560 research outputs found

    A day in the life of a British general practitioner

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    General Practitioners are key providers of patient related services in National Health Service (NHS) in United Kingdom. The general practitioner have enjoyed enormous trust from the general public. Author shares his day today work giving an interesting insight into the model of care general practitioners engage with in U

    Identification of the Kna/Knb polymorphism and a method for Knops genotyping

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    DNA mutations resulting in the McCoy and Swain-Langley polymorphisms have been identified on complement receptor 1 (CR1)-a ligand for rosetting of Plasmodium falciparum-infected RBCs. The molecular identification of the Kna/Knb polymorphism was sought to develop a genotyping method for use in the study of the Knops blood group and malaria

    Inoculating before the next infodemic: Lessons learned from Covid fact-checkers

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    Corresponding author (Journalism & New Media): Kristen Swain, [email protected]://egrove.olemiss.edu/pharm_annual_posters_2022/1019/thumbnail.jp

    The Netherlands

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    Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository ‘You share, we take care!’ – Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.Water Resource

    Map of Swain County, N.C. region

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    This topographic map, produced by the United States Geological Survey, includes much of Swain County, North Carolina. The map was collected by Horace Kephart (1862-1931), noted naturalist, woodsman, journalist, and author, and it is likely that the notations on the back of the map are his. After moving to western North Carolina in 1904, Kephart became fascinated by the Appalachian landscape and culture and collected clippings, photographs, and maps of the region throughout his life

    James L Crews, Jr

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    Mounted portrait of James L. Crews, Jr., a 5th generation Floridian. He is the author of the poem The Romantic Life of the Florida Cowhunter. His Great, great grandfather was Joel Swain, whose name is the first name in Manatee County's first Marks and Brands official record book in 1879. This photo and the poem are found in Joe G. Warner's book, Biscuits and 'Taters: a history of cattle ranching in Manatee County

    Library Special Collections: Papers of Margaret Swain

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    Margaret Helen Swain (1909-2002) was a historian of embroidery and textiles. The author of several books and numerous articles, she also lectured widely, and her papers reflect these activities. Her early publications were on Ayrshire needlework but she became an expert on embroidery in general and Scottish work in particular. Her books included Historical Needlework (1970), The Needlework of Mary, Queen of Scots (1973) and Scottish Embroidery (1986). Her advice was frequently sought by curators and collectors and she became a consultant to the National Museum of Scotland and the National Trust for Scotland. She was asked to help to improve the displays in the Palace of Holyroodhouse, which led to the publication in 1988 of her catalogue of the tapestries and textiles there

    The Fables of Aesop and Others Translated into Human Nature

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    This book surprises me. It is slightly smaller in size than Bennett's original publication by W. Kent in 1857. The surprise to me is that the illustrations, apparently the same size as in the original, are colored. Are they hand-colored by the publisher? To me they seem so. They show quite different coloring patterns from those in my original copy. There are a number of striped and polka-dotted pieces of clothing here! The least like a hand-colored illustration is the title-page, but its coloring scheme here is quite different from the one in my original edition. The cover here is green cloth with the frontispiece -- a man is being tried before a frightening lion judge -- stamped into the front board. The title-page differs here by dropping Author of 'Shadows under Bennett's name. Pagination is by the number of the individual fable among the 22. No page, whether of text or illustration, is imprinted on both sides. The paper stock is very heavy. The s is no longer shaped like an f, as it was in the original. Lovely stuff!This is a hardbound book (hard cover)Charles H. Bennett

    Microfinance and Women's empowerment : evidence from the self help group bank linkage programme in India

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    This publication is an extract from research work within microfinance at the Department of Economics at Uppsala University done by the author Ranjula Bali Swain. The purpose of the paper is to capture the relationship between microfinance and Millennium Development Goal number three, which concerns gender equality and women empowerment. The research is based on the Self Help Group Bank Linkage Programme in India and has revealed that the clients are in fact in the process of empowering themselves. The results show however that a greater emphasis needs to be placed on business training and awareness programmes. Therefore a minimalist approach to microfinance might not have the same outcome.</p

    Grave of noted author

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    This undated article is a memorial to Horace Kephart (1862-1931), a noted naturalist, woodsman, journalist, and author. In 1904, he left his work as a librarian in St. Louis and permanently moved to western North Carolina. His popular book, “Camping and Woodcraft” was first published 1906; the 1916/1917 edition is considered a standard manual for campers after almost a century of use. Living and working in a cabin on Hazel Creek in Swain County, Kephart began to document life in the Great Smoky Mountains, producing “Our Southern Highlanders” in 1913. Throughout his life, Kephart wrote many articles supporting the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.GRAVE OF NOTED AUTHOR—On a hillside overlooking Bryson City and with the Great Smoky Mountains National park in view in the distance, a huge boulder marks the grave of Horace Kephart, of Bryson City, author of "Our Southern Highlanders" and other books, and who was an active advocate of a national park in the Smokies. The highest peak of the mountains in the distance is Mount Kephart, named in honor of the author. The boulder that marks the grave in Bryson City cemetery was brought from the Great Smokies as a CCC project
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