1,071 research outputs found

    Thomas B. Cavanagh, Ph.D.

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    2008 - Dr. Thomas B. Cavanagh the Director of Online Course Design and Production, and Assistant Professor at ERAU.https://commons.erau.edu/db-read-posters/1049/thumbnail.jp

    The Death of the Washington Consensus?

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    Robin Broad; John Cavanagh World Policy Journal; Fall 1999; 16, 3; Research Library Core pg. 7

    Illuminations talks to Tom Cavanagh

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    Thomas B. Cavanagh, Ph.D. is Associate Vice President of Distributed Learning at the University of Central Florida (UCF). In this role he oversees UCF’s distance learning strategy, policies, and practices, including program and course design, development, and assessment. In his career, Tom has administered e-learning development for both academic (public and private) and industrial (Fortune 500, government/military) audiences. Tom’s research interests include e-learning, technical communication, and the societal influence of technology on education, training, culture, and commerce. He is also an award-winning author of several mystery novels

    Checking it once, checking it twice

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    Published as: Broad, R., & Cavanagh, J. (1996, Dec 08). Checking it once, checking it twice. The Washington Pos

    Donna Cavanagh Talks Ocean Inspiration — and Kid Beach Reads

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    Veteran humor writer Donna Cavanagh has built a career helping writers find their voice and audience. Now the author and publisher has added another page to her resume — children\u27s book author

    American business values : a global perpective

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    In this fifth edition, the author examines the ethics and values of American business. Cavanagh helps the reader to : - understand the values and ethics of free market systems - clarify and articulate personal goals and ethics - comprehend the relationships among business, government, and society - be equipped to judge and act ethically, and - examine how American values influence people and businesses throughout the world and how these values are, in turn, affected by other people

    Colors 1970

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    CONTENTS Analysis of "fern hill", Michelle Turcote 4; "The death of the ball turret gunner", Cordell Brown 56; Imperceptibly, by bounds, Dan Burr 8; The creators, Pattie Linehan 16; Love minus grandpa, Jackie Lokowich 28; X, Judy Smith 38; Crystal ticket, Charles Atkins 43; Peter, Anonymous 52; Dead birds, Pattie Linehan 60; Sure, Dan Burr 69; Quest for saint helena, Connie Kelly 1; Two poems, Shag 2; The loom, slowly shifting, silent!, Jim Tracey 6; Cat, Pattie Linehan 7; Kraft carmel, Pattie Linehan 7; Upon leaving the seminary, Tom Cavanagh 14; Ombres d' inquietude, Angie Juhl 23; From: a wonderer, a wanderer, or what, Jon Lokowich 23; Beside the fire's dialogue, Pattie Linehan 33; Motherhood, Charles Atkins 35; Parousia, Robert b. Heywood 36; Carpet, Pattie Linehan 41; Dialogue, Thomas R. Madden 42; The prisoner, Margaret Poore 48; Too much rime with a single reason, Robert Heywood 49; Prenatal monologue, Pattie Linehan 55; I was curious, Shag 58; Abusion of an illusion, Charles Atkins 59; God's requiem, Charles Atkins 68; I have seen, Philip Hall 72; Proofus unicomicus, Kristen Noel Hanson 73; And what will you do then, Phil Tonkovich 74; Fifty and some tomorrow, Robert B. Heywood 75 Before and after what we almost became, Jon Lokowich 76; October at rimini, Thomas R. Madden 77; The masses of my muscle, molded muscle, Jim Tracey 78

    Henry Cavanagh at Port Arthur, Tasmania, 1874 [picture]

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    Condition: Fair, some foxing.; No photographer name or studio stamp appears on these photographs. Formerly attributed to Thomas J. Nevin, the portraits are now considered more likely to have been taken by A.H. Boyd. See: Julia Clark. A question of attribution: Port Arthur's convict portraits in Journal of Australian Colonial History, Vol 12, 2010, p77-97.; Title devised by cataloguer.; Inscription: "306 Henry Cavanagh Native Taken at Port Arthur 1874."--In ink on verso.; Part of collection: Convict portraits, Port Arthur, 1874.; Gunson Collection file 203/7/54.; NLA neg. 1998.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3660505; Exhibited: "Treasures Gallery", National Library of Australia, 6 May 2013 - 15 September 2013

    A Malaria Vaccine Based on the Polymorphic Block 2 Region of MSP-1 that Elicits a Broad Serotype-Spanning Immune Response

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    Polymorphic parasite antigens are known targets of protective immunity to malaria, but this antigenic variation poses challenges to vaccine development. A synthetic MSP-1 Block 2 construct, based on all polymorphic variants found in natural Plasmodium falciparum isolates has been designed, combined with the relatively conserved Block 1 sequence of MSP-1 and expressed in E. coli. The MSP-1 Hybrid antigen has been produced with high yield by fed-batch fermentation and purified without the aid of affinity tags resulting in a pure and extremely thermostable antigen preparation. MSP-1 hybrid is immunogenic in experimental animals using adjuvants suitable for human use, eliciting antibodies against epitopes from all three Block 2 serotypes. Human serum antibodies from Africans naturally exposed to malaria reacted to the MSP-1 hybrid as strongly as, or better than the same serum reactivities to individual MSP-1 Block 2 antigens, and these antibody responses showed clear associations with reduced incidence of malaria episodes. The MSP-1 hybrid is designed to induce a protective antibody response to the highly polymorphic Block 2 region of MSP-1, enhancing the repertoire of MSP-1 Block 2 antibody responses found among immune and semi-immune individuals in malaria endemic areas. The target population for such a vaccine is young children and vulnerable adults, to accelerate the acquisition of a full range of malaria protective antibodies against this polymorphic parasite antigen.</p

    Supplementary_Material – Supplemental material for The origin and spread of olive cultivation in the Mediterranean Basin: The fossil pollen evidence

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    Supplemental material, Supplementary_Material for The origin and spread of olive cultivation in the Mediterranean Basin: The fossil pollen evidence by Dafna Langgut, Rachid Cheddadi, Josѐ Sebastián Carrión, Mark Cavanagh, Daniele Colombaroli, Warren John Eastwood, Raphael Greenberg, Thomas Litt, Anna Maria Mercuri, Andrea Miebach, Neil Roberts, Henk Woldring and Jessie Woodbridge in The Holocene</p
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