3,730 research outputs found

    Timothy Phillips' Graduate Recital

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    Original Format: CassetteComposers in the first graduate recital: Giuseppe Pitoni; Thomas Luis de Victoria; Alessandro Scarlatti; Felice Anerio; Joseph Haydn; Jean Berger; Johannes Brahms; Norman LuboffComposers in the second graduate recital: Henry Purcell; Joseph HaydnFirst Recital: ConductorSecond Recital: Conducto

    1994 Kentucky Timothy Variety Test Report

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    Timothy (Phleum pratense) is the fourth most widely sown cool-season perennial grass used in Kentucky for forage, ranking behind tall fescue, orchardgrass, and Kentucky bluegrass. It is a late-maturing bunchgrass that can be used for grazing but is mainly harvested as hay, particularly for horses. For hay production, timothy can be sown with alfalfa or red clover, while white clover or birdsfoot trefoil make good mixtures with timothy for grazing. Management is similar to that for other cool-season grasses. Harvesting at the mid- to late-boot stage is needed to assure good yields and high forage quality. Quality of timothy declines more rapidly than other cool-season grasses as it over-matures. In Kentucky, timothy behaves like a shortlived perennial with stands lasting for 2-3 years

    1993 Kentucky Timothy Variety Test Report

    No full text
    Timothy (Phleum pratense) is the fourth most widely grown cool-season perennial grass used in Kentucky for forage, ranking behind tall fescue, orchardgrass, and Kentucky bluegrass. It is a late maturing bunchgrass that can be used for grazing but is mainly harvested as hay, particularly for horses. Management is similar to that for other cool season-grasses. Harvesting at the proper stage of maturity (mid- to late-boot) is needed to assure high forage quality; otherwise, quality of timothy declines more rapidly than other cool-season grasses as it overmatures. In Kentucky, timothy behaves like a short-lived perennial with stands lasting for 2-3 years. Table 1 lists other College of Agriculture publications related to the establishment, management, and utilization of timothy that are available from your local county extension office

    The New Keynesian Phillips curve : lessons from single-equation econometric estimation

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    We review single-equation methods for estimating the hybrid New Keynesian Phillips curve (NKPC) and then apply those methods to U.S. quarterly data for 1955?2007. Estimating the hybrid NKPC by the generalized method of moments yields stable coefficients with a large role for expected future inflation. Measures of marginal costs better explain U.S. inflation than does a range of measures of the output gap. But estimates of the slope of the NKPC are imprecise and confidence intervals that are robust to weak identification are wide. Further research on measuring marginal costs may reconcile these mixed findings. A reconciliation is important if the NKPC is to remain a fundamental component of models of the monetary transmission mechanism.Inflation (Finance) ; Phillips curve

    A socio-rhetorical exegesis of 1 Timothy 2:8-15

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    In this thesis two interralted tasks are undertaken. First, this thesis is an attempt to gain mastery of an interpretive methodology, namely, socio-rhetorical analysis. Second, by looking at a crucial text that has major implications for the contemporary church, I have applied this method of analysis to a particularly Scriptural text, namely, 1 Timothy 2:8-15. In this thesis I demonstrate using socio-rhetorical analysis that the discourse contained in 1 Timothy 2:8-15 constitutes baptised patriarchal cultural practices and traditions from the dominant Greco-Roman culture of the first century. I demonstrate, therefore, that the portrayal of women in the text reflects a cultural imperative, and not a theological imperative, that was co-opted from the ""secular"" Greco-Roman culture of the day and transposed, using Scriptural texts as authentication, into the Christian community at Ephesus. Thus the text is simply re-enforcing normative Greco-Roman cultural values upon Christian women and camouflaging it as a Christian norm in order to persuade women to conform to patriarchal cultural standards. Such persuasion, however, is hardly required unless one has already accepted cultural assumptions about the subordination and silencing (objectification) of women in an androcentric hegemonic culture

    William Phillips to Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Phillips, 30 September 1962

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    Phillips informs recipients that he is alright as of 10 oclock [sic] and states he will stay in Oxford unless the university closes.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/west_union_tel/1136/thumbnail.jp

    Simple drag prediction strategies for an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle’s hull shape

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    The range of an AUV is dictated by its finite energy source and minimising the energy consumption is required to maximise its endurance. One option to extend the endurance is by obtaining the optimum hydrodynamic hull shape with balancing the trade-off between computational cost and fluid dynamic fidelity. An AUV hull form has been optimised to obtain low resistance hull. Hydrodynamic optimisation of hull form has been carried out by employing five parametric geometry models with a streamlined constraint. Three Genetic Algorithm optimisation procedures are applied by three simple drag predictions which are based on the potential flow method. The results highlight the effectiveness of considering the proposed hull shape optimisation procedure for the early stage of AUV hull desig

    sj-docx-1-ine-10.1177_15910199231185632 - Supplemental material for Balloon assisted Woven endobridge deployment (BAWD): A safety and efficacy study

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-ine-10.1177_15910199231185632 for Balloon assisted Woven endobridge deployment (BAWD): A safety and efficacy study by Anthony Trimboli, Jason D Wenderoth, Andrew K Cheung, Justin Whitley, Alex McQuinn, Cameron Williams, Timothy J Phillips, Jacob Fairhall, Mark Sheridan and Nathan W Manning in Interventional Neuroradiology</p

    Rattus montanus Phillips 1932

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    Rattus montanus Phillips, 1932. Ceylon J. Sci., Sec. B, 16:323. TYPE LOCALITY: Sri Lanka (Ceylon), West Haputale, Ohiya, 6000 ft. DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type locality, Horton Plains at 7000 ft, and Nuwara Eliya at 6000 ft in primary montane forests of Central and Uva Provinces of Sri Lanka (Phillips, 1980). COMMENTS: A montane endemic on Sri Lanka and morphologically so unlike most other species of Rattus it may not belong in same genus, despite assertion of one author that it is nothing more than a large form of R. rattus (see Musser, 1986:22). Like R. annandalei, R. hoogerwerfi, R. korinchi, R. macleari, R. nativitatis, and members of the R. xanthurus group, the Ceylon endemic seems isolated within present morphological boundaries of Rattus (Musser, 1986).Published as part of Guy G. Musser & Michael D. Carleton, 1993, Order Rodentia - Family Muridae, pp. 501-755 in Mammal Species of the World (2 nd Edition), Washington and London :Smithsonian Institution Press on page 656, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.735309
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