1,198 research outputs found

    Gone Fishing: Marketing Faith to Millennials in the Postmodern Era

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    Digitized copy of a D.Min. major project by Gary W. Filson. 179 pages

    Gary Hart, Jesse Douglas, and Julian Dixon, August 1985

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    From left to right, Senator Gary Hart, Reverend Jesse Douglas, and Congressional Black Caucus Chair Julian Dixon sit during an event held at the 28th Annual Southern Christian Leadership Conference Convention in Montgomery, Alabama.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Joseph & Evelyn Lowery Institute for Justice and Human Rights, the Joseph Echols Lowery Irrevocable Trust, and other donors in supporting the processing and digitization of Morehouse College's Joseph Echols and Evelyn Gibson Lowery Collection

    Zoonotic potential of Giardia duodenalis and Cryptosporidium spp. and prevalence of intestinal parasites in young dogs from different populations on Prince Edward Island, Canada

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    The prevalence of Giardia duodenalis, Cryptosporidium spp. and other intestinal parasites was determined in dogs <1 year old from Prince Edward Island, Canada. Fecal samples were collected from the local animal shelter (n=62), private veterinary clinics (n=78) and a pet store (n=69). Intestinal parasites isolated included G. duodenalis, Cryptosporidium spp., Toxocara canis, Isospora spp. and Uncinaria stenocephala. To estimate the zoonotic risk associated with these infections, genotypes of G. duodenalis and Cryptosporidium spp. were determined using 16S rRNA and Hsp70 gene sequencing, respectively. Dogs from the pet store had the highest prevalence of intestinal parasites (78%, 95% CI: 68-88%), followed by the private veterinary clinics (49%, 95% CI: 37-60%), and the local animal shelter (34%, 95% CI: 22-46%). The majority G. duodenalis belonged to host-adapted assemblages D (47%, 95% CI: 31-64%) and C (26%, 95% CI: 13-43%), respectively. Zoonotic assemblages A and B were isolated alone or in mixed infections from 16% (95% CI: 6-31%) of G. duodenalis-positive dogs. All Cryptosporidium spp. were the host-adapted C. canis. While host-adapted, non-zoonotic G. duodenalis genotypes were more common, the presence of G. duodenalis assemblages A and B, T. canis, and U. stenocephala suggests that these dogs may present a zoonotic risk. The zoonotic risk from Cryptosporidium-infected dogs was minimal.Fabienne D. Uehlinger, Spencer J. Greenwood, J. Trenton McClure, Gary Conboy, Ryan O’Handley, Herman W. Barkem

    Gary Cordner, AnnMarie Cordner and Dilip K. Das, Urbanization, Policing, and Security. Global Perspectives, Wyd. CRC Press – Taylor & Francis Group, Boca Raton – London – New York 2010, 461 s.

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    Author positively assessed substantive value of Gary Cordner, AnnMarie Cordner and Dilip K. Das, URBANIZATION, POLICING, AND SECURITY. GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES book. The book contains an article delivered at the 14th Annual Conference of the International Police Executive Symposium (IPES), which was held in 2007 in Dubai under the general theme "Urbanisation and Security". Issues covered in the book is particularly relevant in the plane of national and international security. According to the reviewer book should be very interesting not only to academics but also to politicians.Uniwersytet w Białymstok

    How "Chicagoan" are Gary Becker's Economic Models of Marriage?

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    This paper describes Gary Becker’s theoretical models of marriage. At the micro-level, these are all rational choice models. At the market level, Becker offers two major types of models: partial equilibrium models based on Price Theory as taught by Marshall and Friedman and optimal sorting models based on optimal assignment models. The paper examines some of the possible intellectual influences on Becker’s theory of marriage, compares Becker’s research on marriage with that of some scholars interested in intra-marriage distribution, and documents that Becker’s students at Chicago were more interested in Becker’s Friedmanian models of marriage than in his optimal assignment models.

    Pleonosporium ricksearlesii C. W. Schneider & G. W. Saunders 2024, sp. nov.

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    &lt;i&gt;Pleonosporium ricksearlesii&lt;/i&gt; C.W.Schneider &amp; G.W.Saunders, sp. nov. (Fig. 3) &lt;p&gt; HOLOTYPE (DESIGNATED HERE). &mdash; &lt;b&gt;Bermuda&lt;/b&gt;. Somerset Island, 32&deg;16.783&rsquo;N, 64&deg;52.788&rsquo;W, on wooden dock in Ely&rsquo;s Harbour, depth 0-1 m, 30.VI.2015, &lt;i&gt;C.W&lt;/i&gt; &lt;i&gt;. Schneider &amp; T.R. &lt;i&gt;Popolizio 15-21-3&lt;/i&gt; (holo-, MICH[1210917]), dried silica sample: BDA1944, GenBank: OR336107 (COI-5P), OR336112 (&lt;i&gt;rbc&lt;/i&gt; L).&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;ISOTYPES. &mdash; Same data as holotype (iso-, NY, UNB, Herb. CWS).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; ETYMOLOGY. &mdash; Named for Prof. Richard Brownlee Searles, the first author&rsquo;s graduate mentor, collaborator and friend, on the occasion of his 87th birthday. Joint cruises with the first author to study mesophotic seaweeds off Bermuda aboard the R/V &lt;i&gt;Seahawk&lt;/i&gt; in the early 1980s initiated four decades of investigation on the macroalgal flora of this Atlantic archipelago.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;DISTRIBUTION. &mdash; Endemic to Bermuda as currently known.&lt;/p&gt; DESCRIPTION &lt;p&gt;Delicate plants lignicolous or on mud-saturated wood, bushy, erect to 5.0 cm tall, Persian red in colour (Graf 1x 2023) and ecorticate (Fig. 3A); indeterminate axes fine with alternately irregular branching above with corymbose and narrowly-angled branches at apices, some with some branches overtopping the apex (Fig. 3B); most branches simple of 15 with fewer cells or once branched, indeterminate branches irregularly replacing these branches; in lower portions of indeterminate axes, the lateral branches markedly smaller than the axis that produced them (Fig. 3C), and with most lateral branches losing all but a few of their most proximal cells; in distal portions the axes only slightly larger in diam. than the branches they produce; indeterminate axial cells cylindrical and usually flared at their proximal ends in basal portions of main axes (Fig. 3C, F, G), 95-150 &micro;m diam. and 370-530 &micro;m long, gradually tapering distally to cells 20-30 &micro;m diam. and 85-250 &micro;m long several segments below the apices; upper branches incurved, apical cells slightly tapering but obtuse (Fig. 3D); tetrasporangia adaxially sessile on upper incurved branches, borne singly or in a series of successive cells or every other branch cell (Fig. 3E), subglobose to obovoidal, 33-36 &micro;m diam. and 36-48 &micro;m long, including a thick wall, sporangia also forming laterally or terminally, at times clustered or in secund series, on broken lower and regenerating lateral branches (Fig. 3F, G), some appearing to have single-celled stalks; gametangia unknown.&lt;/p&gt;Published as part of &lt;i&gt;Schneider, Craig W. &amp; Saunders, Gary W., 2024, Australasian Lophothamnion J. Agardh aligns genetically with Pleonosporium Nägeli (Wrangeliaceae, Spongoclonieae): new species from the western Atlantic, pp. 1-10 in Cryptogamie, Algologie 20 (1)&lt;/i&gt; on page 4, DOI: 10.5252/cryptogamie-algologie2024v45a1, &lt;a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10526738"&gt;http://zenodo.org/record/10526738&lt;/a&gt

    A citizen's guide to employment, inflation, income, and the Oregon economy

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    R. Bruce Rettig, David R. Darr, Ludwig M. Eisgruber, John P. Farrell, A. Gene Nelson, Gary W. Sorenson.This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English

    A Celebration of the Wild. On Earth Democracy and the Ethics of Civil Disobedience in Gary Snyder’s Writing

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    The article attempts to shed light upon the evolution of Gary Snyder’s “mountains-and-rivers” philosophy of living/writing (from the Buddhist anarchism of the 1960s to his peace-promoting practice of the Wild), and focuses on the link between the ethics of civil disobedience, deep ecology, and deep “mind-ecology.” Jason M. Wirth’s seminal study titled Mountains, Rivers, and the Great Earth: Reading Gary Snyder and Dōgen in an Age of Ecological Crisis provides an interesting point of reference. The author places emphasis on Snyder’s philosophical fascination with Taoism as well as Ch’an and Zen Buddhism, and tries to show how these philosophical traditions inform his theory and practice of the Wild

    A Celebration of the Wild. On Earth Democracy and the Ethics of Civil Disobedience in Gary Snyder’s Writing

    No full text
    The article attempts to shed light upon the evolution of Gary Snyder’s “mountains-and-rivers” philosophy of living/writing (from the Buddhist anarchism of the 1960s to his peace-promoting practice of the Wild), and focuses on the link between the ethics of civil disobedience, deep ecology, and deep “mind-ecology.” Jason M. Wirth’s seminal study titled Mountains, Rivers, and the Great Earth: Reading Gary Snyder and Dōgen in an Age of Ecological Crisis provides an interesting point of reference. The author places emphasis on Snyder’s philosophical fascination with Taoism as well as Ch’an and Zen Buddhism, and tries to show how these philosophical traditions inform his theory and practice of the Wild
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