1,127 research outputs found
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© 2021, L. Cassidy, D. Hannibal, S. Semple, B. McCowan. This is an author produced version of a paper published in AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY uploaded in accordance with the publisher’s self- archiving policy. The final published version (version of record) is available online at the link. Some minor differences between this version and the final published version may remain. We suggest you refer to the final published version should you wish to cite from it
Treatise of building
by George SempleRückentitel: Semple. Treatise of buildingExlibrisetikette: "The Library Company of Philadelphia" 990005850930205503_0001 Exemplar der ETH-BI
Semple Cochrane - Excalibur within a Scottish setting or the limitations of audit?
The paper outlines accounting irregularities which led to the near collapse of Semple Cochrane, one of last cases brought before a Tribunal under the aegis of the United Kingdom’s Joint Disciplinary Scheme. The accounting issues at stake provide a backdrop to an exploration of the role of the external auditors within corporate governance, the notion of expertise within the accounting profession, and possible limitations on what auditors can, and cannot, achieve, issues which remain at the centre of discussion on the role and value of audit
Letter from George Goldthwaite in Montgomery, Alabama, to Captain Henry Semple.
During the Civil War, Henry Semple served as a captain of an artillery battery organized in Montgomery (known as Semple's Battery). He was later appointed a major and transferred to Mobile. In the letter Goldthwaite congratulates Semple on "the reputation which the Battery and your self had gained." He then discusses the availability of goods, specifically mentioning the price of alcohol. Also included is an excerpt of another letter, which deals with a promotion for Semple (it is unclear whether Goldthwaite is the author or the recipient): "You wrote in relation to Semples [sic] promotion. He is not in a corps in which promotion is rapid and a sine qua non of promotion is a vacancy. Gen Bragg can have him promoted whenever he will say I have a command which needs a Major of Artillery & I desire Capt. Semple to have the place.
Correction to: A Randomized Clinical Trial of a Modified Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Children Hospitalized with Cancer (Mindfulness, (2021), 12, 1, (141-151), 10.1007/s12671-020-01506-3)
In the original published version of this article, Dr. Randye J. Semple was captured as corresponding author instead of Dr. Mojtaba Habibi. Dr. Semple took the role of pre-publication correspondent simply because she is more familiar with the journal�s online submission process than Dr. Habibi. Thus, this erratum is presented to fix the error. The original article has been corrected. © 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature
Mutational bias in spermatogonia impacts the anatomy of regulatory sites in the human genome
ATAC-Seq reports local chromatin accessibility and provides a snapshot of active regulatory regions and genomic regions occupied by DNA-binding proteins in a given tissue. We used ATAC-Seq to identify open chromatin sites in FGFR3-positive spermatogonial cells isolated from dissociated human testicular samples. FGFR3 is most highly expressed in self-renewing spermatogonial stem cells, with low expression also being detected in early differentiating spermatogonia; its expression thus overlaps with the onset of PRDM9 expression in pre-meiotic spermatogonia. Open chromatin in FGFR3-positive cells was identified using standard peak detection analysis with MACS2 software.Talmane, Lana; Kaiser, Vera; Kumar, Yatendra; Semple, Fiona; MacLennan, Marie; Semple, Colin; Fitzpatrick, David; Taylor, Martin. (2021). Mutational bias in spermatogonia impacts the anatomy of regulatory sites in the human genome, [dataset]. University of Edinburgh. MRC IGC. MRC Human Genetics Unit. https://doi.org/10.7488/ds/3053
Employment, Smoking, and Health : The Role of the Hygienist
© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Occupational Hygiene Society.Peer reviewe
Argument for the defense in the case of The Confederate States versus Lieutenant David Hartshorne, presented by Major Henry Semple.
One of Hartshorne's men, Jack Davis, had been arrested for drunkenness and disorderly conduct by a Colonel Taylor. Hartshorne is on trial for failing to assist Taylor in the arrest; for allowing Davis to misbehave; and for rebuking Taylor for "wounding unnecessarily a drunken soldier" while making the arrest. Semple argues that Hartshorne is innocent because he could not hear Taylor's call for assistance; did not know that Davis was intoxicated; and was justified in correcting Taylor's behavior: " If there was anything to the prejudice of good order & military discipline it was on the part of Colo Taylor and not on the part of accused - Any officer has a right and it is his duty, to protect his men against all unlawful violence, and the fact that it is offered by an officer of superior rank does not alter the case - I submit to the court that the rebuke to Colo Taylor was entirely justified by the circumstances...One who acts as an public officer and forgetting his public character attempts to gratify his own passions, becomes a trespasser...and subjects himself to arrest by any officer under the 27th article of war." During the Civil War, Semple served as a captain of an artillery battery organized in Montgomery (known as Semple's Battery). He was later appointed a major and transferred to Mobile
“The Virgin with the Book at Breedon-on-the-Hill (Leicestershire)”
Immured in the Priory Church of St Mary and St Hardulph at Breedon-on-the-Hill, Leicestershire, is a stone relief with a half-length representation of the Virgin Mary (Fig. 21.1). It is part of the largest group of sculpted reliefs from the early medieval kingdom of Mercia. She is veiled and has no nimbus; she imparts a blessing to the beholder with a disproportionately enlarged right hand, which also points to a book she reverently holds in her veiled left hand. She is framed by an arch supported by colonnettes and plain capitals. It has been suggested that her “hieratic frontality”, staring gaze, and the drapery style may be derived from seventh-century Byzantine icons. Yet, the iconography of this relief, let alone the emphasis on the hand pointing to the book, is not found in Byzantine art and remains highly unusual to the point that not all scholars who have dealt with it believe it to be a representation of the Virgin. In fact, in the conventional Byzantine half-length iconography of the Virgin known as Hodegetria, ‘The One who shows the Way’, she holds the Christ Child in one arm while pointing to him with the other, indicating the Saviour, the way to Salvation. At Breedon a book takes the place of the Child. That being the case, is the relief in Breedon to be seen as a variation of the Hodegetria, or a Mercian rendition of an earlier, lost model, or an invention of early medieval England? What might its historical context suggest
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