1,274 research outputs found

    Senator Alan Nunnelee, Sherry Smith, and Thomas McIntosh

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    Senator Nunnelee, Sherry Smith, and Thomas McIntosh converse at 4-H eventhttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/ua-photo-collection/9296/thumbnail.jp

    Emily Tucker, Thomas McIntosh, and Senator Alan Nunnelee

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    Emily Tucker and Thomas McIntosh speak with Senator Nunnelee at 4-H eventhttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/ua-photo-collection/9293/thumbnail.jp

    Being the church in a multi-ethnic community : why it matters and how it works

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    The face of America is growing rapidly more diverse, and many churches are wondering what it means to carry out the Great Commission in a community where different ethnicities are represented. Being the Church in a Multi-Ethnic Community is an introductory guide, a basic primer for pastors and congregation leaders who are wrestling with how to reach the ethnic groups next door and welcome them into the multi-ethnic body of Christ. Gary L. McIntosh and Alan McMahan offer a research-based overview of the issues, challenges, and essential principles for developing multi-ethnic churches in the United States. Rather than being a one-size-fits-all, this book describes a variety of approaches for bringing multiple ethnicities together into a single congregation. Learn how your church can be effective in welcoming disciples of all ethnicities.https://digitalcommons.biola.edu/faculty-books/1133/thumbnail.jp

    Dalhousia McIntosh 1885

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    Dalhousia McIntosh, 1885 reinstated Dalhousia McIntosh, 1885: 186. Type species: Dalhousia atlantica McIntosh, 1885, by monotypy. Diagnosis: Hesioninae with two lateral antennae, and one median antenna on dorsal prostomial surface. Palps biarticulate, palpophores large, massive, palpostyles smaller, blunt. Eyes dark, black, brown or reddish, anterior ones larger than posterior ones, sometimes approaching each other in lateral view. Nuchal organs U-shaped. Peristomial dorsolateral and ventrolateral tubercles low, barely projected. Pharynx with upper jaw double, lower jaw transverse plate. Parapodia sesquiramous along chaetigers 1–3, biramous thereafter. Notochaetae from chaetiger 4, subdistally denticulate, delicate, sometimes abundant, usually very long, reaching neurochaetal tips. Neurochaetae compound falcigers, blades bidentate, guards approaching subdistal tooth. Etymology. McIntosh (1885: 186, footnote 2) indicated that the genus group name was named ‘after the Earl of Dalhousie, K.T.’ It was Fox Maule-Ramsay, 11 th Earl of Dalhousie (22 Apr. 1801 – 6 Jul. 1874), who under Queen Victoria was the Secretary of State for War (1855–1858) (Fryde et al. 1941). ‘K.T.’ stands for Knight of the Order of the Thistle, a Scotish order of chivalry. Gender. Feminine. Indicated by the declination of the nominative, and after the combination with the specific epithet, atlantica, used in its feminine acception to emphasize that the type specimen was found in the Atlantic Ocean. Remarks. von Marenzeller (1904: 308), Chamberlin (1919: 190), Horst (1921: 80), and Pleijel (1998: 110) regarded Dalhousia as a junior synonym of Leocrates. It is herein regarded as distinct on the bases of the above diagnosis. It can be separated from other genera in the tribe by following the key above. Roule (1896b: 454) rejected the independent status of Dalhousia McIntosh, 1885 because the morphological characters seemed insufficient, especially regarding the presence of the so-called frontal tubercle. However, McIntosh (1885: 187) included in the diagnosis the lack of median antenna. Further, Roule (1896: 454) regarded Dalhousia as a junior synonym of Fallacia de Quatrefages, 1866 probably because McIntosh (1885: 188) wrongly indicated that the pharynx was unarmed, but Fallacia is a junior synonym of Hesione Savigny in Lamarck, 1818, as indicated elsewhere (Salazar-Vallejo 2018). Roule (1906: 51) modified his perspective by clarifying that Dalhousia was proposed because it lacks median antenna, and pharyngeal jaws, and he regarded it as a junior synonym of Tyrrhena Claparède, 1868 based upon a damaged specimen and concluded that ‘Ce genre, avec son unique espèce, doit probablement disparaitre de la nomenclature.’ [This genus, with its only species, should probably disappear from nomenclature]. This conclusion was probably taken too literally, including by McIntosh himself, because he referred to Roule as the author for the species in his subsequent publications (McIntosh 1901: 227, 1908: 130). However, provided that both names refer to the same biological species, Dalhousia atlantica McIntosh, 1885 has priority over Tyrrhena atlantica Roule 1896. On the other hand, there are some differences worth mentioning based on the original descriptions. For example, McIntosh (1885:187) indicated that eyes were reddish-brown, whereas Roule (1906: 54) reported them as purple and, in the same publication, he included a figure to show some features. This difference, however, might depend on the time spent in the ethanol before the study of specimens by these authors. Then, these differences were the high variation of the relative size of eyes (Roule 1906, Pl. 5, Fig. 37), their fusion, pigmentation of nuchal organs, and insertion of the median antenna: between anterior eyes in two cases, central in one (two if figure 36 is included), and between posterior eyes in the other. Regretfully, despite McIntosh (1885: 187) indicated the eyes were placed in a pigmented prostomial area, this pigmentation was apparently not taken into account by Roule (1906) for clarifying the relative size of eyes. Further, as indicated in the above key to Hesioninae genera, Dalhousia McIntosh, 1885 is very similar to Paradalhousia n. gen. by having palps biarticulate, jaws in the pharynx, their nuchal organs as two U-shaped lobes, and parapodia are sesquiramous anteriorly and biramous posteriorly. They differ in some features of the pharynx armature and in neurochaetal pigmentation. In Dalhousia the upper jaw is double, T-shaped, and the ventral one is a transverse plate, but there are no marginal denticles, and neurochaetae are often brownish, whereas in Paradalhousia upper and lower jaws are single, fang-shaped, with a marginal circle of denticles, and neurochaetae are pale.Published as part of Salazar-Vallejo, Sergio I., 2020, Revision of Leocrates Kinberg, 1866 and Leocratides Ehlers, 1908 (Annelida, Errantia, Hesionidae), pp. 1-114 in Zootaxa 4739 (1) on pages 20-21, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4739.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/367254

    Church that works : your one-stop resource for effective ministry

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    The expertise of veteran church consultant and best-selling author Gary McIntosh is now available in an easily portable format. McIntosh offers readers his invaluable insights on the church in order to help leaders make their churches more effective. It\u27s just like hiring your own church consultant, but at a fraction of the cost. This at-a-glance practical guidebook helps pastors and church leaders with a wide variety of issues, including: -reaching different generations -assimilating visitors -following trends -designing worship -danger signs of decline -and many more. Short, to-the point chapters examine trends and ministry methods that can be easily adapted to fit every church\u27s needs.https://digitalcommons.biola.edu/faculty-books/1001/thumbnail.jp

    Mnr. H.O.K. Zastrau, Mnr. Alan Mcintosh, Prof. P.J. Nienaber en Prof. G. van N. Viljoen kyk na 'n boek wat 300 jaar oud is

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    Format: TIFF; Size: 8.29 MB; Dimensions: 3506 x 2479 pixels; Resolution: 300 ppiProf. G. van N. Viljoen, Rector of the Randse Afrikaanse Universiteit, received a donation of 4500 books to the value of R20 000 from the Central News Agency(CNA). In the photo, f.l. to r., mr. H.O.K. Zastrau, chief librarian of RAU, mr. Alan Mcintosh and Prof. P.J. Nienaber of the University of the Witwatersrand and Prof. G. van N. Viljoen are looking at a book which is nearly 300 years old. The book, 'Die Geskiedenis van die Wêreld', was donated to the university by Mr. Koot Kruger of Johannesburg

    Mnr. H.O.K. Zastrau, Mnr. Alan Mcintosh, Prof. P.J. Nienaber en Prof. G. van N. Viljoen kyk na 'n boek wat 300 jaar oud is

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    Format: TIFF; Size: 8.29 MB; Dimensions: 3506 x 2479 pixels; Resolution: 300 ppiProf. G. van N. Viljoen, Rector of the Randse Afrikaanse Universiteit, received a donation of 4500 books to the value of R20 000 from the Central News Agency(CNA). In the photo, f.l. to r., mr. H.O.K. Zastrau, chief librarian of RAU, mr. Alan Mcintosh and Prof. P.J. Nienaber of the University of the Witwatersrand and Prof. G. van N. Viljoen are looking at a book which is nearly 300 years old. The book, 'Die Geskiedenis van die Wêreld', was donated to the university by Mr. Koot Kruger of Johannesburg

    Human Rights and the Environment

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    This chapter is published in the book International Human Rights Law in Aotearoa New Zealand, edited by Margaret Beddgood, Kris Gledhill and Ian McIntosh. This chapter considers whether New Zealand law should contain explicit human rights to an environment of quality. The author surveys New Zealand’s existing environmental law and compares this to International rights and standards to identify where New Zealand falls short. The chapter concludes that whilst human rights in relation to climate change provides many benefits, such as a public mechanism to influence climate change regulation, they also present problems, such as jurisdictional limits, creating the ultimate rights paradox

    Human Rights and the Environment

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    This chapter is published in the book International Human Rights Law in Aotearoa New Zealand, edited by Margaret Beddgood, Kris Gledhill and Ian McIntosh. This chapter considers whether New Zealand law should contain explicit human rights to an environment of quality. The author surveys New Zealand’s existing environmental law and compares this to International rights and standards to identify where New Zealand falls short. The chapter concludes that whilst human rights in relation to climate change provides many benefits, such as a public mechanism to influence climate change regulation, they also present problems, such as jurisdictional limits, creating the ultimate rights paradox

    A maximal theorem for holomorphic semigroups on vector-valued spaces.

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    Suppose that 1<p\leq \infty (\Omega ,\mu) is a \sigma finite measure space and E is a closed subspace of Labesgue Bochner space L^p(\Omega; E) consisting of function oon \Omega that take their values in some complex Banach space X. Suppose that -A is invertible and generates a bounded hlomorphic semigroup T_z on E. If 0<\alpha <1, and f belongs to the domain of A^\alpha, then the maximal function \sup_z|T_zf|, where the supremum is taken over any sector contained in the sector of holomorphy, belongs to L^p. This extends an earlier result of Blower and Doust
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