1,049 research outputs found
The Feildian, 1926, vol. 30, no. 3
The Feildian was the magazine of Bishop Feild College, a Church of England academy for boys. The first publication of its kind in Newfoundland, it was established in 1893 with a twofold purpose: to foster school feeling and to chronicle the affairs of the College. Its content included news, correspondence, sports and a section on alumni. Publication ceased in 1960. (Vol. 1, no. 1, p. 2; Euguene P. Kennedy, "Bishop Feild College," Encyclopedia of Newfoundland and Labrador, vol. 1, 195-6.)Frequency: irregular. Includes advertisements. In its first issue (October 1893) The Feildian was entitled Church of England College Magazine, the title being changed the following year when the institution was renamed Bishop Feild College. The Blue Review issue included in this collection appears to be a new school publication from the mid-1960s
The Feildian, 1926, vol. 30, no. 4
The Feildian was the magazine of Bishop Feild College, a Church of England academy for boys. The first publication of its kind in Newfoundland, it was established in 1893 with a twofold purpose: to foster school feeling and to chronicle the affairs of the College. Its content included news, correspondence, sports and a section on alumni. Publication ceased in 1960. (Vol. 1, no. 1, p. 2; Euguene P. Kennedy, "Bishop Feild College," Encyclopedia of Newfoundland and Labrador, vol. 1, 195-6.)Frequency: irregular. Includes advertisements. In its first issue (October 1893) The Feildian was entitled Church of England College Magazine, the title being changed the following year when the institution was renamed Bishop Feild College. The Blue Review issue included in this collection appears to be a new school publication from the mid-1960s
The Feildian, 1929, vol. 31, no. 4
The Feildian was the magazine of Bishop Feild College, a Church of England academy for boys. The first publication of its kind in Newfoundland, it was established in 1893 with a twofold purpose: to foster school feeling and to chronicle the affairs of the College. Its content included news, correspondence, sports and a section on alumni. Publication ceased in 1960. (Vol. 1, no. 1, p. 2; Euguene P. Kennedy, "Bishop Feild College," Encyclopedia of Newfoundland and Labrador, vol. 1, 195-6.)Frequency: irregular. Includes advertisements. In its first issue (October 1893) The Feildian was entitled Church of England College Magazine, the title being changed the following year when the institution was renamed Bishop Feild College. The Blue Review issue included in this collection appears to be a new school publication from the mid-1960s
sj-docx-1-aop-10.1177_10600280221125919 – Supplemental material for Impact of Piperacillin-Tazobactam Dosing in Septic Shock Patients Using Real-World Evidence: An Observational, Retrospective Cohort Study
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-aop-10.1177_10600280221125919 for Impact of Piperacillin-Tazobactam Dosing in Septic Shock Patients Using Real-World Evidence: An Observational, Retrospective Cohort Study by John M. Allen, Devi Surajbali, Dalena Q. Nguyen, Jolanta Kuczek, Maithi Tran, Brianna Hachey, Carinda Feild, Bethany R. Shoulders, Steven M. Smith and Stacy A. Voils in Annals of Pharmacotherapy</p
sj-docx-2-aop-10.1177_10600280221125919 – Supplemental material for Impact of Piperacillin-Tazobactam Dosing in Septic Shock Patients Using Real-World Evidence: An Observational, Retrospective Cohort Study
Supplemental material, sj-docx-2-aop-10.1177_10600280221125919 for Impact of Piperacillin-Tazobactam Dosing in Septic Shock Patients Using Real-World Evidence: An Observational, Retrospective Cohort Study by John M. Allen, Devi Surajbali, Dalena Q. Nguyen, Jolanta Kuczek, Maithi Tran, Brianna Hachey, Carinda Feild, Bethany R. Shoulders, Steven M. Smith and Stacy A. Voils in Annals of Pharmacotherapy</p
The role of zirconium in microalloyed steels
Recently there has been a renewed interest in the addition of zirconium to microalloyed steels. It has been used since the early 1920's, but has never been universally employed, as have niobium, titanium or vanadium. The functions of zirconium in steelmaking are associated with a strong chemical affinity, in decreasing order, for oxygen, nitrogen, sulphur and carbon. Historically, the main use of additions of zirconium to steel was for combination preferentially with sulphur and so avoid the formation of manganese sulphide, known to have a deleterious influence of the impact toughness of wrought and welded steel. Modern steelmaking techniques have also raised the possibility that zirconium additions can reduce the austenite grain size and increase dispersion strengthening, due to precipitation of zirconium carbonitrides, or in high nitrogen vanadium-zirconium steels, vanadium nitride. This review gathers information on the compounds of zirconium identified in steels together with crystallographic data and solubility equations. Also brief accounts of the role of sulphides and particles in general on austenite grain size control and toughness are included
The Power of Imagination---From Stagecoach to Bullet Trains
The author invites the reader to consider the power of imagination. In the way that imagination led transportation from the stagecoach to the bullet train, so also imagination can lead to postive adaptations and changes in theological feild education
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