, I would have needed a ruler and a calculator. I
didn’t bother. Paradox: When it comes to informing readers, the
chart on the upper left contains too much data – not too little.
A good headline could have easily replaced it. Source: Wall
Street Journal Europe, 2010–10–25, p. 15. I got to thinking. How
exactly do we need to know that? Would it be redundant to say
what we see in the he |
7.135806 | 3.748425 | 22 | Every year, thousands of teens (and adults, too) develop eating
disorders and eating disordered behaviors. In our image-obsessed
culture, it can be easy to become critical of our bodies.
Everyday concerns about healthy eating and weight management can
cross the line and become eating disorders. This happens when
someone starts to do things that are physically and emotionally
unsafe — things that could have long-term health consequences.
Some people go on extreme diets and can develop anorexia. Others
may go on eating binges (overeat to excess, known as "binge
eating"). And others may purge their bodies of the food they've
just eaten through forced compulsive exercise, inducing
vomiting, taking laxatives, or a combination of these (known as
bulimia). Although eating disorders are much more common in
girls, guys can get them, too. So how do you know if a friend
has an eating disorder? It can be hard to tell — after all,
someone who has lost a lot of weight or feels constantly tired
may have another type of heal |
8.049709 | 5.321718 | 23 | GeNeuro’s Therapeutic Domain GeNeuro is developing therapies and
diagnostic tools for diseases associated the expression of the
human endogenous retrovirus MSRV, with a primary focus on
Nervous System diseases: Multiple Sclerosis and Schizophrenia.
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory disease of the
central nervous system that is characterized by progressive
neurodegeneration in the brain, spinal cord and optic nerves.
The clinical manifestations are muscle weakness, loss of muscle
coordination, pain, and an evolution towards severe disabilities
such as loss of vision, bladder control and paralysis. Cognitive
and psychological problems are frequent. Today, more than 2.5
million people worldwide suffer from MS. Schizophrenia (SCZ) is
a severe and chronic psychiatric disorder. The major clinical
features of the disease are delusions, auditory hallucinations,
thought disorder, social withdrawal, lack of motivation and
cognitive dysfunction. Today, more than 51 million people
worldwide suffer from SCZ. Mult |
1.63775 | -0.362428 | -1 | ||This article needs additional citations for verification.
(October 2007)| A mid-ocean ridge is a general term for an
underwater mountain system that consists of various mountain
ranges (chains), typically having a valley known as a rift
running along its spine, formed by plate tectonics. This type of
oceanic ridge is characteristic of what is known as an oceanic
spreading center, which is responsible for seafloor spreading.
The uplifted seafloor results from convection currents which
rise in the mantle as magma at a linear weakness in the oceanic
crust, and emerge as lava, creating new crust upon cooling. A
mid-ocean ridge demarcates the boundary between two tectonic
plates, and consequently is termed a divergent plate boundary.
The mid-ocean ridges of the world are connected and form a
single global mid-oceanic ridge system that is part of every
ocean, making the mid-oceanic ridge system the longest mountain
range in the world. The continuous mountain range is 65,000 km
(40,400 mi) long (several times long |
0.413132 | 3.98478 | -1 | Primary Sources & Lesson Plans This letter, part of a lifelong
correspondence between Rebecca Gratz and her childhood friend
Maria Fenno, reflects many important facets of society in the
early nineteenth century. Life in the young American nation was
exciting. Filled with optimism, many Americans of this era
realized that they were involved in an experiment of great
promise. The most immediate concerns of young women of
affluence, such as Gratz, were family and social relations, as
shown by Gratzs reports of her own activities and her inquiries
about the health and happiness of her friend. Yet despite their
privileged world, even the wealthy could not escape the
instability caused by disease and other dangers. Fenno had lost
both her parents in the Yellow Fever epidemic of 1798, and
Gratzs concerns for her friends health betray the fragility of
life in this period. Gratz later became involved in much more
than the personal relations of family and friends that filled
the lives of most of the women of her statu |
3.833366 | -0.309117 | -1 | Is fish farming the answer to food insecurity in Africa? Over
the next few decades Africa’s population is expected to expand
to more than that of China or India, constituting about 23% of
the global population by 2050. It is also expected that Africa’s
urbanisation will continue to increase, following trends
witnessed in the last 50 years. About 50% of Africa’s population
will be living in cities before 2025, according to these
forecasts. African Futures 2050 predicts that the populations of
West and East Africa will be two and a half times those
predicted for North, Central and Southern Africa combined by
2050. Although this movement contributes to an increase in human
productivity it is not sustainable, and will place a huge demand
on governments and states to provide sufficient survival
opportunities. Africa’s coastline stretches for about 32,000 km
along two oceans and four seas: the Atlantic and Indian oceans,
the Red Sea and the Mediterranean. Africa also has large inland
waterways such as the Congo, Za |
1.60702 | 1.858519 | -1 | Asante (Ashanti) History Much of the modern nation of Ghana was
dominated from the late 17th through the late 19th century by a
state known as Asante. Asante was the largest and most powerful
of a series of states formed in the forest region of southern
Ghana by people known as the Akan. Among the factors leading the
Akan to form states, perhaps the most important was that they
were rich in gold. History of the Ashanti People In the 15th and
16th centuries, gold-seeking traders came to Akan country not
only from the great Songhay empire (in the modern Republic of
Mali) and the Hausa cities of northern Nigeria, but also from
Europe. After the Portuguese built the first European fort in
tropical Africa at El Mina in 1482, the stretch of the Atlantic
coast now in Ghana became known in Europe as the Gold Coast.
Akan entrepreneurs used gold to purchase slaves from both
African and European traders. Indeed, while Europeans would
eventually ship at least twelve million slaves to the Americas
(the estimates vary betw |
0.868607 | 1.211326 | 195 | |Description: A map of Nassau County as of 1845 showing Nassau
and St. Marys River.| Place Names: Nassau, Nassau ISO Topic
Categories: oceans, inlandWaters, boundaries Keywords: Nassau
County, physical, political, physical features, county borders,
major political subdivisions, oceans, inlandWaters, boundaries,
Unknown,1845 Source: Sidney Edwards Morse, A system of
Geography, for the use of schools (New York, NY: Harper &
Brothers, 1845) Map Credit: Courtesy the private collection of
Roy Winkelman. |
3.995197 | 5.220587 | 62 | Below you will find a list of Web resources to help you locate
further information about children, parenting, and family life.
These are by no means the only resources out there. However,
they will make excellent starting points as you begin your
search. For additional information, you can also visit our page
of local resources AARP Grandparent Information Center The
American Association of Retired Persons offers resources for
grandparents in all sorts of situations—those living long
distance or nearby, those raising their grandchildren, step
grandparents, or those with visitation issues. Joe Bruzzese,
M.A. Author of the Parent's Guide to the Middle School Years,
now available for purchase through Amazon.com. Founder of “The
Parents' University” – the online source for confidently
pursuing the middle school years. KidsHealth is a medical
resource site sponsored by the Nemours Foundation. The site has
separate sections for children, teens, and parents. Topics
include nutrition and fitness, stress and emotional |
-0.382099 | 2.529317 | -1 | An ancient dwelling, dating back as far as 8500 B.C. has been
found by a team of archaeologists from the Universities of
Manchester and York in Yorkshire County in the United Kingdom.
It is a rare find that hints at having been rebuilt several
times. It may be so old that the house may have been built when
the British Isles were still part of the European mainland. A
few artifacts have been found as well, the most interesting of
which, are the tops of deer skulls which may have been used as
masks. While this suggests ritual activities, it is far too
early to begin speculating on the function of the space, or very
much else detail for that matter. There are a couple of pictures
included in the original article, which is linked to at the
bottom of this entry. |
3.888689 | 0.218583 | -1 | You would have to see it to believe it. Or rather, you would be
forgiven for believing what you see, not knowing what truly lay
on the horizon. Driving through northern Kenya's drought-
affected famine district as the midday sun lifts temperatures to
over 40 degrees centigrade, pools of water shimmer in the
distance, laying between dessicated trees and shrubs, with the
mountains of Turkana peering through the haze. But these aren't
pools. There is no water here. By a cruel irony, this parched
land taunts its thirsty and hungry people with distant images
mirages of glistening oases in the distance. There hasn't been
rainfall since 2004, according to Akwari Nubukwi, an elder in
the village of Kanigipur in the southern Turkana district. "We
use the water from the riverbed, where we dig to find it. But it
is just a little water, and even the goats and dogs drink from
it", he told me. Simon Roughneen is working for the Dublin-based
international humanitarian organisation Goal in northern Kenya
and southern Ethiopia |
-1.069963 | 3.090066 | -1 | Details on the Saxon tribe Saxony,, —I. THE SAXON TRIBE.—There
arose in Germany during the third and fourth centuries after
Christ the great tribal confederations of the Alamanni;
Bavarians, Thuringians, Franks, Frisians, and Saxons, which took
the place of the numerous petty tribes with their popular tribal
form of government. With the exception of the Saxons all these
confederations were ruled by kings; the Saxons were divided into
a number of independent bodies under different chiefs, and in
time of war they elected a duke. The Saxons (Lat., Saxones) were
originally a small tribe living on the North Sea between the
Elbe and Eider Rivers in the present Holstein. Their name,
derived from their weapon called Sax, a stone knife, is first
mentioned by the Roman author Claudius Ptolemaus (about 130
A.D.). In the third and fourth centuries the Saxons fought their
way victoriously towards the west, and their name was given to
the great tribal confederation that stretched towards the west
exactly to the former boun |
5.538823 | -2.302871 | 3 | Capable of reaching an imposing 19 inches (49 cm) in length, the
pileated is the largest woodpecker in America. This feisty
redhead is hard to miss when loudly excavating in trees for food
or when carving out a nesting cavity. The name may be pronounced
either “PILL-ee-ated” or “PILE-ee-ated” and derives from the
Latin name pileatus, which means capped or crested. Woodpeckers
such as the pileated are beneficial to other woodland species
because of the nesting cavities that they leave behind each
season. New residents, from songbirds to squirrels, are happy to
move in and make themselves at home. The pileated woodpecker is
relatively common in western Pennsylvania, but is rarely banded
because of the type of net used at the banding station. The
small mesh size that is normally used is intended for smaller
birds, not these large fellows. The banding team reports that
the occasional pileated woodpecker that finds its way into a net
uses its strong claws, punishing beak, and raucous calls to make
its indignance k |
-0.285685 | 3.333807 | -1 | The British government is embarking on historic reforms of the
monarchy. The government is proposing to change the centuries-
old law of succession that automatically gives male children
precedence in inheriting the crown. For as far back as anyone
can remember, first-born male children have received preference
in royal succession. Remember, for example, Henry VIII’s
obsession with having a male heir. Among the British royals, the
boy gets the position even if there’s an older female sibling
who could assume the title. Known since feudal times as
primogeniture, the practice of favoring males was even codified
into law in the Settlement Act of 1700. Only when there is no
male heir at all is it possible for a Queen to assume the
throne. That’s why the current Queen Elizabeth is the monarch:
she had no male siblings. But male primogeniture is now very
likely to end. Parliament is moving towards altering the law of
succession. Last month, Prime Minister David Cameron sent a
letter supporting the reform to heads of |
9.213782 | 4.540157 | 61 | Marquette General Heart Institute Transesophageal
Echocardiography (TEE) There are several ways to create an image
of the heart and how it functions. The TEE is one of these ways.
It will show the heart structure and the blood flow through the
heart. This procedure can detect heart problems such as blood
clots, aneurysms, valve dysfunction, septal wall defects,
backflow of the blood through the valves, infections of the
heart valve and cardiac masses. What exactly is a TEE?
Transesophageal echocardiography is a painless ultrasound
imaging exam. The instrument used is inserted through the mouth
and passed into the esophagus. Because the heart and esophagus
are close together, and there are no bony structures between,
TEE can provide a clear image of the heart. The TEE probe is a
long flexible instrument with an ultrasound sensor located at
the tip. The probe is passed through the mouth, down the back of
the throat, and into the esophagus and stomach. This allows the
doctor to examine the heart and valves throu |
1.157646 | 1.28337 | -1 | Established in 1965, the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT)
includes the scattered islands of the Chagos Archipelago,
located south of the Equator near the center of the Indian
Ocean. The islands were formerly administered as a dependency of
Mauritius. They were detached as a separate colony in 1965 so
that Britain and the U.S. could establish a military base on
Diego Garcia, the largest atoll of the group. The U.S. has
leased this base, the U.S. Naval Support Facility Diego Garcia,
at least until 2016. Former residents of the islands were
displaced to Mauritius and Seychelles. In 2000 the British High
Court ruled that they have the right in principle to return, and
in 2006 the islanders were granted the right to visit their
former home for purposes such as tending the graves of their
ancestors. Mauritius claims sovereignty over the Chagos
Archipelago, and Britain has promised to return sovereignty to
Mauritius if the islands are no longer needed for defense
purposes. This seems quite unlikely to happen in |
1.415282 | 4.504539 | -1 | Note: This lesson was originally published on an older version
of The Learning Network; the link to the related Times article
will take you to a page on the old site. Teaching ideas based on
New York Times content. Overview of Lesson Plan: In this lesson,
students explore the commercial roots of the American Dream and
analyze a historical or literary text that supports this
philosophy in conversation with an Op-Ed column. Sandhya
Nankani, The New York Times Learning Network Suggested Time
Allowance: 1-2 class periods Activities / Procedures: 1. WARM-
UP/DO NOW: Before class, write the following terms on four
poster boards and hang them up in different sections of your
classroom (we’ve provided links to Web resources that might be
helpful to you in coming up with definitions to share with your
students): -American Dream (The Library of Congress Learning
Page) -Self-Made Man (article “Abraham Lincoln: Self-Made Man”
from the Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association) -Rags to
Riches (Stanford Library page on Ho |
9.602514 | 4.599504 | -1 | A bone scan is a test that detects areas of increased or
decreased bone activity. These may indicate bone injury or
disease. Radioactive isotopes and tracer chemicals are used to
highlight problem areas. Reasons for test The test is done to
detect an abnormal process involving your bone, including the
following: - Stress injuries (such as, stress fracture , shin
splints ) - Infection ( osteomyelitis ) - Bone tumors -
Metabolic disorders (such as, Pagets Disease ) - Nutritional
disorders that can affect bones, like low vitamin D levels (for
example, rickets ) - Death of an area of bone tissues due to
blocked circulation ( avascular necrosis ) Complications are
rare, but no procedure is completely risk free. If you are
planning to have a bone scan, your doctor will review a list of
possible complications, which may include: - Allergic reaction
to the injected material Some people worry about the use of
radioactive material in a bone scan. The amount of radioactivity
is very small, though larger than you would r |
-0.197357 | 6.59487 | 24 | |20: What is the difference between a chord in major and a chord
in minor?| Question: What is the difference between a chord in
major and a chord in minor? - T.B. Answer: A major triad is a
perfect fifth combined with a major third (4 halfsteps) above
the lowest note. Example: C-E-G. A minor triad is the same but
the third is minor (3 halfsteps). Example: C-Eb-G. Rearranging
the notes doesn't change their basic nature: E-G-C is still a
major triad but it's "inverted." Most of the music we listen to
is basically major and minor triads in succession with various
added tones like sevenths, plus decorations and connecting
tones. Either kind of triad could be found in both major and
minor keys. In the key of A minor the chord built on the tonic
note A is a minor triad (A-C-E), while the chord built on the
third note of the scale is major (C-E-G). In the key of C major
it's the major triad C-E-G that is built on the tonic note,
while the triad built on the 6th note is minor (A-C-E). When you
hear a piece in A minor |
7.408525 | 0.911281 | -1 | June 14, 2010 Known as EBC-46, the drug may work on a wide-
variety of cancers, including skin, breast, prostate, head and
neck tumors. The drug works by altering white cells to the
growth, which they attack. Despite the promising announcement,
the company's research has yet to be published and human trials
will be necessary to determine the drug efficacy against cancer
in humans. Still according to the Chief Executive of QBiotics,
Dr. Victoria Gordon, the drug proves the importance of
conserving the world rainforests, which are vanishing at a rate
of some 80,000 acres (32,300 hectares) a day. "The world's
rainforests are an amazing biological resource which we need to
conserve and cherish," Gordon said in a statement as reported by
AFP. "Not only may they hold the secret to many new drugs, they
are the home of more than half of all other species with which
we share the planet." Experts say the Earth has entered a mass
extinction period due to human activities, such as deforestation
and habitat destruction. Th |
-0.364724 | 3.419151 | -1 | What prehistoric art tells us about the evolution of the human
brain. (Of course, while the 2009 article described above passed
a review for accuracy this March, Lehrer himself was a master at
distorting facts to achieve a more pleasing, orderly story. For
this reason alone, he belongs in a discussion of falsehoods that
charm the brain.) Cave art illuminates some of the truths of the
prehistoric world: that buffalo meat made a great dinner; that
women seemed magically procreative; that the parts of the lion
to watch out for were its head and mouth. (It also reminds us
that our ancestors were relentless hunters—some of the most
haunting cave art depicts animals that we may have driven to
extinction, including the cave bear, auroch, Irish elk, and
woolly rhinoceros.) But peak shift doesn’t quite explain the
strange patterns overlying some of the animal images in Altamira
and Lascaux—a drifting scrim of dots, lines, and grids with no
discernible reference points. We could consult the perceptual
grammar that gove |
-1.020299 | -1.601606 | -1 | We have seen that the grand disparity that was believed to exist
between the way Nature works here on earth and in the heavens is
not valid. The question remains, however, can we learn
everything we need to know by investigating phenomena here on
earth and extending that result to the Universe at large? The
answer must be no for the following reasons: 1) Who would have
thought to look for a law of Universal gravitation without the
precise measurements and detailed analysis of Brahe and Kepler?
Cavendish's laboratory measurement of G was done in response to
interpret results obtained for the solar system. 2) Even if
someone would have used the Cavendish apparatus to map out the
gravitational force between two bodies, independently of knowing
Kepler's results, would we be able to infer a complete
understanding of celestial motion? No. We know Newton's Law of
Universal Gravitation is For example, there are certain aspects
of Mercury's motion that can not be explained using the
Newtonian form. The correct explana |
6.651026 | 4.98887 | 25 | Individual differences | Methods | Statistics | Clinical |
Educational | Industrial | Professional items | World psychology
| 'Narcoanalysis (Narco Analysis Test or Narco Test) refers to
the practice of administering barbiturates or certain other
chemical substances, most often sodium pentothal , to lower a
subject's inhibitions, in the hope that the subject will more
freely share information and feelings. Use in forensic
contextEdit The term Narco Analysis was coined by Horseley.
Narco analysis first reached the mainstream in 1922, when Robert
House, a Texas obstetrician used the drug scopolamine on two
prisoners. Since then narco testing has become largely
discredited in most democratic states, including the United
States and Britain. There is a vast body of literature calling
into question its ability to yield legal truth. Additionally,
narcoanalysis has serious legal and ethical implications. A
person is able to lie by using his imagination. In the Narco
Analysis Test, the subject's inhibitions are lowere |
7.759085 | 4.783407 | -1 | results show that babies born extremely prematurely may have a
wide range of cognitive or physical impairment The follow-up
results of a major study1 into babies born extremely prematurely
published today in the New England Journal of Medicine conclude
that cognitive and neurologic impairment is common although the
levels vary widely. EPICure is the first study in the UK that
has followed a group of babies born extremely prematurely at 25
or fewer weeks gestation in 1995 and assessed them at 2½ and 6½
years of age. The 2½ year assessment published in 20002 showed
that of the 302 surviving babies available for follow-up, 50%
had no disabilities, 25% had some level of disability and 25%
had severe disability. This new element of EPICure followed 241
of the surviving children at early school age and assessed them
at an average age of six years and four months. Very detailed
medical and psychological testing took place and 160 classmates
born at full term served as a comparison group rather than using
standardize |
4.231158 | -0.009061 | -1 | Senate committee focuses on CWA rewrite - New booklet tells all
about U.S. water. Laughlin, James // WaterWorld;Oct97, Vol. 13
Issue 9, p2 Opinion. Comments on the release of a booklet on
drinking water standards in the United States by the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Information on the
availability of drinking water tests; Number of communities
which failed to satisfy drinking water standards of the federal
government. - Amending the Safe Drinking Water Act: Views from
Congress. Waxman, Henry // EPA Journal;Summer94, Vol. 20 Issue
1/2, p32 Focuses on some of the drinking water problems in the
United States and on legislative attempts to deal with some of
the issues. 1986 amendments to the Safe Drinking Water Act;
Contamination affecting Milwaukee's water supply in 1993; Lead
contamination; Role of Congress in dealing with this issue. -
Public health groups kick off water campaign. Terrazas, Mike //
American City & County;May95, Vol. 110 Issue 6, p22 Reports on
the collaboration among environmental |
2.823357 | 6.616163 | -1 | A photograph can tell a powerful story; no one knows this better
than a photojournalist. Media images of dramatic events become
burned into our collective memory, acting as visual shorthand
for emotions long after specific details have faded. From
Dorothy Lange’s photographs of the Depression, to images of
police brutality during the civil rights movement of the 1960s,
to recent television coverage of the falling Twin Towers, still
and motion photography has played an important role, delivering
the news and influencing public opinion. Photojournalists cover
a wide range of subjects in addition to national and
international news, including human interest stories, sports,
and prominent people, like celebrities and politicians. As a
photojournalism major, you’ll learn photography basics,
including camera and equipment operation and technique, subject
surveillance, and digital editing. You’ll also learn the
fundamentals of journalism, from news editing and layout, to
news team field operations, to professional st |
9.348935 | 1.392403 | -1 | It sounds like a plot straight out of a science fiction movie: A
new strain of a deadly airborne fungus in Oregon is set to
spread to California. But there's no need to sound the alarm,
doctors say. The new strain of the well-known Cryptococcus
gattii fungus is "worrisome" because it appears to be a threat
to otherwise healthy people, according to a report released
today by Duke University Medical Center. The fungus had
previously affected only people with weakened immune systems. It
is absorbed through the lungs and the symptoms of infection,
which can appear two to several months after exposure, can
include chest pain, shortness of breath, headache, fever and a
cough lasting weeks, according to researchers. Scientists at
Duke have called for awareness and vigilance regarding the
potentially harmful fungus, but doctors caution that while
increased research may be wise, the new strain should not be of
concern to the public. To make a big deal out of this would be
"a great example of the manufacturing of risk, |
8.947682 | 3.774564 | 26 | Synthetic Platelets Cut Clotting Time Every second counts when
treating a traumatic injury. While our bodies are built to
quickly stem bleeding from everyday nicks and cuts, major
trauma—whether sustained on the battlefield or in a car
accident—can cause hemorrhaging that often overwhelms the body's
natural blood-clotting process. To give nature a boost, a team
led by Erin Lavik, a Case Western Reserve University biomedical
engineering professor, and her former doctoral student James P.
Bertram, have built synthetic platelets from biodegradable
polymers that are designed to link up with natural platelets at
the site of an injury, like adding sandbags to a levy along a
flooding river. Blood platelets are the structural and chemical
foundation of blood clotting. Using donor platelets can enhance
clotting, but carries risks of several complications. And these
platelets must be refrigerated and have a short shelf life.
Tests show Lavik's synthetic platelets stay viable for at least
two weeks. In tests, use of the |
7.927503 | 4.063759 | 160 | Fast-Freeze May Help Sperm Survive Storage, Study Finds TUESDAY
Sept. 14, 2010 -- Researchers say they have developed a new and
better method of freezing human sperm for later use in pregnancy
attempts. The new technique could potentially improve in vitro
fertilization treatment and perhaps make it possible for HIV-
positive men to donate sperm safely, the researchers say. The
freezing approach used in the study is already used for embryos
and eggs, "and this is the next step, so it is logical," said
Dr. Ian Cooke, emeritus professor of obstetrics and gynecology
at the University of Sheffield in England, who is familiar with
the study. "Any improvements in sperm freezing would be
welcome," said Mathew Tomlinson, a fertility specialist and
scientist at Nottingham University Hospitals in England. "We can
store sperm for many years, but only 25 to 30 percent of sperm
survive from even the best samples," said Tomlinson. Among
cancer patients who want their sperm stored before they undergo
chemotherapy, as little a |
6.909312 | 5.331482 | -1 | NIH Research Matters May 14, 2007 Learning and Memories Restored
in Mice Two strategies boost new memory formation in mice and
restore access to old memories that had seemed lost, according
to a new study. The results raise the possibility that the
memories of people with dementia may not be forever gone, but
temporarily inaccessible. As our brains age, they inevitably
degenerate, making us less able to think as quickly or remember
as well. This degeneration can eventually lead to dementia, in
which intellectual function is so impaired that it interferes
with normal activities and relationships. Dementia can also be
caused by neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's
disease. Dr. Li-Huei Tsai of the Picower Institute for Learning
and Memory at Massachusetts Institute of Technology leads a team
that used genetic engineering to develop a type of mouse in
which age-dependent degeneration in the brain could be induced
with an additive to the diet. The team, which is partially
supported by NIH's National Inst |
2.410434 | 1.884594 | -1 | This class is intended to introduce students to understandings
of the city generated from both social science literature and
the field of urban design. The first part of the course examines
literature on the history and theory of the city. Among other
factors, it pays special attention to the larger territorial
settings in which cities emerged and developed (ranging from the
global to the national to the regional context) and how these
affected the nature, character, and functioning of cities and
the lives of their inhabitants. The remaining weeks focus more
explicitly on the theory and practice of design visions for the
city, the latter in both utopian and realized form. One of our
aims will be to assess the conditions under which a variety of
design visions were conceived, and to assess them in terms of
the varying patterns of territorial "nestedness" (local,
regional, national, imperial, and global) examined in the first
part of the course. Another will be to encourage students to
think about the future pr |
3.335339 | 0.244854 | -1 | In a new national opinion survey about the next 40 years
conducted by Smithsonian magazine and The Pew Research Center,
most Americans said technology and science will provide
solutions for some of the worlds toughest challenges: 53 percent
believed most of our energy will come from sources other than
coal, oil and gas; the same percentage said there will be
computers that can carry on a conversation just like a human;
and a majority believed there will be a cure for cancer.
However, this faith in a better world does not extend to the
environment. Of those polled, a small majority said the United
States would face severe water shortages by 2050. Six in 10 said
the oceans would be less healthy than they are now, and seven in
10 foresaw a major energy crisis. Social change is expected to
be significant over the next 40 years, including a female
president (89% agree), a Hispanic president (69% agree) and
improved race relations (68% agree). Sixty-two percent agree
that in order to maintain the strength of the U. |
7.338992 | 5.04011 | -1 | Individual differences | Methods | Statistics | Clinical |
Educational | Industrial | Professional items | World psychology
| |style="background: #F8EABA; text-align: center;"
colspan="2"||Piperazine| |Molar mass||86.14 g mol-1|
|style="background: #F8EABA; text-align: center;" colspan="2"||
Except where noted otherwise, data are given for| materials in
their standard state (at 25 °C, 100 kPa) Infobox disclaimer and
references The piperazines are a broad class of chemical
compounds, many with important pharmacological properties, which
contain a core piperazine functional group. Origin and
namingEdit Piperazines were originally named because of their
chemical similarity with piperidine, a constituent of piperine
in the black pepper plant (Piper nigrum). Piperidine itself is
found in fireant venom and is the cause of the burning
sensations from the bites of these insects. Piperazine is freely
soluble in water and ethylene glycol, but insoluble in diethyl
ether. It is a weak base with a pKb of 4.19; the pH of a |
-0.582221 | 3.531464 | -1 | The Order of Merlin is an award bestowed upon wizards and
witches who have achieved great deeds. It has three different
levels: First Class, Second Class, and Third Class. The Order of
Merlin was founded by Merlin in the Middle Ages as an
organisation with the goal of promoting laws to protect and
benefit Muggles. It is unknown when the Order changed from an
organisation to an award or when its focus shifted from
advocating Muggle rights to honouring great wizarding
accomplishments in general. Order of Merlin, First ClassEdit -
Sirius Black's grandfather (either Arcturus Black III or Pollux
Black) - Albus Dumbledore - During the campaign to discredit
him, it was suggested by Remus Lupin that the Ministry would
consider taking away the Order of Merlin from Dumbledore.
Dumbledore claimed that he did not care as long as he is not
taken off the Chocolate Frog Cards. However, when Dumbledore's
credibility was restored, the Ministry's consideration to
retract the medal was cancelled. - Cornelius Fudge - Presumably |
-0.03466 | 3.984209 | -1 | RA Magazine Spring 2013 Issue Number: 118 The power of landscape
in the north of England Two exhibitions celebrate the poetic
power of landscape in the north of England, writes Ian Warrell.
John Atkinson Grimshaw, 'On the Tees, near Barnard Castle',
c.1868. On show at the Bowes Museum. © Leeds Museums and
Galleries/The Bridgeman Art Library. In Britain, our
appreciation of the great landscapes of the North is often
shaped by the words of poets, especially the Romantics of the
early 19th century. An exhibition at the Bowes Museum explores
the echoes caused by the publication of Walter Scott’s epic poem
Rokeby, 200 years ago. It was an instant hit, selling 10,000
copies in only three months, and thereafter drawing countless
tourists to the locations it describes in Teesdale, between
Barnard Castle (home of the Bowes Museum) and Darlington.
Artists also began to include the banks of the Tees and the
Greta on their northern itineraries. But when it came to
creating an illustrated edition of the poem, Scott’s publ |
0.117705 | 5.095832 | -1 | Caboodle is derived from the phrase "Kit and Caboodle". Kit and
caboodle is a phrase that evolved over time. Most recently from
the earlier phrase "kit and boodle". Boodle (or Buddle) is an
old word, and probably evolved from the Dutch "boedel" meaning a
crowd or bunch. "The whole boodle" was heard as long ago as the
early 19th century. Kit is also a time honored word with many
meanings, one of which is a collection of tools or possessions
that a person might carry with them. "The whole kit" was used by
1785. Caboodle is essentially a nonsense word, and is perhaps a
contraction or rhyme of "kit and boodle". Stephen Crane's "The
Red Badge of Courage" contains it: "Of course it might happen
that the hull (whole) kit and boodle might start and run, if any
big fighting came first-off. |
2.330153 | -1.560904 | 27 | This article, written by Charles W. Schmidt, a freelance writer
specializing in science, medicine and technology, appeared first
in Environmental Health Perspectives—the peer-reviewed, open
access journal of the National Institute of Environmental Health
Sciences. The article is a verbatim version of the original and
is not available for edits or additions by Encyclopedia of Earth
editors or authors. Companion articles on the same topic that
are editable may exist within the Encyclopedia of Earth. Out of
Equilibrium? The World's Changing Ice Cover In August 2010 an
iceberg four times the size of Manhattan broke off Greenland’s
northwestern coast and began drifting out to the sea. At nearly
100 square miles, this was the largest iceberg to appear in
Arctic waters since 1962 and a fresh indicator that Greenland’s
frozen landscape is undergoing significant changes.1 Originally
part of the much larger Petermann glacier, which flows down from
Greenland’s interior into a coastal fjord, the iceberg detached
for unkn |
2.404188 | 3.605007 | -1 | Poverty and inequality not key reasons for law breaking
OPINION:CRIME HAS fallen sharply since the economy crashed.
There are three likely explanations for less lawlessness: more
jailing, fewer youths and lower consumption of intoxicants.
Before looking at the likely causes of falling crime, it is
worth debunking the notion that recession, poverty and
inequality make people break laws. Reported crime rates in
Europe and North America rose sharply in the three decades from
the 1950s, despite the advent of mass prosperity. In most
European countries more recently, crime rates have continued to
rise or stabilised. Recessions have had no discernible effect.
Nor has poverty. Worldwide homicide rates illustrate this. They
show a link between income levels and killings is non-existent.
Russia, a middle-income country, has a very high murder rate.
India has more people living on less than $1 a day than any
other country, but its murder rate is a fraction of Russia’s.
Colombians are richer than Bolivians but are five |
6.489844 | -0.893889 | 28 | The Troodos Mountains and the unspoiled Akamas Peninsula are
particularly noted for their endemic plants. Cyprus is well
known for its orchids – being home to 45 species one of which is
the endemic Kotschy’s bee orchid. Other exquisite varieties are
the Troodos Anatolian orchid, the giant orchid and the woodcock
orchid. The best time to admire wild flowers is in early spring
and late autumn. Worth looking out for is the white and yellow
Cyprus crocus, the dark red Cyprus tulip, the three-coloured
chamomile and the cotton thistle.The island’s national plant is
the Cyprus cyclamen, an endemic plant that flowers from
September to January. The national tree is the golden oak that
takes its name from the golden colour of its leaves. Also
endemic to Cyprus, it is found in the Troodos mountain range and
flowers from April to May. The fruits ripen from November to
December. The forests are also graced with pine, cypress and
cedar. Olive and carob trees grow widely, while deciduous fruit
trees and nuts are grown in th |
7.597805 | 1.105271 | 29 | Cold Spring Harbor, NY -- A team co-led by neuroscientists at
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) has shed light -- literally
-- on circuitry underlying the olfactory system in mammals,
giving us a new view of how that system may pull off some of its
most amazing feats. It has long been known from behavioral
experiments that rodents, for instance, can tell the difference
between two quite similar odors in a single sniff. But in such
instances, what precisely happens in the "wiring" leading from
sensory neurons in the nose to specialized cells in the
olfactory bulb that gather the signals and transmit them to the
brain? How can this occur within the brief span of a single
respiratory cycle -- one inhalation and one exhalation? Using a
new method of exploring this question, CSHL scientists, in
collaboration with researchers at Harvard University and the
National Centre for Biological Science in Bangalore, India, have
assembled evidence suggesting that the olfactory bulb in mice is
not merely a relay station be |
0.69028 | 1.974001 | 12 | Shirley is a city in Central Massachusetts. The town was named
for former Governor William Shirley. The town was settled in
1720 and incorporated in 1775. Route 2 West to Exit 38B (Route
110 / 111), 37B (Fort Devens) or 36 (Shirley Road) Commuter Rail
(Fitchburg Line) West to Shirley Station (Zone 8) Not much
public transit, need a car to get around. First Parish Meeting
House on the Common, Shirley, MA Shirley Common – Corner of
Parker and Horsepond Roads. The public space where many summer
festivals and town events occur. There is a Civil War monument
in the center that was dedicated May 30, 1891. Its inscription
reads: "Erected by the Citizens of Shirley in memory of those
brave men who in response to the nation's call hazarded their
lives to suppress the Great Rebellion 1861-1865." First Parish
Meeting House – On the Shirley Common. (Phone: 978-425-9262) The
building was built in 1773 moved by oxen to its current location
in 1851. Today it can be rented for weddings. Old Town Hall –
Also on the Shirley Co |
4.81192 | 5.023225 | 30 | Integrating assessment with instruction can aide in learning We
have four major beliefs about assessment: (a) it should be
ongoing and regular, (b) it should be authentic, (c) planning
what to teach is the same as planning what to assess, and (d)
assessment should serve as a system of checks and balances for
teaching and learning. This reference outlines a tactical
approach to teaching sport skills, with detailed lesson and unit
plans and a DVD-ROM containing reproducibles and videos of
sample lessons. Elementary lessons teach basic concepts and
tactics, while lessons for middle and high school students delve
more deeply into 12 sports. This text also includes a NASPE
standards-linked Game Performance Assessment Instrument (GPAI).
The third edition of the popular book Teaching Sport Concepts
and Skills: A Tactical Games Approach for Ages 7 to 18 now
covers the elementary level as well as middle and secondary
levels. It shows teachers how to move from a traditional to a
tactical games teaching approach with de |
7.801463 | 5.070517 | -1 | Using Bone Marrow to Protect the Brain Tuesday, September 20,
2011 Stem cell technology from TAU research begins clinical
trial for Lou Gehrig's disease The ability to produce
neuroprotectors, proteins that protect the human brain against
neurodegenerative disorders such as Parkinson's and ALS, is the
holy grail of brain research. A technology developed at Tel Aviv
University does just that, and it's now out of the lab and in
hospitals to begin clinical trials with patients suffering from
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's
disease. Developed by Prof. Daniel Offen and Prof. Eldad Melamed
of TAU's Sackler Faculty of Medicine and Felsenstein Medical
Research Center, the technology is now a patent-pending process
that takes stem cells from a patient's own bone marrow and
causes them to differentiate into astrocyte-like cells, which
are responsible for the well-being of the brain's neurons. The
cells release neurotrophic factors, or neuroprotectants, which
have been shown to play a key |
7.777103 | 2.730852 | -1 | Anorexia of Aging - Thu, 10/6/11 - 4:04pm - 0 Comments - 6857
reads Annals of Long-Term Care: Clinical Care and Aging.
19(10):18-24. Angela Champion, BSN, RN As people age, they
become less active and normal physiologic changes cause a shift
in body composition, with an increase in proportion of body fat
and a decrease in lean muscle mass and extracellular fluid
mass.1 The body typically responds to the decrease in energy
needs with a desire for fewer calories. This predisposes older
adults to anorexia of aging, a syndrome associated with
unplanned weight loss and protein-energy malnutrition (PEM).2,3
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) defines
significant unplanned or undesired weight loss as a 5% decline
in body weight over 1 month, 7.5% over 3 months, and 10% over 6
months (Table 1).4 Various physiologic, pathologic, psychologic,
and sociologic factors (eg, depression, loss of social networks,
chronic illness, medications) increase the risk of anorexia of
aging and resultant malnutrition. Al |
0.249526 | 3.204829 | -1 | by Sally M. Walker. (Carolrhoda, 2009. ISBN 9780822571353. Order
Info.) Nonfiction. 144 pages. Grades 6-12. This outstanding
nonfiction book provides a great way to take advantage of the
current popularity of forensics and its hip TV scientists by
bringing forensics into the history and science curriculum. The
discovery of 17th century graves in and around Jamestown,
Virginia is covered by the on-the-scene author who follows the
scientists as they work to uncover mysteries about the bodies of
a Captain, an African slave girl, an upper class woman and more.
The cover has a creepy, haunting feel suitable for a book about
bones and uncovering corpses. The photographs throughout the
book of the archaeologists, the grave sites and the human
remains are striking and informative. Students who are eager for
forensics on the bodies in the graves will have to read through
a discussion of soil conditions and signs in the dirt of the
original Jamestown fort and grave outlines before they get to
the more tantalizing analy |
6.842081 | 0.477009 | -1 | Arracacha (Arracacia xanthorrhiza) Arracacha is from the same
family as celery and carrot. The three main varieties, with
their distinctively yellow-, white-, and purple-colored roots,
are often intercropped with maize, beans, and coffee. Arracacha
produces high returns on investment, and is a high-value cash
crop for poor farmers. With a dense flesh that is richer in
texture and taste than potato, the root can be roasted or boiled
and used as an accompaniment to flavor a range of dishes from
soups to desserts. Young stems are used in salad or as a cooked
vegetable, and the leaves are often fed to livestock. The small
size of Arracahca’s starch grains make it easy to digest, so it
is good pureed or in a soup for babies, the elderly, or people
with disabilities. The processed roots are used as a thickener
for baby food formula and instant soups. The root’s short shelf
life means that it must reach consumers within a week of
harvest, and the plant can be susceptible to viruses. Arracacha
is an important food in |
5.998026 | 1.919422 | -1 | In chemistry, soap is a salt of a fatty acid. Soaps are mainly
used as surfactants for washing, bathing, and cleaning, but they
are also used in textile spinning and are important components
of lubricants. Soaps for cleansing are obtained by treating
vegetable or animal oils and fats with a strongly alkaline
solution. Fats and oils are composed of triglycerides; three
molecules of fatty acids are attached to a single molecule of
glycerol. The alkaline solution, which is often called lye
(although the term "lye soap" refers almost exclusively to soaps
made with sodium hydroxide), brings about a chemical reaction
known as saponification. In saponification, the fats are first
hydrolyzed into free fatty acids, which then combine with the
alkali to form crude soap. Glycerol (glycerine) is liberated and
is either left in or washed out and recovered as a useful
byproduct, depending on the process employed. Soaps are key
components of most lubricating greases, which are usually
emulsions of calcium soap or lithium so |
8.552325 | 4.102689 | 101 | Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) - CVDs are the number one cause
of death globally: more people die annually from CVDs than from
any other cause (1). - An estimated 17.3 million people died
from CVDs in 2008, representing 30% of all global deaths(1). Of
these deaths, an estimated 7.3 million were due to coronary
heart disease and 6.2 million were due to stroke (2). - Low- and
middle-income countries are disproportionally affected: over 80%
of CVD deaths take place in low- and middle-income countries and
occur almost equally in men and women (1). - The number of
people who die from CVDs, mainly from heart disease and stroke,
will increase to reach 23.3. million by 2030 (1,3). CVDs are
projected to remain the single leading cause of death (3). -
Most cardiovascular diseases can be prevented by addressing risk
factors such as tobacco use, unhealthy diet and obesity,
physical inactivity, high blood pressure, diabetes and raised
lipids. - 9.4 million deaths each year, or 16.5% of all deaths
can be attributed to high |
4.917108 | 0.442829 | -1 | The Policy Brief series evidence for policy provides research
highlights on important development topics. No. 12 Threats and
opportunities for smallholders in rural development Rural
development and smallholders’ livelihoods are attracting renewed
attention because of concerns over climate change. But other
trends will have an even bigger effect on them in the near term:
rising food prices due to changing consumption patterns and
speculation, increasing food insecurity, and rapid economic
growth in big developing countries. In addition, biofuels
compete with other crops for land, and large-scale investors,
often foreigners, are investing in agricultural land in
developing countries. This policy brief highlights the risks and
possibilities for smallholders to harness these trends. Download
(English / PDF 741 KB) No. 11 Upholding Health for All “The
enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health is one of
the fundamental rights of every human being.” But in 2013 we are
still far from fulfilling this sta |
1.825209 | 7.695256 | 31 | Simple Equations Introduction to basic algebraic equations of
the form Ax=B ⇐ Use this menu to view and help create subtitles
for this video in many different languages. You'll probably want
to hide YouTube's captions if using these subtitles. - Let's say
we have the equation seven times x is equal to fourteen. - Now
before even trying to solve this equation, - what I want to do
is think a little bit about what this actually means. - Seven x
equals fourteen, - this is the exact same thing as saying seven
times x, let me write it this way, seven times x, x in orange
again. Seven times x is equal to fourteen. - Now you might be
able to do this in your head. - You could literally go through
the 7 times table. - You say well 7 times 1 is equal to 7, so
that won't work. - 7 times 2 is equal to 14, so 2 works here. -
So you would immediately be able to solve it. - You would
immediately, just by trying different numbers - out, say hey,
that's going to be a 2. - But what we're going to do in this
video is to think ab |
5.697457 | 0.994726 | -1 | This site provides information about the University of Michigan
Dioxin Exposure Study (UMDES). It also provides links to other
sites, such as government agencies and news organizations, which
may have information related to this study, or general
information about dioxins and dioxin-like compounds. Elevated
levels of dioxins have been found in the soil of the
Tittabawassee River flood plain and nearby areas. In the fall of
2004, the University of Michigan began conducting a two-year
study to find out whether the elevated levels of dioxins in the
soil in the city of Midland, and in the Tittabawassee River
flood plain between Midland and Saginaw, have also caused
elevated levels of dioxins in residents' bodies. For comparison
purposes the investigators also performed similar measurements
among residents in Jackson and Calhoun Counties. |
3.407441 | 2.234924 | -1 | The definition of a balustrade is a railing that is held up by
supporting posts.(noun) An example of a balustrade is the
railing on the top of a long railing around a deck. See
balustrade in Webster's New World College Dictionary Origin: Fr
balustrade < It balaustrata < balaustro: see baluster See
balustrade in American Heritage Dictionary 4 Origin: , from
Italian balaustrata Origin: , from balaustro, baluster; see
baluster. Learn more about balustrade |
2.04379 | 2.774522 | -1 | Belgium - Balance of payments Belgium-Luxembourg ran deficits on
current accounts each year from 1976 through 1984. Trade
deficits, incurred consistently in the late 1970s and early
1980s, were only partly counterbalanced by invisible exports,
such as tourism and services, and capital transfers. The Belgian
franc is equivalent at par with the Luxembourg franc; the two
nations formed the Belgian-Luxembourg Economic Union (BLEU) in
1921. Belgium ranks among the top 10 trading nations in the
world. Belgium in the early 2000s was making progress on meeting
the EU's Maastricht target of a cumulative public debt of not
more than 60% of GDP. Belgium has one of the highest current
account surpluses of all OECD countries, at 5% of GDP. The US
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) reports that in 2002 the
purchasing power parity of Belgium's exports was $162 billion
while imports totaled $152 billion resulting in a trade surplus
of $10 billion. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) reports
that in 2001 Belgium had exports |
5.39196 | 1.549179 | -1 | Below are the first 10 and last 10 pages of uncorrected machine-
read text (when available) of this chapter, followed by the top
30 algorithmically extracted key phrases from the chapter as a
whole. Intended to provide our own search engines and external
engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text
on the opening pages of each chapter. Because it is UNCORRECTED
material, please consider the following text as a useful but
insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages. Do not use
for reproduction, copying, pasting, or reading; exclusively for
search engines. OCR for page 19 Standing Operating Procedures
for Developing Acute Exposure Guideline Levels for Hazardous
Chemicals 1. Overview of AEGL Program and NAC/AEGL Committee
HISTORY The concerns of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), other U.S. federal agencies, state and local agencies,
private industry, and other organizations in the private sector
regarding short-term exposures due to chemical accidents became
sharply focus |
2.256057 | 3.403872 | 56 | - Historic Sites The Days Of Boom And Bust As the twenties
roared on, a market crash became inevitable. Why? And who should
have stopped it? August 1958 | Volume 9, Issue 5 And since
capital gains were what counted, one could vastly increase his
opportunities by extending his holdings with borrowed funds—by
buying on margin. Margin accounts expanded enormously, and from
all over the country—indeed from all over the world—money poured
into New York to finance these transactions. During the summer,
brokers’ loans increased at the rate of $400,000,000 a month. By
September they totaled more than $7,000,000,000. The rate of
interest on these loans varied from 7 to 12 per cent and went as
high as 15. This boom was also inherently self-liquidating. It
could last only so long as new people, or at least new money,
were swarming into the market in pursuit of the capital gains.
This new demand bid up the stocks and made the capital gains.
Once the supply of new customers began to falter, the market
would cease to rise. |
-0.737788 | 5.884738 | 36 | - n. Plural form of impromptu. “I suspect a good many
"impromptus" could tell just such a story as the above.” “The
telegraph is good for that, if not for anything else: it
facilitates 'impromptus'. ” “His Jewishness is long marinated in
Schubert impromptus and described as intellectually "ritzy".”
“It is Schubert, a really great melody there, one of his
impromptus, and it's played by Imogen Cooper, a British
pianist.” “But as with so much Schubert – you could choose from
the lieder, the piano sonatas, the exquisite impromptus – it's
the song-like tenderness of the music, and the way it breaks out
into turbulence, that brings the anguish on.” “First came the
four late impromptus of D. 935, published posthumously, spinning
their themes into long graceful chains of notes looping across
the keyboard like Italian opera arias.” “Many times these are
impromptus, non-planned discussions and activities.” “My taste
might be more vanilla than you're looking for, but I often study
listening to Chopin's nocturnes, Schube |
9.88947 | -2.771775 | -1 | Head lice are tiny insects that live on the skin covering the
top of your head, called the scalp. Lice can be spread by close
contact with other people. Head lice may also be found in
eyebrows and eyelashes. Lice - head; Nits; Pediculosis capitis -
head lice Head lice infect hair on the head. Tiny eggs on the
hair look like flakes of Head lice...Read more On
MySkinCareConnection we always know when school begins because
we get more questions about head lice. Although anyone is
susceptible to... Read more » |
8.236793 | 4.513352 | 140 | |Posted by transitionsbirth on February 1, 2012 at 10:50 AM| In
most births, the baby's umbilical cord is clamped within seconds
of being born. Recently, this practice has been called into
question. There have been several studies that show benefits to
waiting even just a minute before clamping the cord. More moms
are beginning to ask for delayed cord clamping, and sometimes
their doctors are not familiar with the benefits of it. Nicholas
Fogelson, an OB/GYN, has this blog post which summarizes the
research on delayed cord clamping. Much of the research he looks
at focuses on preterm babies. Some of the benefits seen in
preterm babies include fewer cases of intraventricular
hemorrhage and late-onset sepsis, higher red blood cell volumes
and hematocrits and less need for mechanical ventilation and
surfactant. In term babies, there were higher iron stores at 6
months. There is this study in the Journal of the American
Medical Association which Dr. Fogelson doesn't discuss that
looks at term babies: Late vs earl |
6.005621 | 0.184507 | -1 | Corn on the cob is a great summer eating treat. Yet even the
most ardent corn-lover can wary of yet another cob to gnaw upon.
Mix things up by taking the kernels off the cob. Turn your
results into salads, soups, fritters, and cakes (see recipes
below). To cut kernels from the cob: Hold the stem end of the
husked ear of corn and rest the tip of the ear on the bottom of
a very large bowl. Use a sharp paring knife to cut off corn
kernels and let them fall into the bowl. Be careful to cut just
the kernels and not include any of the tough, inedible cob.
(Better, in fact, to leave some kernel behind than to include
some cob!) Continue cutting around the ear to remove all
kernels. Cutting the kernels into a bowl makes much less mess of
splattering corn "milk" and makes it easier to hold the ear at
an angle that allows you to cut down around the ear safely. |
3.835851 | 7.246813 | -1 | 1958: New hire Jack Kilby shows his Texas Instruments colleagues
a little something he’s built. A very little something: a
working integrated circuit on a piece of semiconductor material.
The world will soon change. Electronics had relied on vacuum
tubes for half a century before Bell Labs invented the
transistor in 1947. Transistors were tinier, more reliable,
longer-lasting, cooler and more energy-efficient. But connecting
hundreds or thousands of them in a complex circuit required wire
and solder. That cost money, took time and created thousands of
ways for the circuit to fail. Texas Instruments, or TI to
insiders, was working on the U.S. Army Signal Corps’ Micro-
Module program when Kilby joined the firm in 1958. Micro-Modules
proposed to make all components the same size, so they could be
snapped together to create circuits without wire or solder. Most
of the company’s employees went on a two-week vacation in July,
but Kilby hadn’t earned any vacation time yet. He used his
solitude to good effect. “Furthe |
-0.961596 | -1.489582 | -1 | The midday sun now traces its lower arc through the southern sky
as coloured leaves seem to cling to branches that become sparser
of foliage with each passing day. The long shadows of a cool,
clear late afternoon soon morph into the darkness of early
evening, hastening the arrival of much sought-after starry
views. The Summer Triangle, that great, familiar asterism we’ve
watched crossing the sky for months now, composed of the stars
Vega, Deneb and Altair, has shifted fully into the western sky
by mid-evening, though still close to overhead. Viewers in rural
locations on dark, moonless nights will easily trace the edge-on
outline of our home galaxy, The Milky Way, as it wanders the
length of the Summer Triangle before plunging towards the
southwestern horizon, where the constellation Sagittarius is
taking its bow. The “Teapot” of Sagittarius, described here at
length last month, now appears to be tipping over in a strange,
almost comical pose; as if about to pour its contents across the
horizon where the last |
4.549457 | 2.338783 | 32 | As technology advances, it's becoming clearer that consumer
electronics could benefit from a significant development of
today's battery technology. Starting with mobile phones,
portable computer systems, consumer electronics or the latest
electrical cars, Lithium-Ion batteries are a significant part of
our daily lives. On that note, Hitachi has recently announced
that it has managed to come up with a new material that could
potentially boost the capacity of today's Lithium-Ion batteries
by a factor of two. The batteries could be used in smart grid
applications, that being the main focus of the company.
According to a recent news report on Nikkei, Hitachi has teamed
up with Shin-Kobe Electric Machinery Co. in an attempt to
complete prototypes of the new batteries as early as the
beginning of next year. The move better explains the company's
expectations that Lithium-Ion batteries for the industrial use
market could reach three trillion yen by 2020, or roughly 31.88
billion US$. The breakthrough, according to t |
1.518916 | 3.035884 | -1 | September 11 2011 9/11 Commission Recommendations on
Intelligence Agencies and Information Sharing The National
Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, commonly
known as the 9/11 Commission, was created in late 2002 to give a
complete account of the September 11 attacks and to offer
recommendations for preventing future terrorist attacks. The
9/11 Commission Report released on July 22, 2004 is the
Commission's answer. The 9/11 Commission Report in a section
titled “Unity of Effort in Sharing Information” characterized
U.S. inter-intelligence information sharing as governed by "Cold
War assumptions": archaic and inappropriate. This archaic view
of information sharing hindered the ability of agencies to
respond to the attacks of September 11 once they were underway,
and inhibited the agencies from predicting the attacks in the
first place.The Commission acknowledged real security interests
in secrecy. However, it asserted that these concerns must be
weighed against other pertinent concerns such |
2.858372 | -0.501263 | 63 | Fire, floods, coastal storms, drought—the list of natural
disasters that invoke billions in damage to communities and
their economies is long and persistent. The tally of costs from
Hurricane Sandy in the Northeast continues to mount, mirroring
the multi-billion dollar price tags for other hurricane
disasters. Yet, year after year, the US Army Corps of Engineers
spends millions of dollars to replenish beaches, supporting the
continued presence and expansion of coastal communities. And
federal agencies spend between $1 billion and $2 billion
annually on fire suppression and efforts to remove dangerous
underbrush and trees from overly dense forests. Billions more
are spent on flood protection. Should federal taxpayers continue
to foot the bill for measures to protect communities in areas at
high risks from natural disasters? A recent National Public
Radio story resurrects this long-standing debate, focusing on
federal taxpayer costs to replenish beaches—year after year—as
bulwarks against storm damage. Proponen |