1,509 research outputs found
Letter from JV [John Victor] Carson, Dominguez Estate Company to J.S. Yoshinobu, June 3, 1938
Letter making final request for information no Mr. Kuda's lease information. Signed by JV [John Victor] Carson
1949 Springfield College 2nd JV Football Team
A photograph of the Springfield College #2 JV football team, or JV "B" squad, as they were also referred to. The team was coached by Frank Robinson and Doug DeWeese. The team only played 2 games during the season, finishing with a record of 1 win and 1 loss.
Members of the 1949 Springfield College 2nd JV football team included: Crocker, Merle; Halbersleben, F.; Mooradian, Charles; Arnold, Lloyd; Guschke, Joseph; Los Banos, Domingo; Jacouzzi, Rocco; Johnson, Franklin; Rotondi, Michael; Cobb, Justin; Falvey, John; Houghton, Dean; Williams, Arthur; Carbonneau, Albert; Duncanson, Robert; Schreiber, George; Robinson, Frank; Stearns; Hammond, Winston; McCool, Dixon; Dellert, David; Berry, Carlton; Neumann, John; Thomas, Tommy; Nelson, Arthur; Marcon, Peter; DeWeese, Doug.In 1890, Amos Alonzo Stagg, a Yale all-American and major league baseball pitching prospect, came to Springfield College (then known as the YMCA Training School) and started the college’s first football team. A grad student in a one-year program to become a YMCA Physical Director, he served as Coach, Manager, Captain, and Player on this original team often called “Stagg’s Eleven” or “The Stubby Christians.” The team finished the first season with a record of 5 wins and 3 losses, playing Yale strongly in the first indoor football game ever played in Madison Square Garden. Among other greats to coach the football team was James Huff McCurdy. McCurdy came to Springfield in 1895 and headed the team till 1917. He is largely responsible for helping to grow the Springfield College football team’s reputation and starting a long tradition of being feared by other colleges, in addition to his innovative work in exercise physiology. Later, Oscar “Ossie” Solem, famous Syracuse University coach, coached the team from 1946-1957
The internationalization and localization of professional services: The case of executive search firms in Australia
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Routledge / Taylor & Francis via the DOI in this record.William Harvey would like to acknowledge the financial support of the University of Sydney Business School in 201
‘“Liever geen onderzoek”: hoe schandalen over koloniaal geweld in de Britse en Nederlandse politiek onschadelijk gemaakt konden worden (1945-1960) [“Preferably No Inquiry”: how scandals about colonial violence have been managed and politically defused in British and Dutch politics],’
In this forum contribution Huw Bennett and Peter Romijn compare how British and Dutch authorities have dealt with reports on atrocities committed systematically by their own troops in the armed conflicts of decolonisation in Kenya and Indonesia, respectively. This comparison demonstrates the differences that existed in the Dutch and British dealing with and manipulation of information, the organisation of disinformation and the management of scandals, owing to the particular nature of the political and colonial systems in both empires. Despite these differences, it is clear that both the British and the Dutch authorities successfully applied a ‘management of scandal’ in order to avoid that critical reports on atrocities would be investigated thoroughly and would cause political trouble. Against the background of ingrained colonial practices and mentalities, both the British and Dutch government took absolute priority in ‘restoring their authority’ in these territories. Thus, the responsible authorities allowed their troops much room for manoeuvre in engaging the enemy. If necessary, they offered those responsible for atrocities the benefit of the doubt, thus institutionalising an informal culture of impunity
Human Trafficking
Human trafficking, defined as the recruitment, transport or receipt of individuals for the purpose of exploitation, is perhaps the most negative phenomenon linked to globalisation. The link between migration and human trafficking is close, although domestic trafficking can and does occur. This chapter looks at human trafficking taking globalisation into account. It examines the questions of the definition and understanding of trafficking, as well as exploring the difficulties of establishing good quantitative measures of the extent of trafficking, and concludes with a look at the interactions between counter-trafficking efforts and border control
CT venogram and 3D vessel imaging of JV stenosis.
<p>(<b>A</b>) Sham mouse with patent JVs (white arrow). JVL mouse confirming ligation of the right and left JV and formation of collateral veins (yellow arrow). (<b>B</b>) Sham mouse exhibits normal venous drainage. (<b>C</b>) Right-side view of JVL mouse exhibits formation of small collateral vessels (yellow arrow) and stenosis due to surgical ligation (black arrow). Left-side view of JVL mouse exhibits complete occlusion at ligation site (black arrow) with formation of collateral vessels (yellow arrow).</p
Influence of propolis extract in Hubbard JV chickens nutrition on oxidative stabilty of meat
DOI: 10.15414/afz.2014.17.02.47–51Received 12. May 2014 ǀ Accepted 3. June 2014 ǀ Available online 23. June 2014In the experiment we evaluated the influence of propolis extract in nutrition of chickens on stability of meat in the most valuable parts of carcass that were stored by freezing at -18 °C. The hybrid combination of tested chickens was Hubbard JV. Propolis extract was added to experimental groups at a dose of 600 mg.kg-1 (group E1) and 800 mg.kg-1 (group E2). Fattening lasted 42 days. Oxidative stability of breast and thigh muscles was evaluated from the 1st day to 6th month of storage in regular month intervals. In the breast muscle, values of malondialdehyde (MDA) were from 0.212 to 0.313 mg.kg-1 in control group, from 0.186 to 0.264 mg.kg-1 in E1 group and from 0.175 to 0.259 mg.kg-1 in E2 group. In the thigh muscle, MDA values were from 0.255 to 0.339 mg.kg-1 (control group), from 0.196 to 0.279 mg.kg-1 (E1 group) and from 0.194 to 0.268 mg.kg-1 (E2 group). Application of propolis extract in Hubbard JV chickens nutrition has significant influence (P≤0.05) on decreasing of oxidative processes in breast and thigh muscles during the whole period of storage.Keywords: chickens, nutrition, feed supplements, propolis, chicken meat, oxidative stability, malondialdehyd
Reconstructing a state's responsibility to provide safety to its constituent population: globalization, international population movements and transterritorial public
This paper discusses how a state can reconstruct its function to provide safety to its constituent population after having become a destination country of international population movements (IPM). First, the paper considers why it is the responsibility of a state to provide safety to its constituent population. Second, using an International Political Economy perspective, it is claimed that a change in economic circumstances will lead to a change in the political domain. Third, when they accept new norms, actors in world politics could change their ways of action. Fourth, if a norm alternative to nationalism is formulated, the state could alter its action to provide safety to foreign nationals. Fifth, a state’s understanding of ‘the constituent population of a society’ can be modified in accordance with a changing knowledge of the characteristics of a state’s boundaries. It is concluded that a state’s responsibility to provide safety to its constituent population should remain unchanged, but an understanding of the form of such a population has to be updated. A state of destination country of IPM should characterize the foreign nationals within its territory as a ‘transterritorial public’, and provide safety to them just as it would to its nationals
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