1,722,915 research outputs found
Langkap Crunch / Muhammad Akim Hassan
Langkap Crunch (LC) is a sole proprietorship company that has been established by myself, Muhammad Akim bin Hassan as a way to provide scrumptious dessert at an affordable price.
The reasoning behind its name is that Langkap is the hometown of the owner and Crunch to signify that the focused product would mainly be scrumptious desserts. LC currently is fully operated by the owner as it is still at a small business and has limited prowess to catch up with larger demand.
As of now, there is only one product that has been launched which is mini coco crunch bathe with white chocolate to make a tasty dessert that will surely leave tester with a sense of satisfaction. This premium dessert is done at small batch and it people can purchase this dessert through its Facebook page; Langkap Crunch
Akim court
Akim joue tranquillement avec d'autres enfants et leurs petits bateaux au bord de la rivière Kuma. En fin d'après-midi, un bruit sourd et des tirs se font entendre. Dans le village d'Akim, les gens se mettent à courir dans tous les sens. Akim court comme les autres. Il veut rentrer à la maison. Mais sa maison est détruite, il n'y a plus personne. Akim crie! Il veut retrouver sa famille. Un livre soutenu par Amnesty Internationnal: L'histoire d'Akim est singulière et intime. Mais elle est aussi celle de milliers d'autres enfants, hommes et femmes que la violence contraint à la fuite. Tous ont droit et besoin de la protection garantie par le droit d'asile et Amnesty International se bat pour que ce droit soit effectivement respecté partout dans le monde
Akim Tamiroff, film actor
Akim Tamiroff, film actor. From the back: "Rascal - to the list of burly rascals he has portrayed on the screen, Akim Tamiroff adds the character of Dominique You. Dominque was Napoleon's ace cannoneer who became pirate Joan Lafitte's chief lieutenant, and Akim portrays him thus in 'The Buccaneer,' in which Fredric March is Lafitte."To order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see:
http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/reproduction/reproduction
Please cite the Order NumberScanned at 600ppi with an Epson 20000 flatbed scanner. Image then rotated, cropped, level-adjusted, and sharpened using Photoshop CS3. Converted to a JPEG2000 image upon ingest into CONTENTdm
Protein tools for therapeutic intervention in rare disease epidermolysis bullosa
submitted by: Akim Strohmeyer, B.Sc.Literaturverzeichnis: Blatt 74-78Masterarbeit Paris Lodron University of Salzburg 2017Abstract in deutscher und englischer Sprach
Protein tools for therapeutic intervention in rare disease epidermolysis bullosa
submitted by: Akim Strohmeyer, B.Sc.Literaturverzeichnis: Blatt 74-78Masterarbeit Paris Lodron University of Salzburg 2017Abstract in deutscher und englischer Sprach
MANYETİK REZONANS ELEKTRİKSEL ÖZELLİKLER TOMOGRAFİSİ İÇİN PROGRAMLANABİLİR AKIM KAYNAĞI TASARIMI
MANYETİK REZONANS ELEKTRİKSEL ÖZELLİKLER TOMOGRAFİSİ İÇİN PROGRAMLANABİLİR AKIM KAYNAĞI TASARIM
Patterns of fertility and contraceptive use in Tanzania
The evidence that fertility has started to decline in parts of sub-Saharan Africa is the major motive of conducting the current research. This is particularly important because the Tanzanian Government considers the current fertility levels to be very high. As a consequence, the Government of the United Republic of Tanzania has established a National Population Policy in 1992.This study examines the reproductive behaviour of Tanzanian women. The study of current levels and trends of fertility showed that, on the average, a Tanzanian woman bears six children. This is a decline from seven births per woman which prevailed between 1960s and early 1980s. The reduction in infant and child mortality and the rise in age at first marriage are among the factors responsible for the decline in fertility in Tanzania. It should be noted, however, that this decline is largely confined to urban areas. The percentage of women using contraception is still very low in Tanzania but a rising trend has been observed recently.Breastfeeding is both prolonged and universal in Tanzania and its importance in lowering fertilising below its biological maximum is noted. In fact, the effect of breastfeeding durations in prolonging birth intervals is found to be statistically significant even after controlling for amenorrhea and after resuming sexual relations. Variations in durations of breastfeeding, length of birth intervals and the extent of using contraception are found to depend mainly on the region of residence, the type of place of residence and the age of women. It is important therefore to design separately programmes to lower fertility by regions of residence, by rural/urban residence and where relevant target young women separately.</p
An examination of the ESL/EFL literature teacher education course content and methodology and its influence on literature learning in Ugandan schools
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN039410 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
Recent trends in Tanzanian fertility
This paper provides an assessment of the nature and magnitude of Tanzania s recent fertility decline, using robust methods for the identification of fertility trends. A decline in Tanzanian fertility began some time in the late 1970s or early 1980s. The pattern of decline exhibits similarities to patterns identified some years ago in Zimbabwe and Kenya. The decline has been especially marked in urban areas. It has been accompanied by a rapid rise in contraceptive prevalence from the very low levels before 1990 to just under 20 per cent of currently married women of reproductive age. Although falling marital fertility associated with a rise in contraceptive use is the main contributor to the decline in fertility, a rise in the average age at marriage has also made a (smaller) contribution, as has the AIDS epidemic. The fact that fertility is declining in Tanzania raises questions about the social and economic requirements for fertility transitions to begin in sub-Saharan Africa
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