The full dataset viewer is not available (click to read why). Only showing a preview of the rows.
The dataset generation failed
Error code: DatasetGenerationError
Exception: ArrowInvalid
Message: JSON parse error: Missing a closing quotation mark in string. in row 147
Traceback: Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/packaged_modules/json/json.py", line 153, in _generate_tables
df = pd.read_json(f, dtype_backend="pyarrow")
File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/pandas/io/json/_json.py", line 815, in read_json
return json_reader.read()
File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/pandas/io/json/_json.py", line 1025, in read
obj = self._get_object_parser(self.data)
File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/pandas/io/json/_json.py", line 1051, in _get_object_parser
obj = FrameParser(json, **kwargs).parse()
File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/pandas/io/json/_json.py", line 1187, in parse
self._parse()
File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/pandas/io/json/_json.py", line 1403, in _parse
ujson_loads(json, precise_float=self.precise_float), dtype=None
ValueError: Trailing data
During handling of the above exception, another exception occurred:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 1997, in _prepare_split_single
for _, table in generator:
File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/packaged_modules/json/json.py", line 156, in _generate_tables
raise e
File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/packaged_modules/json/json.py", line 130, in _generate_tables
pa_table = paj.read_json(
File "pyarrow/_json.pyx", line 308, in pyarrow._json.read_json
File "pyarrow/error.pxi", line 154, in pyarrow.lib.pyarrow_internal_check_status
File "pyarrow/error.pxi", line 91, in pyarrow.lib.check_status
pyarrow.lib.ArrowInvalid: JSON parse error: Missing a closing quotation mark in string. in row 147
The above exception was the direct cause of the following exception:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/src/services/worker/src/worker/job_runners/config/parquet_and_info.py", line 1529, in compute_config_parquet_and_info_response
parquet_operations = convert_to_parquet(builder)
File "/src/services/worker/src/worker/job_runners/config/parquet_and_info.py", line 1154, in convert_to_parquet
builder.download_and_prepare(
File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 1029, in download_and_prepare
self._download_and_prepare(
File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 1124, in _download_and_prepare
self._prepare_split(split_generator, **prepare_split_kwargs)
File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 1884, in _prepare_split
for job_id, done, content in self._prepare_split_single(
File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 2040, in _prepare_split_single
raise DatasetGenerationError("An error occurred while generating the dataset") from e
datasets.exceptions.DatasetGenerationError: An error occurred while generating the datasetNeed help to make the dataset viewer work? Make sure to review how to configure the dataset viewer, and open a discussion for direct support.
pred_label
string | pred_label_prob
float64 | wiki_prob
float64 | text
string | source
string |
|---|---|---|---|---|
__label__cc
| 0.732766
| 0.267234
|
We are proud to sell our ice cream in many stores all across Ohio.
Call or text for locations near you! 937.284.1358
On a long stretch of road just outside of Mechanicsburg, Ohio, golden-and-white Guernsey cows graze happily in pastures or rest in cozy barns. Cows are milked, calves fed, and homemade ice cream made fresh here on Land of Living Farm. John and Bonnie, along with sons Lucas and Eli own and operate the farm, which has been a family farm since 1972. The name "Land of Living" stems from the belief of John's parents, Jack and Gladys Ayars, that the location of their farm was truly the scene of a land of living things.
Though our farm consists of 1,000 acres of conventionally-grown corn, soybeans, and hay, our main focus has always been dairy farming. We milk 150 cows, both Guernseys and Brown Swiss, and use the Guernsey milk to make our homemade ice cream right here on the farm. There's nothing more important to us than cow care and comfort, which is why we strive to keep our farm and barns well-kept and clean.
We started making ice cream in 2010 after a long period of research and learning. We are excited to offer such a niche product, and it's our honor to provide such a high-quality ice cream. When Lucas, farm manager and sole ice cream maker, is mixing a batch of ice cream, he can look out the windows of the building and see the cows grazing or relaxing in the barn.
We here at Ayars Family Farm are glad to provide you with a delicious, wholesome ice cream treat - from our family to yours! Find our current flavors here.
Ayars Family Farm | 4381 Rosedale Road, Mechanicsburg, Ohio 43044 | 937.284.1358 | Follow us on Facebook!
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line0
|
__label__cc
| 0.631974
| 0.368026
|
Category: Republic of Cyprus
BoatPilot Real Economy Sector Business Starts a $9,850,000 Token Generation Event
Published by Bitcoin PR Buzz Feed UnderBitcoin Press Release Blockchain BoatPilot cryptocurrency decentralized digital currency Nicosia Republic of Cyprus TGE token Token Sale Virtual currency on March 7, 2018
Bitcoin Press Release: BoatPilot, announces their Token Generation Event up to 9,850,000 USD. A TGE for a real economy sector business. BoatPilot will start its token sale on April 1st, 2018. The funds raised in this Token Generation Event will be used to expand business dramatically. After successfully raising over 1,000,000 USD in their private sale.
March 7th, 2018. Nicosia, Republic of Cyprus: BoatPilot, a vendor of hardware navigation solution and a developer of the market’s first mobile platform that combines navigation, booking, and advertising services for the private and charter yachting, announces the worldwide launch of its token generation event. With six years of successful real economy sector business, BoatPilot will start its token crowdsale on April 1, 2018. The TGE is to raise $10 mln through a token distribution campaign. Funds raised will be used for further business expansion to the Caribbean, the US, and Asian markets.
BoatPilot a Marine Navigation System
TGE of a real economy sector business is a rare event for the crypto market. Founded in 2012, BoatPilot is a marine navigation system that combines features of a classic chart plotter and an interactive pilot with the opportunities for users to add comments and correct content from other users, similar to Google Maps and TripAdvisor. BoatPilot is an all-in-one navigation service (interactive electronic pilot and navigator) with augmented reality mode support. Additionally, the company produces BoatGod – a hardware module for collecting statistics from onboard systems and aggregating geolocation data; and Pocket Skipper – an advertising marketplace application. Pocket Skipper was designed for booking and selling yachts, reserving marinas and searching for fellow passengers and tour offers.
With headquarters in Cyprus, BoatPilot has offices in Montenegro and Panama with its R&D center located in Russia. More than 50 thousand users downloaded the Android and iOS versions of the application. In 2017, BoatPilot was used to navigate over 4,700 yachts. The company has exclusive rights to book vessels from over 1,000 companies in Europe and signed agreements with several charter and service companies.
Dead On Target
BoatPilot offers opportunities to yachtsmen and enterprises, placing thousands of potential clients in reach of yachting services and industry related companies. BoatPilot’s main advertising feature is targeting based on users’ interests, demands, and geolocation. “Unlike many other industries, the yachting industry mainly supports the “here and now” demand. Until now, thousands of yachting-related SMEs had no tool to promote their services to their target audience in a “dead on target”, innovative, and affordable way. Today, BoatPilot offers one comprehensive advertising solution. Our solution even knows when the vessel needs an oil change and where the crew can find the nearest service station,” states the company’s CEO Artyom Borodin.
BoatPilot has a 6-year track record of a stable and mature business, and its win-win business model is backed by the extensive experience of the company’s founders and team. With the ambition to make its services available to the international yachtsmen community, the company counts on a successful token distribution campaign which will offer token holders true value.
An Already Massive Market
MarketsandMarkets estimates total marine navigation market size to be $74 billion. The largest regions with the fastest growth rates are Asia (CAGR of 3.36%) and Latin America (CAGR of 3.30%). BoatPilot plans to capture 2.5% of the charts market by 2019 due to charts licensing and 1.5% of the advertising market through geo-targeted adverts sales.
Today, marine navigation systems lack up-to-date mobile features, charts accuracy, timely updates and users’ possibilities to comment and improve charts. Due to the fact that BoatPilot attracts the global yachtsmen community to enhance its charts, with a couple of taps a user can add any content to the database in real-time, or check the reliability of other users’ content. As a result, the project quickly reached full coverage of the Mediterranean and has the most accurate database: more than 4,000 marinas versus 1,800 listed by its closest competitors. Hundreds of key geotags are more accurate and have more detailed descriptions than those of systems that have been on the marker for decades.
The Native NAVI Token
The NAVI token presale started on January 9th, and has the minimum entry amount of $25,000. The TGE public sale starts April 1. The TGE has a Soft Cap of $3,920,000. and a Hard Cap of $9,850,000. With the face value of $0.07, the maximum quantity of 281,737,610 NAVI tokens will be issued and all the unsold tokens will be burnt after the crowdsale is over.
As BoatPilot evolves and gains traction leading the market with its already outstanding services, Boatpilot has an uncompromised view on Geo-data, this being an important element of the system. In order to keep all BoatPilots charts up-to-date, the company will be giving out their native NAVI token to all users who share their geodesic and cartographic data that is recorded by their onboard computers while sailing. The number of tokens awarded will be proportional to the amount of data shared.
BoatPilot reserves the right to use any such data within their interface and will aim to consolidate this for their permanent access. BoatPilot cannot guarantee instantaneous purchase of the NAVI bonus tokens, as this will depend on the current financial state of the company, the volume of liquid assets, any strategic or tactical tasks, as well as any other circumstance. BoatPilot will do everything possible to ensure that Navi tokens will be traded on a large number of exchanges.
BoatPilot has an outstanding natural and logical business model will see the company in go stead. This will create a great investment opportunity.
NAVI tokens will be available on major exchanges, giving yachtsmen the opportunity to buy and sell, with users given the opportunity to sell back the token to BoatPilot in order to fully own their Geo-data, which creates fertile grounds for growth for all TGE participants.
Name: Ivan Smirnov
Location: Cyprus
Email: ivan@boatpilot.io
Visit the Website: https://www.boatpilot.io
Read the Whitepaper: https://www.boatpilot.io/docs/BoatPilot_White_Paper_EN.pdf
Join BoatPilot on BitcoinTalk: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2802679.0
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/24786211/
Subscribe on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsChAFC0nQ6Xfx1gtNdPD5g
Chat on Telegram: https://t.me/boatpilot
Join on Medium: https://medium.com/@boatpilot/
Subscribe on Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/BoatPilot/
Follow on Twitter: https://twitter.com/boatpilot_io
Join BoatPilot on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/boatpilot.io/
Boatpilot is the source of this content. Virtual currency is not legal tender, is not backed by the government, and accounts and value balances are not subject to consumer protections. This press release is for informational purposes only. The information does not constitute investment advice or an offer to invest
The post BoatPilot Real Economy Sector Business Starts a $9,850,000 Token Generation Event appeared first on Bitcoin PR Buzz.
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line6
|
__label__wiki
| 0.84019
| 0.84019
|
The Bhoy in the Picture – Billy Stark
Posted by The Celtic Underground | May 17, 2010 | Images | 0 |
However, on his big Celtic debut, Frank Munro will always be remembered for slicing the ball into his own net and contributing to Celtic’s 2-1 defeat. And he was even made captain on that fateful day. St Mirren had a fine young side with Frank McGarvey, Tony Fitzpatrick and Bobby Reid being amongst their fine young assets, as well as Fergie, their rumbustious manager.
Another memory that has stayed with me since that day was of the tall, slim Saints midfielder who danced round two Celtic players and fired home the winning goal; that player was Billy Stark and my main recollection of Celtic that day is of playing in horrible green socks, which to my mind were never aesthetically pleasing when worn with the hoops.
Billy had a fine career at Love Street and followed Ferguson up north to Pittodrie in 1983 where he won several medals in a successful Dons side. In the summer of 1987 Billy was 31, out of contract, looking for a club and looking pretty washed up. Hearts and Dundee were rumoured to be after him but it was a major shock when Billy McNeill swooped to take him to Parkhead for a token fee of £75,000. I can recall being with friends in a pub early one June Saturday morning when the signing was announced and it’s no exaggeration to say we were totally unimpressed. While Rangers were in the market for English internationalists we were scrambling about signing SPL has beens. Or so we perceived.
That summer I went on holiday to the old Yugoslavia just shortly before that beautiful country was to endure a terrible civil war. There was only one other Scots family in the hotel and I began chatting with the Father one evening. Turns out he was Jim Whyte, the former Kilmarnock and Aberdeen full back from the 60’s and early 70’s. He was a big Aberdeen fan and naturally I was keen to discuss all things Celtic and Jim described in detail the contrast of facing the fast elusive Jinky as opposed to the powerful, direct style of big Yogi.
He was perplexed as to why we should have signed Billy Stark and said that he was unpopular with the fans at Pittodrie as they felt he lacked heart and he was never truly accepted by a judgemental section of the Aberdeen support.
Whyte waxed lyrical over a young Aberdeen player who he believed would be the next ‘Jinky’ and become an Aberdeen great. The boy’s name was Joe Miller and three short months after my holiday wee Joe hooked up with Stark at Parkhead and helped Celtic to the double. One can only wonder what Jim Whyte would have thought of that.
Aberdeen fans may not have wanted Billy Stark alongside them in the trenches but Billy McNeill appreciated the finer talents that the big midfielder had to offer. ‘Starky’ hit the ground running and scored on his debut, a 4-0 thumping of Morton at Cappielow and impressed the Celtic fans over the following weeks and months with his intelligent play, strong running and an uncanny knack of getting on the end of crosses in the box.
Any doubts over him where banished when he scored a glorious winner against Rangers at Parkhead and then was lucky to avoid serious injury when Graeme Souness was sent off for a crude challenge, and this at a time when Billy‘s boot had fallen off. It was a shocking challenge (and one which Souness excelled in) and he ran the gauntlet off the park with Celtic fans howling all around him as Billy looked clearly relieved to avoid permanent damage.
Stark gave us several memorable moments that season and one header against Dunfermline at Parkhead from a deep Joe Miller cross stays in the mind and some Celtic fans would refer to Billy around this time as ‘The ghost at the back post’. He developed a wonderful partnership with Chris Morris on the Celtic right flank and Billy’s clever off the ball running created much space for the fast over-lapping Morris.
However my favourite memory of Billy Stark came on 24 February 1988 at a packed Easter Road on the night of a Scottish Cup replay against Hibs. With the game perilously balanced at 0-0 on a bitterly cold evening, Peter Grant smashed a long range shot off the crossbar. Before Hibs’ keeper Goram could get back on his feet, Billy pounced to rise through the air and gracefully head home the winning goal. That went a long way to winning the double that season.
Billy gave valuable service for the next few seasons before going on to join his great friend Tommy Burns at Kilmarnock. In time Tommy would become Killie manager and Billy his assistant and then both men would return to Parkhead in their managerial capacities for a turbulent but nevertheless fascinating three seasons.
In 2008 Billy Stark gave a memorable eulogy (which was, thankfully, filmed) at Tommy Burns’ funeral. He was obviously overcome with grief near the end and finished with; ‘I’ll miss you pal…’ which summed up exactly the mood of everyone connected with Celtic on that fateful day.
My only regret is that Celtic didn’t sign Billy Stark years earlier as the big man was a marvellous footballer and it was a privilege to have watched him in the hoops. He joins a list of Celts like Ronnie Simpson, Pat Stanton and Lubo Moravcik who were perceived to have been past their best when they joined up at Parkhead but who went on to have great success in their short Celtic careers.
Billy Stark was a real, class act.
Pic 1 shows Billy about to score against Celtic in 1977.
Pic 2 Shows Billy in the classic Celtic centenary strip.
Pic 3 shows Billy in early Celtic action.
Pic 4 shows Billy scoring for Celtic against Honved in the European Cup in 1988.
{gallery}BillystarkBITP{/gallery}
PreviousThe Georgios Samaras Diaries: May 16th 2010
NextRangers And The Consequences Of Third Party Player Payments
The Bhoy in the Picture – Dixie Deans
Help A Hurting Hun
The Bhoy in the Picture: Hampden Memories
The Bhoy In The Picture – Lou Macari
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line11
|
__label__cc
| 0.749079
| 0.250921
|
Rio+20 side event: Women's Resistance and Resilience
By Ms. Kathleen Leewai, SPREP
15 June 2012, Rio de Janeiro -- The Pacific Network on Globalisation (PANG) was featured at a Women Rio+20 side event this morning.
Maureen Penjueli (middle) from PANG, presenting on a panel
Represented at the event by their coordinator, Ms. Maureen Penjueli, PANG’s message to the conference is that there is a need to change mindsets about the root causes of our crisis.
“There needs to be a recognition in Rio that the crisis we’re faced with is linked to the current model of development which is about endless, unlimited growth,” said Ms. Penjueli.
“A second key message is the need for political will and commitment to ensure that we set the world on a path that is going to lead us to sustainability.”
Speaking about how the conference could affect local communities in the Pacific, Penjueli said that it would depend on if the root causes of unsustainable development and that the way forward is a discussion of alternative forms of economies.
“The models we are looking at are around bridging the subsistence economy with the cash economy, and we are finding very strong examples in Vanuatu and also in Papua New Guinea where there are lots of women still engaged with traditional farming.”
She says that these have shown that small scale subsistence livelihood projects are important as they have shown improvement in quality of life for women in the Pacific.
PANG is a small regional NGO based in Suva, Fiji, that works specifically on critiquing current development models and dealing with trade agreements such as the World Trade Organisation agreements, economic partnership agreements, and the Pacific Agreement on Closer Economic Relations (PACER Plus) and to what environmental impacts these agreements pose to island economies.
Organised by the Women in Europe for a Common Future (WECF) of the Women’s Major Group to Rio+20, the side event showcased presentations from 7 countries; Kazakhstan, Bolivia, Cambodia, Fiji, the Niger Delta, Sudan, and Guatemala.
Youth empowering youth
Adapting to climate change through the ecosystem b...
Green jobs for youth
Week one nearly over, 15 June 2012
Scene @ Rio+20 with the Ri+20 Pacific Media Team
WWF South Pacific Programme at Rio+20
Weapon contamination at Rio+20 has links to the Pa...
Greenpeace backs Pacific islands over Oceans support
Pacific NGO's step up Oceans campaign at Rio+20
Partners with Melanesians Inc. featured at Rio+20
Rio+20 for everyone
Vibrant village at Athletes Park, 14 June, 2012
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line13
|
__label__cc
| 0.529556
| 0.470444
|
BioKIDS Critter Catalog
Lanius excubitorgreat grey shrike(Also: great grey shrike;northern shrike; northern shrike)
By Theresa McHugh
Great grey shrikes (Lanius excubitor), also known as northern shrikes or northern grey shrikes, have a Holarctic distribution and are found in North America, Europe, Asia and Africa. Their breeding range includes the northern United States, Canada, Norway, Spain, France, Poland, Sweden, Russia and China as well as other Eurasian countries. Wintering sites are found in southern locations of the same countries and the northern continental United States. (Atkinson and Cade, 1993; Brady, et al., 2009; Cramp and Perrins, 1993; Hernandez, 1995; Peer, et al., 2011)
Other Geographic Terms
holarctic
Great grey shrikes are often found in semi-open areas composed of farmlands, field hedges, arable fields, meadows and pastures as well as coniferous and mixed forests. Shrikes prefer lowlands and tend to avoid higher elevations. (Antczak, Marcin, 2010; Degen, et al., 1992; Kuczynski, et al., 2010; Olborska and Kosicki, 2004; Tryjanowski, et al., 2007)
desert or dune
1400 (high) m
4593.18 (high) ft
Great grey shrikes are medium-sized passerines, about the size of large thrushes or mockingbirds. They range in length from 22 to 26 cm, with a wingspan of 30 to 36 cm. They weigh between 48 and 80 g, however, most range between 60 and 70 g. Their upper parts are pearl grey. Their cheeks, chin and the stripe above their eyes are white. A dark mask extends from their beak past their eyes to their ear coverts. The space immediately above their beak is grey. Their shoulder feathers are white and their wings are black with white tufts. Their tail is black and pointed at the tip; the most distal edges of their tail are white. Their ventral parts tend to be white or tinged grey. Their breast is often slightly darker than the rest of their underside. Their legs and feet are black. Males and females are about the same size and coloration, females tend to be tinged in brown, but have the same overall color patterns. Fledglings resemble females, as they are greyish-brown all over. They have barring and pastel yellow markings on their upper parts. Their wing coverts are pastel yellow and have black bands. Young shrikes acquire their adult plumage during their first spring. (Brady, et al., 2009; Brzezinski, et al., 2010; Harris and Franklin, 2000)
sexes alike
48 to 81 g
1.69 to 2.85 oz
60-70 g
22 to 26 cm
8.66 to 10.24 in
Range wingspan
Great grey shrikes are territorial, socially monogamous birds; however, extra-pair copulations (EPCs) are frequent in both males and females, making them semi-polygynandrous. As opposed to within pair copulations (WPCs), which occur in open places such as near electrical lines, fences or the tops of trees, EPCs occur in more secretive locations. During pre-copulatory displays, a male faces a female, shivering and fluttering his wings while calling or quietly singing. Males often offer a food item as a nuptial gift. Pre-copulatory gifts before EPCs have an energetic value of about four-fold of those given before WPCs. If a male detects an EPC, he often attempts mating with his partner shortly thereafter; however, females seem to control copulation. Copulations are most frequent in the early morning. (Antczak, et al., 2005; Antczak, et al., 2012; Lorek, 1995; Tryjanowski, et al., 2007)
Courtship begins around March and lasts until April or May. Males participate in courtship displays and maintain caches to attract females. Impaling prey may be a sexual display for males as they impale prey in conspicuous places significantly more often than females. The size of their cache is indicative of the male's health. By storing caches in more conspicuous places and returning frequently to those caches, males can display their hunting prowess and entice a female. Males may also sit at a right angle to the desired female as part of the display. Males also attract females through song. Sounds associated with calls to females include a mix of whistles and strophes of songs. Softer whistles may be used in duets between mates during wintering and between neighbors during breeding seasons. Song phrases interspersed with harsh whistles are often used in pre-courtship, songs become softer as males introduce females to their territory, with lively chatters indicating potential nesting sites. A female usually rejects males at first, only allowing them to feed her, but eventually females participate in the displays and their songs become duets. Copulation usually begins after a male brings a prey item to his mate and performs a pre-copulatory display. Male and female shrikes produce a begging call until they are adjacent to one another. The male bobs his body left and right and gives prey to the female, followed by copulation. Once nesting begins, breeding groups disperse. A male feeds his mate and closely guards her, perching high up to watch for threats. During this time, males often stray into one another's territory to obtain a quick EPC; as a result, their nests often contain offspring from multiple males. Clutches are usually produced within 10 to 15 days. Cooperative breeding sometimes occurs. Other adults also occasionally assist in feeding offspring; these "helpers" may be offspring from the previous year. (Antczak, et al., 2005; Antczak, et al., 2012; Lorek, 1995; Tryjanowski, et al., 2007)
monogamous
cooperative breeder
Great grey shrikes like to breed in dispersed groups of six or more individuals. They breed during the summer, generally once, but sometimes twice in a year. During the breeding season, the monogamous pair bond is particularly strong, but during the wintering season, it loosens and a new mate may be chosen. Pairs produce one brood each year but replacement clutches can occur after nest failures. Nesting usually begins in April or May; pairs construct nests in about one to two weeks. Nests from previous years are often reused with minor alterations. Nests are usually located at least 1 m above ground, but usually range from 2 to 16 m above ground. The pair builds nests together, but males collect the majority of the nest materials. Nests tend to be quite large, 20 to 28 cm in outer diameter, made of twigs, moss, pieces of fabric and sometimes pieces of trash. The inner diameter of the nest is about 8 to 12 cm and 10 to 15 cm deep, lined with twigs, roots, lichens, hairs and feathers. Breeding and nesting territory is highly flexible, but most nests are located centrally in the territory, with convenient perches for monitoring the territory. Nests are often located in a tree or thorny bush and range in height from 0.2 to 25.0 meters. (Harris and Franklin, 2000; Hernandez, 1995; Olborska and Kosicki, 2004; Tryjanowski, et al., 2007)
Laying usually occurs in May with 3 to 9 eggs per clutch and an average of 7 eggs total. Second clutches, if produced, are smaller than the first. Eggs are grey or blue and have yellow, red-brown and purple-grey blotches; they are about 26 mm long and 19.5 mm wide. The 16 to 21 day incubation period is completed by the female, while the male provides her with food. Hatchlings are naked, blind and pink-skinned, weighing about 4 g. Offspring fledge after 2 to 3 weeks, usually in June or July, and become independent 3 to 6 weeks later. Offspring become sexually mature during their first spring and attempt to breed immediately. Great grey shrikes attempt breeding about four times in their life. (Harris and Franklin, 2000; Hernandez, 1995; Olborska and Kosicki, 2004; Tryjanowski, et al., 2007)
oviparous
Great grey shrikes breed in the summer months, once yearly and in rare cases, twice in a year.
Breeding occurs between April and May; nests are built during both months, laying taking place in May.
Range eggs per season
Average eggs per season
Range time to hatching
21 (high) days
Average time to hatching
Range fledging age
1 (low) years
During the pre-hatching stage, males provide food for their mates, this way females can dedicate all of their time to incubating the eggs. After the eggs hatch, females brood the offspring, as they age, females assist males in food provisioning. Weak fledglings receive extra care and feeding from either, or both parents. (Harris and Franklin, 2000)
male parental care
The lifespan of great grey shrikes is usually about four years. The oldest known individual lived twelve years. Predatory birds and carnivorous mammals often kill shrikes before they reach a fifth year. Their greatest threat is raptorial birds during their fledgling period. (Harris and Franklin, 2000)
Great grey shrikes are diurnal birds that travel frequently through a range about three times the size of their territory and have seasonal migrations to breeding and wintering grounds. They are territorial, but tend to live in groups of about six or more pairs and become more solitary during the breeding season. These birds actively try to prevent EPCs of their mates. Outside of breeding season, groups of breeding birds will gather together and interact through flight displays, chattering and calling to one another for up to an hour. Great grey shrikes fly in a heavy, undulating pattern, but when attacking, fly in a straight, determined direction. These birds can also hover for a brief amount of time. When encountering a conspecific, they show aggression by shifting to a horizontal position and fluffing their feathers, forming crests along their head. To show submission to a conspecific, they may turn their head away or display a crouching, fluttering position while imitating a fledgling call. To prevent attack by a conspecific, the birds point their beak vertically upward. (Antczak, et al., 2005; Harris and Franklin, 2000)
arboreal
0.2 to 3.5 km^2
0.4 km^2
Great grey shrikes have a relatively flexible preference in breeding territory and nesting sites. They have a large home range of 20,000 km^2 and groups tend to be about 5 km away from one another. They can have territories as small as 20 ha, but 40 ha are more common, territories as large as 350 ha have also been reported. (Antczak, Marcin, 2010; Atkinson, 1997; Harris and Franklin, 2000; Olborska and Kosicki, 2004)
Great grey shrikes use vocalizations, body positions and food caches to communicate. Both male and female shrikes sing year round and use a variety of calls including alarm calls, courtship calls, submission calls, prey-attracting calls and nestling calls. Warning songs may consist of warbling strophes and whistles to indicate a small-sized intruder. For larger intruders, they may produce a long shrill, with raspy whistles. Warnings against birds of prey often have a sharp whistle. A harsh call is often repeated twice when the bird is alarmed, calls become faster and higher the more excited the bird becomes. When their young are threatened, they emit a "knuk" sound. Softer whistles are often used by males communicating with females and in duets between mates. To show submission to a conspecific, great grey shrikes may imitate the fledgling "waik" call. In attracting songbird prey, these birds also mimic calls, which may quite successful. When great grey shrikes encounter predators, or when preparing to attack prey, they perform aggressive body movements including bobbing and twisting, oriented on the horizontal plain, while flipping their tail rapidly up and down. Quivering, fluttering and flashing movements are often responses to hunting preparation as well as reactions toward predators. Wing communication is also used during courtship-feeding. Males often quiver and flutter their wings before presenting females with food. In soliciting food from males, females quiver and flutter their wings in return. Great grey shrikes may also use UV light and scent to detect vole locations and abundance. (Antczak, et al., 2012; Atkinson, 1997; Cade, 1962; Harris and Franklin, 2000; Probst, et al., 2002)
Great grey shrikes are carnivorous generalists. They search for prey by actively scanning the surrounding area and perching in an upright and alert posture, changing perches frequently. They are very successful hunters as they usually surprise their prey. Once a prey item has been located, great grey shrikes drop-pounce from their elevated perch, hover and chase small passerines. Shrikes kill by using their hooked beak to crack the skull of their prey. Once the prey is captured, great grey shrikes impale large prey items upon stumps, thorns or barbed-wire. After impalement, prey items become easier to tear apart and consume. Great grey shrikes cache prey items, primarily during the non-breeding period to indicate claimed territory, attract females and hide it from competitors. Prey is often cached in thorny bushes such as hawthorns and blackthorns. They usually consume all of their prey within nine days. Their dietary preferences depend on where they live and the food sources available. In southern Europe, they feed primarily on orthopterans and beetles, whereas in northern and central Europe, mammals and birds are a larger portion of their diet. Invertebrates, as well as vertebrates, compose their diet. Arthropods are their most frequent prey item, namely beetles including ground beetles, dung beetles, rove beetles and darkling beetles. Other insects in their diet include bumblebees. Small mammals are also a large portion of their diet including common voles, field voles, deer mice, harvest mice and wild house mice. Their avian prey includes dark-eyed juncos, white-crowned sparrows, black-capped chickadees, pine siskins, European starlings, house sparrows and members of the genera Carduelis and Carpodacus. Shrikes may attract small passerine birds within attack range by imitating parts of their calls and songs. Lizards and frogs are caught on occasion, but are frequently left in caches and not eaten. (Atkinson and Cade, 1993; Atkinson, 1997; Brzezinski, et al., 2010; Hernandez, 1995)
terrestrial non-insect arthropods
Predators of great grey shrikes include mammals and other birds. Members of family Corvidae have been known to prey upon their eggs and nestlings. Raptorial birds also present a threat to shrikes, but this occurs primarily after fledging. Likewise, little owls are known predators of great grey shrikes. When predators approach, great grey shrikes often vocalize and ruffle their feathers. Various types of warning calls are made depending on the size and proximity of the predator. (Cade, 1962; Harris and Franklin, 2000)
little owls (Athene noctua)
In the past, nests of great grey shrikes were invaded by eggs from common cuckoos; however, these brood parasites are likely now extinct. Parasite-host coevolution seems to have occurred, the high levels of parasite egg rejection suggests parasite defense mechanisms are rooted in this bird's evolutionary history. There has been one recorded case of interspecific helping, where yellowhammers were found feeding a great grey shrike fledgling, although great grey shrikes are larger. Some birds, including whinchats and skylarks, have been observed intentionally avoiding a particular breeding ground due to presence of great grey shrikes, a known predator. Since great grey shrikes are one of the first birds to occupy their territory in the spring, this may influence the breeding bird assemblage near their nests. Their body size may influence their primary prey choice, smaller birds forage mainly on beetles, whereas larger birds more frequently prey on flying and plant-dwelling insects. (Drozdz, et al., 2004; Harris and Franklin, 2000; Hromada, et al., 2003; Hromada, et al., 2002; Peer, et al., 2011)
There are no known benefits of great grey shrikes to humans.
There are no known adverse effects of great grey shrikes on humans.
Great grey shrikes have an extensive range in the Holarctic region and are listed as an IUCN Red List species of Least Concern. They have become extinct in Switzerland and the Czech Republic, but the extent of their geographic range is large enough that overall populations have remained stable. They are sensitive to landscape changes and reductions in hedgerows and other shrubs. There are often hundreds to thousands of great grey shrikes within each country they inhabit, with particularly large populations in Sweden. Countries with smaller populations include Estonia, Belgium, Latvia, Lithuania, Netherlands and Denmark, with only a few hundred birds or less found in each country. (Harris and Franklin, 2000)
US Migratory Bird Act
Theresa McHugh (author), Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne, Mark Jordan (editor), Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne, Leila Siciliano Martina (editor), Animal Diversity Web Staff.
living in the Nearctic biogeographic province, the northern part of the New World. This includes Greenland, the Canadian Arctic islands, and all of the North American as far south as the highlands of central Mexico.
living in landscapes dominated by human agriculture.
Referring to an animal that lives in trees; tree-climbing.
helpers provide assistance in raising young that are not their own
desert or dunes
in deserts low (less than 30 cm per year) and unpredictable rainfall results in landscapes dominated by plants and animals adapted to aridity. Vegetation is typically sparse, though spectacular blooms may occur following rain. Deserts can be cold or warm and daily temperates typically fluctuate. In dune areas vegetation is also sparse and conditions are dry. This is because sand does not hold water well so little is available to plants. In dunes near seas and oceans this is compounded by the influence of salt in the air and soil. Salt limits the ability of plants to take up water through their roots.
to jointly display, usually with sounds in a highly coordinated fashion, at the same time as one other individual of the same species, often a mate
a distribution that more or less circles the Arctic, so occurring in both the Nearctic and Palearctic biogeographic regions.
Found in northern North America and northern Europe or Asia.
parental care is carried out by males
imitates a communication signal or appearance of another kind of organism
Having one mate at a time.
reproduction in which eggs are released by the female; development of offspring occurs outside the mother's body.
BirdGuides. 2013. "Great Grey Shrike (Lanius excubitor)" (On-line). BirdGuides. Accessed March 07, 2013 at http://www.birdguides.com/species/species.asp?sp=122072.
Cornell Lab of Ornithology. 2010. "Northern Shrike" (On-line). All About Birds. Accessed March 07, 2013 at http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Northern_Shrike/id.
Antczak, Marcin, 2010. Winter nocturnal roost selection by a solitary passerine bird, the Great Grey Shrike Lanius excubitor. Ornis Fennica, 87: 99-105.
Antczak, M., M. Hromada, P. Tryjanowski. 2005. Frogs and toads in the food of the Great Grey Shrike (Lanius excubitor): larders and skinning as two ways to consume dangerous prey. Animal Biology, 55 (3): 227-233.
Antczak, M., M. Hromada, P. Tryjanowski. 2012. Sex differences in impaling behavior of Great Grey Shrike Lanius excubitor: Do males have better impaling skills than females. Behavioural Processes, 91: 50-53.
Atkinson, E. 1997. Singing for your supper: acoustical luring of avian prey by Northern Shrikes. The Condor, 99 (1): 203-206.
Atkinson, E., T. Cade. 1993. Winter foraging and diet composition of Northern Shrikes in Idaho. The Condor, 95 (3): 528-535.
Birdlife International, 2012. "Lanius excubitor" (On-line). IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Accessed March 07, 2013 at http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/160031195/0.
Brady, R., J. Paruk, A. Kern. 2009. Sexing adult Northern Shrikes using DNA, morphometrics, and plumage. Journal of Field Ornithology, 80 (2): 198-205.
Brzezinski, M., A. Zalewski, P. Szalanski, R. Kowalczyk. 2010. Feeding habits of the Great Grey Shrike Lanius excubitor wintering in north-eastern Poland: does prey abundance affect selection of prey size. Ornis Fennica, 87: 1-14.
Cade, T. 1962. Wing movements, hunting, and displays of the Northern Shrike. Wilson Bulletin, 74: 386-408.
Cramp, S., C. Perrins. 1993. Handbook of birds of Europe, the Middle East and North Africa. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Degen, A., B. Pinshow, R. Yosef, M. Kam, K. Nagy. 1992. Energetics and growth rate of Northern Shrike (Lanius excubitor) nestlings. Ecology, 73 (6): 2273-2283.
Drozdz, R., M. Hromada, P. Tryjanowski. 2004. Interspecific feeding of a Great Grey Shrike (Lanius excubitor) fledgling by adult Yellowhammers (Emberiza citrinella). Biological Letters, 41(2): 185-187.
Harris, T., K. Franklin. 2000. Shrikes & bush-shrikes: including wood-shrikes, helmet-shrikes, flycatcher-shrikes, philentomas, batises and wattle-eyes. London: Christopher Helm.
Hernandez, A. 1995. Spatial patterns of food caching in two sympatric shrike species. The Condor, 97 (4): 1002-1010.
Hromada, M., M. Antczak, T. Valone, P. Tryjanowski. 2008. Settling decisions and heterospecific social information use in shrikes. PLoS ONE, 3(12): e3930.
Hromada, M., L. Kuczynski, A. Kristin, P. Tryjanowski. 2003. Animals of different phenotype differentially utilize dietary niche—the case of the Great Grey Shrike Lanius excubitor. Ornis Fennica, 80: 1-8.
Hromada, M., P. Tryjanowski, M. Antczak. 2002. Presence of the great grey shrike Lanius excubitor affects breeding passerine assemblage. Annales Zoologici Fennici, 39: 125-130.
Kuczynski, L., M. Antczak, P. Czechowski, J. Grzybek, L. Jerzak, P. Zablocki, P. Tryjanowski. 2010. A large scale survey of the Great grey shrike Lanius excubitor in Poland: breeding densities, habitat use and population trends. Annales Zoologici Fennici, 47: 67-78.
Lorek, G. 1995. Copulation behavior, mixed reproductive strategy, and mate guarding in the Great Grey Shrike. Proceedings of the Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology, 6: 218-227.
Olborska, P., J. Kosicki. 2004. Breeding biology of the Great Grey Shrike (Lanius excubitor): an analysis of nest record cards. Biological Letters, 41 (2): 147-154.
Peer, B., C. McIntosh, M. Kuehn, S. Rothstein, R. Fleischer. 2011. Complex biogeographic history of Lanius shrikes and its implications for the evolution of defenses against avian brood parasitism. The Condor, 133 (2): 385-394.
Probst, R., M. Pavlicev, J. Viitala. 2002. UV reflecting vole scent marks attract a passerine, the great grey shrike Lanius excubitor. Journal of Avian Biology, 33: 437-440.
Tryjanowski, P., M. Antezak, M. Hromada. 2007. More secluded places for extra-pair copulations in the Great Grey Shrike Lanius excubitor. Behaviour, 144 (1): 23-31.
Yosef, R. 1992. From nestbuilding to fledging of young in Great Grey Shrikes (Lanius excubitor) at Sede Boqer, Israel. Journal fur Ornithologie, 133 (3): 279-285.
Order Passeriformes perching birds
Passeriformes: pictures (2832) Passeriformes: specimens (20) Passeriformes: sounds (455)
Family Laniidae shrikes
Laniidae: pictures (33) Laniidae: sounds (1)
Genus Lanius shrikes
Lanius: pictures (33) Lanius: sounds (1)
Species Lanius excubitor great grey shrike
Lanius excubitor: information (1) Lanius excubitor: pictures (1)
To cite this page: McHugh, T. 2013. "Lanius excubitor" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed January 22, 2022 at https://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Lanius_excubitor/
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line14
|
__label__wiki
| 0.786772
| 0.786772
|
Guadalupe Garcia’s interdisciplinary approach to hospitality blurs the lines at Buenos Aires culture hub Casa Cavia
Windsor × FvF
15 15 Jan 2019
Interviews > Guadalupe Garcia’s interdisciplinary appro…
Relaxing in a 1920’s-inspired garden over a cortado, Guadalupe García surveys the mid-morning bustle in Casa Cavia with her filmmaker’s eye.
Staff prep behind the bronze and marble bar, blooms are gathered together at the petit florist, and young women are brunching on fruit platters accompanied by homemade granola and yogurt. This cultural hub is the world of Guadalupe García, the creative director of Casa Cavia, a complex that merges gastronomy, literature, and olfactory arts. García adores chatting with clients and discussing the latest literary release by Ampersand, Casa Cavia’s in-house publisher.
One hundred percent porteña, that’s to say, born in Buenos Aires, García has always easily slipped back into her home city. She honed a passion for scenic arts and storytelling at a young age, followed by a filmmaking degree at Buenos Aires’ Fundación Universidad de Cine (FUC) and seized opportunities to study digital marketing, design, and filmmaking in London, Los Angeles, and Barcelona, adding tools to her professional armory: “While I no longer work in film, it’s served me a lot in making future decisions,” she says, recalling an enriching spell in Cuba taking a documentary workshop. “Cuba opened my mind. It made me realize that despite having nothing, you could still make a film or video. FUC made us think on large scales, that projects needed a million dollars worth of investment. But Cuba taught me that anyone can make a documentary with very few resources. That solidarity, mutual support, and anti-ego sentiment affected me as a 23-year-old.”
One joint collaboration she cooked up is House of Chef, a series of interviews with significant faces from Argentina’s world of gastronomy, and although she’s no longer involved with it, her cinematic eye remains alert. “Lighting, wardrobe, photography… it’s all present. From uniforms to plating and dishware. My passion for telling people’s stories certainly hasn’t dwindled. I love talking to people, hearing about their projects, seeing if I can help out,” she says. “That human trait of listening goes hand in hand with making documentaries.”
“Different spaces live together at Casa Cavia, and always with an artisanal mentality, where lines are blurred between them. One discipline can inspire another.”
It was while living in London that García founded Mezcla, a creative endeavor whose flagship project Casa Cavia fuses sights, sounds, tastes, and eras; her business partner is her father Juan García. The 1927 property was built by architect Alejandro Christophersen—a rare residence he constructed in Argentina’s capital—and García has pulled together talents from a diverse range of disciplines to successfully coexist under Cavia’s roof. Its restaurant is helmed by Julieta Caruso, a former sous-chef at Mugaritz near San Sebastián; Peruvian barista Daniel Calderón commandeers the espresso machine, also overseeing production of Cavia’s own arabica blend; Camila Gassiebayle lovingly arranges floral installations at Blumm Flower Co; while mixologist Lucas López Dávalos takes care of the bar. On the first floor, García’s mother Ana Mosqueda heads Ampersand. All are considered hosts of equal standing, offering warm welcomes in their respective areas of expertise, ensuring Casa Cavia’s brand takes on a collaboratory role. “Different spaces live together at Casa Cavia, and always with an artisanal mentality, where lines blur between them—one discipline can inspire another,” says García thoughtfully. “Every Wednesday, when Camila the florist returns from the market, the kitchen asks her how many edible flowers she has for them to use.”
The restaurant is a key example of these blurred lines, where dishes are inspired by literature. “I like taking inspiration from other worlds besides gastronomy, giving us something to talk about other than technique or recipes,” says García. She points out how Caruso worked with Spanish chef Andoni Luis Aduriz who nurtures creative ecosystems that generate work groups in which each person strengthens another’s virtues. As a result, Caruso thought about how emotions behind texts can be expressed in her dishes, one being especially memorable for García: “It fused hot and cold sensations and presented a reason to revisit a text about two women, friends with opposite views who complemented each other.” In addition, Casa Cavia’s cocktail list is influenced by artists and songs, “Lucas researches the favorite spirits of musicians he loves, forces in Argentine music: we couldn’t leave Mercedes Sosa and Charly García out of our vinyl-shaped menu!”
Mezcla covers an array of hospitality areas including La Panadería de Pablo restaurant, El Abierto and Piso Tres events spaces, and Carne, a hamburger joint with two Michelin-starred chef Mauro Colagreco; García is to launch Orno, a pizzeria with renowned Peruvian baker Renato Peralta. García’s aesthetic key across Mezcla’s projects is: “Simplicity. It seduces me, though I don’t mean austere simplicity. Maestros such as [designer Horacio] Gallo taught me to work with noble products such as marble or bronze. Everything needs context, and every decision has a story behind it, a person with a trade. Even though Carne is fast food, it references the butcher, the baker, the tomato’s origin; it surprises you.”
“Buenos Aires is a city where people make their dreams come true.”
Across Buenos Aires, too, García’s preferred haunts mix and match disciplines, most being examples of the city’s entrepreneurial instinct García admires, made by people with an urge, a hunger, for porteños, born or adopted, to accomplish. Despite Argentina’s turbulent economic cycles, creativity prevails and ideas become reality. “I analyze Buenos Aires a lot! It’s a city where people make their dreams come true. My boyfriend, who’s from Colombia, arrived with a rucksack and $1,000 in his pocket: he now co-owns five restaurants,” she says. “Out of nowhere, someone will always give you a hand here. Not everything is about money. Friends always help out and that’s why I believe in collaborations at Casa Cavia. Everyone with a project has the sentiment that we’ll do something because we like doing it, will do it well, and will do something new. I really feel that you simply need to have the urge to do something in Buenos Aires, in order to make it happen.”
Guadalupe García is the head and creative director of Casa Cavia, a cultural complex that fuses gastronomy and shopping experiences in Buenos Aires’ Palermo neighborhood.
This story is part of our collaboration with fashion brand Windsor. Keep your eyes peeled for their upcoming feature on Guadalupe, as part of which she shares her favorite haunts across Buenos Aires.
Text: Sorrel Moseley-Williams
Photography:Ignacio Coló
Buenos Aires, Argentina / Design, / Fashion,
URSA founder Elizabeth Gleeson breathes new life into Argentine textile traditions
Woven Playgrounds: Alexandra Kehayoglou
Aldo Paparella
Marcy Meachin
Eric Wahlforss
Johanna Tagada & Jatinder Singh Durhailay
Charleston, USA
Mary Edna Fraser
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line18
|
__label__wiki
| 0.729066
| 0.729066
|
69th Ordinary Session: 15 November – 6 December 2021
CharterWebinar in Commemoration of the International Day for Universal Acces...
CharterPUBLIC NOTICE: Upcoming Session 69th Ordinary Session of the African ...
CharterPublic Notice On Complaint/Seizure Forms And Practice Directives On Th...
CharterPress Release from the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights...
CharterDeclaration of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights fol...
CharterAfrican Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights Complaint Form: Non-St...
TorturePress release on the occasion of the International Day for Victims of ...
EqualityPress release on the murder of journalist Joël Musavuli and the safety...
CharterPress Release on the Murder of a Student by a Police Officer in Kinsha...
ACHPR
The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights was inaugurated on November 2, 1987 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The Commission’s Secretariat has subsequently been located in Banjul, The Gambia.
About ACHPR
The Commission was inaugurated on November 2, 1987 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Origin of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights
The Commission consists of 11 members elected by the AU Assembly from.....
Mandate of the Commission
Article 45 of the Charter sets out the mandate of the Commission.
As the Continent’s leading human rights institution mandated to promote and protect....
The summary of activities performed over a given period of time.
The AU-HoAI management meets through the Addis it's Working Group
ACHPR Commissioners
Current Commissioners
The Pan-African Parliament (PAP) is one of the organs of the African Union (AU)
Special Mechanism
The member states of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights are the 55 sovereign states that have ratified or acceded to the Constitutive Act of the African Union to become member states to the African Union
State parties to the African Charter
Congo Repuplic
Sahrawi Republic
Sao Tomé and Príncipe
State reports and concluding observations
Status of states reporting
State reporting procedures and guidelines
Guidelines for submitting complaints
Decisions on Communications
News releases, media contacts, speeches, meetings and workshops, and other ways that Pan African Parliament engages with the public
The African Charter established the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights.
List of Press (Press Releases, Statements, Speech ) of ACHPR
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Repellat, et!
List of all Press related ACHPR
List of all Articles and Stories related ACHPR
The principal areas of intervention, according to our Joint Strategy and Plan of Action, are: Prevention; Protection and assistance to victims, and; Enforcement of laws ...
Audio/podcasting
Live webcasting
This section provides the full overview of key Initiative and programme documents
ACHPR Resources
This section provides the full overview of key Initiative and programme documents.
Soft law instruments
More Ressources
Agenda 2063 is the blueprint and master plan for transforming Africa into the global powerhouse of the future. It is the strategic framework for delivering on Africa’s goal for inclusive and sustainable development and is a concrete manifestation of the pan-African drive for unity.
About Agenda 2063
Agenda 2063: The Africa We Want.
Aspirations
Our Aspirations for the Africa We Want
First-Ten Year Implementation Plan
Implementation Plan (FTYIP) of Agenda 2063 (2013 – 2023)
Flagship Projects of Agenda 2063
National & RECs Development Priorities
Continental Frameworks
Development of key sectors such as Agriculture, trade, transport, energy and mining
Key Transformational Outcomes of Agenda 2063
Goals & Priority Areas
Goals & Priority Areas of Agenda 2063
Linking Agenda 2063 and the SDGs
About Special Mechanism States Communications News & Events Multimedia Resources Agenda 2063
Kingdom of Lesotho
Capital city : Maseru
Official Languages: english
Calling code:
Independance Day: October 04, 1966
Share Please enter to access social media links
Share on Facebook. Link opens in a new tab.
Share on Twitter. Link opens in a new tab.
Share on LinkedIn. Link opens in a new tab.
The African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights (ACHPR) is one of the organs of the African Union (AU) as set out by The African Charter
31 Bijilo Annex Layout, Kombo North District
Western Region P.O. Box 673 Banjul
Tel: (220) 441 05 05, 441 05 06
E-mail: au-banjul@africa-union.org
Good Practises
All African Union websites
Copyright © 2022 African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line34
|
__label__cc
| 0.685534
| 0.314466
|
Contact Us Join Our Email List
300 Samuel Barnet Blvd. New Bedford, MA 02745
New Bedford Recycling
Dartmouth Recycling
Crapo Hill Landfill
Home › Crapo Hill Landfill
The Crapo Hill Landfill is an award-winning, state-of-the-art lined landfill serving the solid waste management needs of the Town of Dartmouth and the City of New Bedford. The landfill sits on a 152 acre wooded site located in North Dartmouth on the Freetown line. It was purchased by the District in 1982 after Dartmouth and New Bedford joined together to form a Refuse District under Massachusetts General Laws, Chapter 40, Section 44A-K and a special act of the State Legislature. The District is governed by the District Committee consisting of, three representatives from Dartmouth and three representatives from New Bedford.
The landfill is currently 39 acres in size and has been constructed in phases of about ten acres each, with an expected total of 70 acres before closing in 2027. The landfill accepts about 100,000 tons of solid waste per year. Roughly 50% is residential solid waste from Dartmouth and New Bedford, and 50% is commercial solid waste brought in by a variety of haulers.
The portions of the landfill that have reached final grade are capped with an impermeable ‘sandwich’ of plastic liner and clay-like materials.
To date, 22 acres have been capped. The ultimate height of the capped landfill will be 320 feet above mean sea level.
Landfill Gas Electric Plant
Gases created by decomposition within the landfill are collected through a system of perforated pipes installed throughout the landfill. The gas is piped to the electric plant operated by CommonWealth New Bedford Energy, LLC where it is burned in Caterpillar engines to generate 3.4 megawatts of electricity. The power is sold to Eversource.
Congratulations from SWANA!
Greater New Bedford Regional Refuse Management District has been selected to receive the 2010 Gold Landfill Management Excellence Award!
Greater New Bedford Landfill Gas Utilization Project at the Crapo Hill Landfill has been selected to receive 2010 Silver Landfill Gas Utilization Excellence Award!
Crapo Hill landfill generates enough gas to light 3500 homes every day. Turning landfill gas into energy reduces global warming.
300 Samuel Barnet Blvd, New Bedford, MA 02745 Get Directions
Hours: Monday to Friday 7:15 am-3:15 pm, and Saturday 8:00 am-11:00 am
Scale Office (weight station): 508 998-5673
Waste Reduction Giveaways!
We are offering a series of monthly waste reduction giveaways. For details, please see the press release.
To enter our February giveaway for a reusable water bottle, complete this entry form by February 8, 2022 at midnight: https://forms.gle/rLHLxx94NbRt2xos9.
May 14, 2022, 8:30 am to noon Sign up is required. The sign up form will be posted closer to the event. New Bedford, Dartmouth, and Freetown residents only. Households only – NO businesses, schools, or contractors. Location: Crapo Hill Landfill, 300 Samuel Barnet Blvd., New Bedford, MA 02745 Directions to the Crapo Hill Landfill. Examples of accepted hazardous wastes: oil-based paint, paint thinner, pesticides & gasoline. Do not bring latex paint (if you cannot give it away, dry out and throw away in the regular trash). Do not bring anything that is accepted at your transfer station including:
Fluorescent light bulbs and mercury containing devices
Propane (or other) tanks or cylinders
TVs or computer monitors
Crapo Hill Sanitary Landfill Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plan – September 2015
Construction Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plan, Phase 2 Cell 6 Construction, May 2018
City of New Bedford – Solid Waste and Recycling
Town of Dartmouth – DPW
Mercury Spill Information
Proper Disposal of Needles & Syringes
Drug Drop Box in Dartmouth
Release for Minor – Release for Adult
Greater New Bedford Regional Refuse Management District.
Developed by Full Scope Creative.
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line43
|
__label__cc
| 0.705008
| 0.294992
|
4 penny stocks I’d buy for 2022 and look to hold for 10 years
I’m on the lookout for the best penny stocks to buy for 2022. Here’s a handful I’d buy for next year and aim to hold for the long haul.
The diagnosis is good
Signs of a fresh wave of Covid-19 infections washing across the globe suggests a growing threat to the economic recovery. But not all UK shares are in danger of being washed out by a worsening public health emergency. Take EKF Diagnostics for example. This business manufactures medical kits that help diagnose whether or not someone has contracted the virus.
EKF might not just be a flash in the pan though. The business also manufactures a range of testing kits for other medical conditions. So it should benefit from the steady increase in global healthcare spending. Remember though, a high-profile failure of its equipment could prove catastrophic for future profits.
Shaking things up
The Covid-19 crisis has also underlined the importance of living healthy lifestyles. Ideas like keeping fit and eating well have gained extra importance as people try to bolster their immunity levels. This all benefits Science in Sport, a penny stock whose wide variety of nutritional products include energy gels, protein shakes and vitamin tablets.
What I also like is the impressive brand power of its labels, such as SiS and PhD (a personal favourite of mine). It’s a quality Science in Sport has built up by teaming with some of the world’s most popular athletes and sports teams. And it helps it thrive in a market which is become increasingly competitive.
Phoenix Copper‘s another cheap UK share that’s caught my attention recently. It’s not just due to the release of impressive survey results at its Red Star project in Idaho this week. The miner has discovered three new anomalies that it says “are significantly greater” than the discovery outcrop drilled in recent years.
It’s also not just because its American Depositary Receipts have received approval to trade over the counter in New York, giving it the opportunity to attract new investors.
I’m thinking of buying Phoenix Copper as clean energy investment and soaring electric vehicle demand should turbocharge copper consumption. Goldman Sachs thinks global copper off-take could soar 600% between now and 2030.
Buying mining shares can be risky business as cost overruns and production problems can hit profits hard. Still, I believe this company’s risk/reward profile is extremely attractive.
Another top penny stock to land
A resurgence in fishing as a recreational activity makes Angling Direct an attractive penny stock to buy too. Sales of rods, lines and other sorts of tackle were rising before the Covid-19 crisis emerged.
The public health emergency has boosted demand even further as people took up the pursuit during lockdowns. Angling Direct’s own sales jumped 27% in the 12 months to January as a result.
Like EKF Diagnostics, Angling Direct could benefit from a long road out of the pandemic. Though supply chain problems are growing, I still think this cheap UK share’s a brilliant buy for 2022.
The post 4 penny stocks I’d buy for 2022 and look to hold for 10 years appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.
FREE REPORT: Why this £5 stock could be set to surge
Are you on the lookout for UK growth stocks?
If so, get this FREE no-strings report now.
While it’s available: you’ll discover what we think is a top growth stock for the decade ahead.
And the performance of this company really is stunning.
In 2019, it returned £150million to shareholders through buybacks and dividends.
We believe its financial position is about as solid as anything we’ve seen.
Since 2016, annual revenues increased 31%
In March 2020, one of its senior directors LOADED UP on 25,000 shares – a position worth £90,259
Operating cash flow is up 47%. (Even its operating margins are rising every year!)
Quite simply, we believe it’s a fantastic Foolish growth pick.
What’s more, it deserves your attention today.
So please don’t wait another moment.
Get the full details on this £5 stock now – while your report is free.
1 penny stock I’d buy for inflation-beating dividends
My favourite high-dividend-yield stock
This is one of my best stocks to buy now with £1k
With interest rates set to rise, is a stock market crash coming?
8.6% dividend yields! 2 FTSE 250 dividend stocks to buy
Royston Wild has no position in any of the shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line45
|
__label__wiki
| 0.711336
| 0.711336
|
Exactly-why-the-Premier-League-can-be-heading-for-third-broadcasting-revolution-according-to-past-Sky-Athletics-MARYLAND-Barney-Francis-h
Revision as of 11:28, 18 September 2020 by Pinkknight1 (talk | contribs) (Exactly-why-the-Premier-League-can-be-heading-for-third-broadcasting-revolution-according-to-past-Sky-Athletics-MARYLAND-Barney-Francis-h)
When it comes to sports transmission, few know the dimensions of the game considerably better than Barney Francis. Often the former managing director of Sky Sports, who cast off Richard Keys and Andy Gray for Gary Neville and Jamie Carragher plus added Formula 1 in addition to golf’s Open to often the network’s portfolio in their time at the helm, has had a front-row seats for decades. Therefore when he says we may be on the cusp of your “revolution”, it feels wise to tune in.
Francis is recounting the associated with the Premier League and it is symbiotic relationship with pay-television, identifying two watershed instances: the competition’s genesis throughout 1992, when novices Skies began broadcasting England’s top rated division and opened often the football programming floodgates; as well as a European Commission ruling that forced the league to promote its matches to a couple of broadcaster from 2007. Nowadays, he says, Covid-19 may be heralding some sort of 3rd.
The Premier League verified on Thursday that that would continue to produce almost all matches readily available regarding located broadcast in typically the UK. Clubs approved this particular previously off-limits pitch to get the delayed conclusion of the last campaign and, using the return of crowds the isolated prospect, have long the arrangement for Oct.
“Only the Premier League know how they expect to promote the protection under the law next time, however it is definitely unprecedented change, ” Francis tells i. “There possess been two really important changing eras. First, the formation of the Premier League… your second field revolution was whenever Brussels introduced this ‘no single buyer’ guideline. Our company is now – quite possibly, because it may all merely dissipate – at the particular beginning of the 3rd revolution. 메이저리그중계 ’s going to help be an interesting time. ”
The Premier League has faced no absence of broadcasting challenges. Last week it terminated the £526m rights deal with Chinese companion PPTV two yrs early immediately after that defaulted on a payment, although Saudi-based piracy procedure beoutQ has harmed an additional key overseas partner, Qatar’s beIN. Both threaten the largest operater of profits progress, international TV deals, and thus its position as football’s almost all powerful domestic league.
Inspite of the growth – supercharged simply by lockdown – of unsuspecting over-the-top (OTT) platforms including Netflix and supposition that this Premier League could establish its own streaming service, Francis believes the tried-and-tested membership model is however king.
“Can you think about if Menu went in the transfer windowpane not knowing how much dollars they have been going in order to generate from accesories next season? That’s the fact connected with OTT, ” says the 48-year-old, who left Heavens Sports last year but continues to be outgoing chief executive of parent company Comcast’s Future Activities division until often the end in this calendar year.
“If football was initially delivered OTT – plus the idea depends on the financial type, but say this was initially done on some sort of transactional basis, that every single game was available – what happens if the sun’s out? Suppose you’re on holiday? Just what forecasting could Arsenal do for his or her consumption revenue over the subsequent season, and even therefore how much cash could they spend inside transfer window?
All main athletics still need a good guaranteed earnings. That does not mean it could not end up being done on OTT, although somebody would still should upfront the money for you to the clubs in major markets and discover a method to claw that again, both through OTT or perhaps ongoing. ”
Where OTT is useful, he affirms, is in reaching small audience in “dark territories” – countries the place where a sports activity may lack a new broadcast partner. He cites modern forays by boxing marketers Matchroom and Formula 1, incorporating: “It’s an effective use of anyone’s inventory. This doesn’t mean it’s intending to control all the main markets. Would often the NFL want to go OTT in the united states? Of course certainly not, because turtles have got lots associated with broadcasters competing which will certainly pay rights fees. But in some markets, where presently there are pockets of fascination, going OTT can make finished sense. ”
Sport’s switching sands are at one's heart of his new communicative position with WePlay, an advertising agency whose clients consist of Fifa, Paris Saint-Germain in addition to British Athletics. Its “performance-driven” approach – no straight up fees, payment on success – is the potential future, he admits that. “It’s time to help get rid of the older models. ”
With regard to all the challenges lockdown has presented, Francis states it has highlighted sport’s importance. “What we’ve noticed from viewing figures, absolutely in the BRITISH, can be Dont really think people’s desire for food intended for sport has lessened coming from Covid. It most likely features only increased. ”
Retrieved from "http://grnrsenr.w3.uvm.edu/index.php?title=Exactly-why-the-Premier-League-can-be-heading-for-third-broadcasting-revolution-according-to-past-Sky-Athletics-MARYLAND-Barney-Francis-h&oldid=70760"
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line47
|
__label__wiki
| 0.726542
| 0.726542
|
1020 Dorchester Ave
Dorchester, MA 02125 • View Phone NumberTel. (617) 265-9840
View Recent Services
Receive New Obituaries via Email
National Obituary Search
Obituary for Mark Anthony Reed
Conroe, Texas | Age 66
Veteran of U.S. Air Force
+ Remember
James A. Murphy & Son Funeral Home
Our Obituaries
Receive Obituary Notices via Email
View Recent Obituaries & Services
View Phone NumberPhone: (617) 265-9840
Our Local Florist
James A. Murphy established the Murphy Funeral Home in 1915. It began in a small storefront at 906 Dorchester Avenue, Dorchester, MA. In 1934, the business moved to where the current facility is at 1020 Dorchester Avenue.
Today James T. Murphy and his son, Thomas P. Murphy operate the firm with the same kind of local commitment that began in 1915. Both Jim and Tom reside in Dorchester and are active in many community affairs including the Colonel Daniel Marr Boys & Girls Club, Dorchester Savin Hill Little League, Columbia/Savin Hill Civic Association, St. Williams Church, and many others.
The Murphy Funeral Home recognizes that the community is comprised of diverse preferences of religion, philosophies and beliefs. You will find that this firm is responsive to the needs and wished of all families. By offering a wide range of services, each family has the ability to create a meaningful and appropriate way to remember their loved one.
The Murphy Family is committed to satisfying your needs with the finest funeral service available. Our funeral home facilities are constantly maintained and improved, as are the kinds of services we offer.
Contact Me Inquiry Form
Please complete the fields below and one of our funeral service professionals will be in touch with you shortly.
Your Name: Your Email: Your Phone: Subject: Choose One Funeral Services Cremation Services Pre-Arrangements Social Security Benefits Veterans Benefits Aftercare Other Message:
*For security purposes, please type the text that appears below.
Your inquiry has been forwarded to James A. Murphy & Son Funeral Home.
Click on the item you would like to print.
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line55
|
__label__wiki
| 0.934889
| 0.934889
|
QUIETLY FURIOUS RETURN FROM ROCK'S GRANDE DAME
by Stephen Trousse
43 years ago, Joni Mitchell—then Roberta Joan Anderson—began her performing career in a Calgary coffeeshop called The Depression. So there's a certain symmetry to the news that she's come out of retirement—five years, as she puts it, of "gardening and watching old movies"—to join Paul McCartney on Starbucks' new Hear Music label.
Although she withdrew in 2002 with memorable venom, scorning the "corrupt cesspool" of the modern music industry, it's not such a surprising return. In many ways hers has been a career of diva-esque goodbyes. Mitchell first proposed retiring back in 1969, freaked out at the prospect of fame, before recording LADIES OF THE CANYON, and refers to 1972's FOR THE ROSES as "one of my first swansongs".
SHINE is trailed as a return to the spirit of the latter record: a stripped-back, more personal album after the lavish contractual obligations of BOTH SIDES NOW (2000) and TRAVELOGUE (2002), recorded at her home in British Columbia with just a piano and an old synth. It's part of a recent flurry of activity that's also seen her complete a collaboration with the Alberta Ballet and a visual art installation.
What's hurt her back into song? Oh you know: the prospect of planetary extinction, the ongoing fiasco of international politics, drivers who over take on the right. The presence of a shuffling,breezy cover of Big Yellow Taxi is an early sign that SHINE finds Mitchell in her own peculiar protest mode. Following a beautiful prefatory instrumental, opening song This Place provides an update on the paving of paradise, as Mitchell watches the mountains near her home ground up to provide gravel for Californian mansions. But where once she was youthfully, giddily defiant of the absurdity, now she seems bitterly, languidly resigned.
If I Had A Heart and Bad Dreams Are Good add to the catalogue of woes. With Mitchell's voice a smoky husk of its former glories over mournful piano and home studio synth, they are both muttered jeremiads against "holy war, genocide, suicide" and the "cellphone zombies" oblivious to it all. "Oh Earth, how can we heal you?" she sings, but it's clear she doesn't expect an answer any time soon.
There's an elegiac beauty to these tracks, Mitchell seeming ready to leave behind this angry overcrowded world. But they fail to dramatise the predicament, and that's always been her strength as a writer. The album proffers a distant prospect of redemption—in the grace under pressure of Hana and a strident setting of Kipling's If — but only really beguiles on the title track. Rippling with flanged guitar, it's a simple seven-and-a-half minute reverie to the wonder and the horror of the world, where, if only in a couplet, all the corrupt churches that "love less and less" can be balanced out by "a hopeful girl in a dreamy dress". Four decades into her career, despite her extravagant despair, Joni still carries the distant echo of that earnest teenager, crooning in the coffeeshop.
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line57
|
__label__wiki
| 0.619413
| 0.619413
|
About the possibility of determining the speed of jets of radio galaxies and quasars from studies of the fine structure of their nodes at high angular resolution
Abstract: The results of observations of 40 extra-galactic radio sources made on a 22-meter radio telescope of the Crimean Astrophysical Observatory at a frequency of 22 GHz in 1990–1994 are presented.
Acoustic diagnostics of heterophase plasma
Acoustic oscillations in the atmosphere as a possible channel of cosmic influence on the biosphere
Analysis of the possibility of using magnetic-liquid devices in space technology
Characteristics of recombination processes in the nighttime F-region of the ionosphere according to incoherent scattering
Checking the list of optical twins of IR and radio sources from observations in the Andrushevskaya joint-stock company
Comparison of the data of the Kharkov incoherent scatter radar with the international reference ionosphere model IRI-2001
Doppler radio sounding of disturbances in the E and F regions of the ionosphere during launches and flights of spacecraft
Doppler radio sounding of the ionosphere as a means of monitoring the state of space weather
Effect of nonconservation of the magnetic moment of fast protons on their confinement in the geomagnetic trap
Energy and material science problems of launching into space and descent to Earth of the device with low overloads
Experimental determination of temperature fields in samples of materials of space technology
Frenay – Serre equations for the trajectory of a charged particle in a magnetic dipole
Generation of Langmuir waves in a magnetized plasma with low-frequency turbulence
Generation of kinetic Alfven waves in a cosmic plasma
Height distribution of electron fluxes with energies above 40 keV at mid-latitudes
Information technologies for diagnosing properties of materials based on ultrasound tomography
Infrared Astrometry Problems
Interaction of a plant cell with pathogens in conditions of changed gravity
Investigation of the efficiency of processing algorithms for symmetric dual Langmuir probe (SDLS) based on the proposed quality indicator
Investigation of the nature of perturbations that affect the own rotation of the satellite
Ionospheric disturbances excited by the lithospheric gas source of acoustic gravity waves before eartquakes
Measurement of electron concentration in the lower ionosphere by the method of incoherent scattering
Measurement of spatial currents by magnetometers
Measurement of the motion of the Simeiz station using the VLBI method
Measuring system for direct determination of plasma parameters based on a symmetric dual Langmuir probe (SDLC)
Microwave Radiation Bastille Solar Flare
New medical technology using extremely high frequency electromagnetic radiation for express control and correction of cosmonauts' functional state
On the generation of the Earth’s magnetic field
Patterns and mechanisms of influence of magnetic storms on human well-being
Plasma injector for space technology
Possibilities of multiparameter helioprognozy the effectiveness of therapeutic and preventive activities
Possible mechanism of electromagnetic responses to acoustic disturbances in the atmosphere
Processing of the incoherent scatter signal in the calculation of the parameters of the ionospheric plasma
Prospects for ground research of solar-terrestrial relations
Prospects for the development of millimeter-wave radio interferometry
Prospects for the study of seed reproduction of higher plants in microgravity
Quasar ON471: WSRT and VLBI Observation, Radio Spectrum
Role of hydrogen in production of materials for space-system engineering by powder metallurgy methods
Search and observations of celestial bodies in near-Earth space on the telescope «ZEIS-1000» in the CJSC
Seasonal variations in the relative content of molecular ions according to the data of the Kharkov incoherent scatter radar
Solar corona heating and microwave variations
Solar-cyclic variations in the concentration of hydrogen ions in the outer ionosphere
Some features of thermospheric-ionospheric disturbances during the transition from calm to disturbed conditions according to the data of the Kharkov Radar NR
Space experiment to determine the size and shape of the visible disk of the sun
Strengthening osteoclast activity in rats under conditions of underlying load deficiency
Study of temperature fields and hydrodynamic flows in an ampoule during crystallization according to the Bridgman method
Study of the temporal characteristics of the decay of nuclear chronometers in order to clarify the age of astrophysical objects
The correlative relationship of solar activity (magnetic storms) with the efficiency of the choice of the operator responsible decisions in stressful situations arising in space and terrestrial conditions
The effect of ultrahigh-frequency electromagnetic radiation of low intensity on the functional state of the body
The introduction of television tools in research and technological practice
The properties of kinetic Alfven waves and their role in the dynamics of the magnetosphere
The results of observations on the laser rangefinder «Simeiz-1873» from May 25, 2001 to May 25, 2002
The results of the GPS station «CRAO» in Simeiz
The study of observations on the RT-22 Krao maser sources in the line of water vapor at a wavelength of 1.35 cm
The technology of multilayer electroplating with elements of electroforming assembly for the manufacture of elements and units of satellite communication systems
Thunderstorms as a possible cause of the increased neutron background near the equator
To the question of acousto-electromagnetic sounding of the ionosphere
Unified side-mounted system for collecting and processing information from scientific equipment
Universal script of formation of galactic subsystems
Use of high-frequency magnetic amplifiers in power supplies for space equipment
Use of reconfigured elements in on-board data acquisition and processing systems
ИССЛЕДОВАНИЕ ЭВОЛЮЦИИ КОРОНАЛЬНЫХ ДЫР ПО НАЗЕМНЫМ И КОСМИЧЕСКИМ НАБЛЮДЕНИЯМ
Home » Archive » 2002 » Supplement No 2(12) » Patterns and mechanisms of influence of magnetic storms on human well-being
Space Life Sciences
1Delyukov, AA, 2Zakharov, IG, 3Nikonov, VV, 4Tyrnov, OF
1Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Kyiv, Ukraine
2V.N. Karazin National University of Kharkiv, Kharkiv, Ukraine
3Kharkiv Medical Academy of Postgraduate Education, Kharkiv, Ukraine
4V.N. Karazin Kharkiv National University, Kharkiv, Ukraine
Kosm. nauka tehnol. 2002, 8 ;(Supplement2):412-419
https://doi.org/10.15407/knit2002.02s.412
Publication Language: Russian
On the basis of an integrated approach, taking into account changes in the solar wind, in the magnetic field, the atmosphere and the Earth’s biosphere, the reaction of the human body to magnetic storms and weather changes was studied from 1997–2001 data. It is shown that the physical influence factor in both cases can be ultra-low-frequency fluctuations of the atmospheric pressure in the range of 0.01–0.1 Hz, the nature of the effect of which can significantly depend on the type of fluctuations: chaotic or harmonic.
1. Moiseeva N. I., Lyubitsky R. Ye. The impact of heliogeophysical factors on the human body, 136 p. (Nauka, Leningrad, 1986) [in Russian].
2. Vladimirsky B. M., Temuryants N. L. Influence of solar activity on the biosphere and noosphere (Heliobiology by A. L. Chizhevsky to the present day), 374 p. (MNEPU, Moscow, 2001) [in Russian].
3. Hoeppe P. New Approaches to Find Causal Agents of Weather Related Health effects. Cosmos and Biosphere: Int. Crimean Seminar: Abstracts, Oct. 1-6, 2001, 6-7 (Partenit, Ukraine, 2001).
4. Bucha V. Influence of Solar Activity on Atmospheric Circulation Types. Ann. Geophys., 6, 513-524 (1988).
5. Loginov V. F., Sherstyukov B. G., Vysotsky A. M. The manifestation of the 27-day solar cycle in the lower atmosphere. Trudy VHIIGMI-MCD, Is. 37, 97-112 (1987) [in Russian].
6. Gurfinkel' Yu. I., Lyubimov V. V., Orayevskii V. N., et al. Effect of Geomagnetic Disturbances on Capillary Blood Flow in Patients Suffering from Ischaemic Disease of the Heart. Biofizika, 40, 793-799 (1995) [in Russian].
7. Zakharov I. G, Tyrnov O. F. On the issue of quantitative testing of non-traditional diagnostic methods. Vestnik Har'kovskogo nac. un-ta im. V.N. Karazina. Medicina, 523 (2), 84-90 (2001) [in Russian].
8. Zakharov I. G., Tyrnov O. F. About the relationship of changes in solar activity and types of atmospheric circulation in Eastern Europe. Human biometeorology: Material congress. St.Peterburg, September 18-22, 2000, 151-152 (Gidrometeoizdat, St.Peterburg, 2000) [in Russian].
9. Delyukov A., Didyk L. The Effects of Extra-Low-Frequency Atmospheric Pressure Oscillations on Human Mental Activity. Int. J. Biometeorol., 43, 31-37 (1999).
https://doi.org//10.1007/s004840050113
10. Didyk L. A., Deliukov A. A., Gorgo Iu. P., Semenova I. A. Effect of extralow frequency variations of atmospheric pressure on voluntary attention parameters. Fiziologiia Cheloveka, 26, 328-333 (2000) [in Russian].
https://doi.org//10.1007/BF02760271
11. Gossard E. E., Hooke W. H. Waves in the Atmosphere, 532 p. (Mir, Moscow, 1978) [in Russian].
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line60
|
__label__cc
| 0.603384
| 0.396616
|
Science can't know consciousness
Friend wrote in a comment below on the ID controversy:
HI BY,Only got a moment but just to say if you stake things on consciousness and put that in the hands of materialists, you'll soon find that disappearing too. They can only judge consciousness, like everything else by measurable means and so they reduce everything to that. Check out Astonishing Hypothesis by Crick, and Theatre of the Mind by Jay Ingram and possibly Conversations on Consciousness edited by Susan Blackmore and watch consciousness disappear from existence.
You may not have noticed it, but I was actually praising scientists for leaving consciousness out of the picture. Consciousness cannot be objectively verified, and therefore cannot be the subject of scientific inquiry. Consciousness can only be subjectively verified, by consciousness. So science and consciousness are better off for not being mixed together. I'm not against consciousness, or the knowing of consciousness, but I think it's a huge mistake to assume that its either possible of desireable to know consciousness scientifically. I also think it's a huge mistake to try to goad science into taking consciousness seriously. It simply can't. It can take seriously the study of the brain and nervous system, and it can take into account people's subjective accounts of consciousness, but it can't study consciousness directly.
Just as ID theory has no place in a science classroom, consciousness theory has no place in science. It certainly has a place in the minds of scientists, but not in their work. Not all scientists are athiests or deniers of consciousness. But when they do science they have to put ideas of God and consciousness aside, because it has no bearing on scientific enquiry. It's probably true that scientists tend to be atheists, and that they tend not to think of consciousness as important, but that is to some extent a product of their concentration in scientific work. The rest of us don't have to base our views of the world on science. Science is a limited tool that does wonderful things in the material world. Like every other thing in the material world, science doesn't point to God or consciousness. Only consciousness can do that, and when it does, it isn't doing science. You keep trying to blame science for being reductionist, when that is not only its purpose, but its virtue: to reduce complex subjects of study to an understandable series of simple principles. Consciousness and God cannot be studied objectively, however. They can't be reduced to anything that is tangible or comprehensible. What could science have to say about consciousness that would actually be meaningful to consciousness? It would simply be silent on the subject. Which in its way is completely appropriate, because the primary quality of consciousness is silence.
Great to hear from you, friend. I noticed you were quite active in the whole ID debate. Do you actually think the universe is intelligently designed, or do you just take a contrarian view out of anitpathy for science?
I agree with you on the subject of science and consciousness but unfortunately, 'science' will not leave well enough alone. They will co-opt it and are, as we speak. And they will shape the thought and perception of the world because people, including the media, do conflate science with authority regarding the nature of reality. I read one review in which the reviewer said that after reading the book, consciousness seemed more like an invention of the human mind than a reality. See what I mean?
It is this materialist mindset or paradigm that I thank religion for rescuing me from and I want to do whatever I can to keep that escape hatch open for others.
I do think there is only conscious being in which everything appears and so I cannot see how can it not have an effect.
From there it is purely speculative but I do not see forward planning as much as I do spontaneous action based on such subjective forces of attraction and repulsion, identification, equilibrium, liberation, and so on. The result of this action is to create trailing effects which concretize and then influence and restrict further action and movement of consciousness as it changes focus. I do actually see the possibility of cosnciousness operating at the physical level although the level at which our consciousness is focused is far from that at the moment.
I know its bizarre and probaly best not mused aloud in public, but really I have nothing at stake in it all other than to suggest the possibility of divinity acting from subjectivity rather than as some objective idea of the divine appearing within its own creation, as atheists tend to be restricted to.
I see the divine more its own dupe than some grand designer creating ready made perfect worlds, in love with its own reflection, but really divinely profoundly in love, and then only later waking up to what it's gotten itelf into and seeking liberation from its own actions. Do I take this seriously? Yes and no. No because of the poverty of my imagination and because I don't know. Yes, because it seems a more likely creation myth to me than most. But 'creation' only relates to the appearance itself, not that from which it all springs. There, there is no doubt in my mind. There was no beginning. There is only the eternal for which no words really surfice.
I do hope we widened the ID debate a little from its tiny little oppositional warfare situation to something a bit more meaningful and real.
BTW, I love science. I think its amazing what has come from the materialist mindset. I just wish this reductionist view wouldn't get conflated with notion that it is the official cultural view of the nature of reality in the popular mind, of which mine was once a desperately trapped example.
Monday, January 9, 2006 at 10:56:00 PM PST
Crazy Jesus, Yogic Jesus
Revisiting Jesus and non-dualism
Self-Enquiry as Faith
And now for something completely different!
Rejoining the River of Life
Adi Da: Raging Alcoholic or Out of Control Alcoholic?
The positive side of Adidam
Did Ramana Enlighten Anyone? Has Da?
Truth wins out
Maybe A Dingo Ate Your Baby?
Causality and Synchronicity
In the Kali Yuga, Everyone Gets the Guru They Deserve
Lies, half-truths, and bizarre distortions in the ...
Uploading to Subtle Realms
The Science of the Psyche
"Weak" ID theory, psychic phenonemena, and Oprah
Signs of intelligent dissent
Adidapedia
History of Christian Scripture
Intelligent design, evolution, involution and the ...
Hello out there
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line61
|
__label__wiki
| 0.691593
| 0.691593
|
Difference between revisions of "EEB 5449 Fall 2016"
Eileen Schaub (Talk | contribs)
(→Topics and Readings)
Elizabeth Jockusch (Talk | contribs)
| Th Oct 20 (L) <br> Tu Oct 25 (P/D) || Novelty 2 (EJ) <br>'''cis-regulatory review:''' [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0168952512001473 Yáñez-Cuna et al. 2013] '''Lecture examples:''' [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v433/n7025/full/nature03235.html Gompel et al. 2005] [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v464/n7292/full/nature08896.html Werner et al. 2010] [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://science.sciencemag.org/content/339/6126/1423.long Arnoult et al. 2013] '''Recommended:''' [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://science.sciencemag.org/content/339/6126/1423.full Arnoult et al. 2013] [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://journals.plos.org/plosgenetics/article?id=10.1371/journal.pgen.1002893 Oliver et al. 2012] [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982216307898 Dowell et al. 2016] [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://evodevojournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/2041-9139-5-7 Martin et al. 2014] [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms6149 Santos et al. 2014] [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221112471401105X Lynch et al. 2015] || P1: Eileen Schaub <br> P2: Mike Stankov || D1: Morgan Napier <br> D2: Kevin Bieger|| P1: [http://www.amjbot.org/content/98/6/923.long Hemingway et al 2011] <br> P2: <br> D:<br>[http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://science.sciencemag.org/content/339/6126/1423.full Arnoult et al. 2013]
| Th Oct 20 (L) <br> Tu Oct 25 (P/D) || Novelty 2 (EJ) <br>'''cis-regulatory review:''' [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0168952512001473 Yáñez-Cuna et al. 2013] '''Lecture examples:''' [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v433/n7025/full/nature03235.html Gompel et al. 2005] [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v464/n7292/full/nature08896.html Werner et al. 2010] [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://science.sciencemag.org/content/339/6126/1423.long Arnoult et al. 2013] '''Recommended:''' [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://journals.plos.org/plosgenetics/article?id=10.1371/journal.pgen.1002893 Oliver et al. 2012] [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982216307898 Dowell et al. 2016] [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://evodevojournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/2041-9139-5-7 Martin et al. 2014] [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms6149 Santos et al. 2014] [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221112471401105X Lynch et al. 2015] || P1: Eileen Schaub <br> P2: Mike Stankov || D1: Morgan Napier <br> D2: Kevin Bieger|| P1: [http://www.amjbot.org/content/98/6/923.long Hemingway et al. 2011] <br> P2: [http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982216307898 Dowell et al. 2016]<br> D:<br>[http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://science.sciencemag.org/content/339/6126/1423.full Arnoult et al. 2013]
EEB 5449, Fall 2016
Meeting Time: Tuesdays and Thursdays, 9:30-10:45 am, TLS171B, Bamford Room)
2 Instructors
3 Announcements and Handouts
5 Expectations and Grading
5.1 Deadlines
5.2 Course grade
6 Topics and Readings
This is an advanced course that explores the patterns and mechanisms of biological evolution (from molecules to organisms to ecosystems) and the applications of evolutionary principles in other branches of Biology and Medicine. Class periods will include discussion and critical analysis of primary literature.
Dr. Elizabeth Jockusch
Office: Biology/Pharmacy 305B
Office hours: by appointment
Dr. Yaowu Yuan
Office: Biology/Pharmacy 300A
Announcements and Handouts
Presentation & discussion sign-up: Everyone should sign up for 1 presentation and 1 discussion slot in the first half of the course (through Novelty 1/Oct. 18). If you have access to EEBedia, please sign yourself up directly. If not, send Yaowu or Elizabeth some information about your preferences, and we'll sign you up. We will need to triple up for one session, so if the topic you really want is full, ask for it anyway. Those of you who are signing up now can also help yourselves to first pick (also 1 presentation & 1 discussion) for the second half of the course.
Discussion leaders: Please post a pdf with discussion questions on the course website prior to the discussion. In the ideal world, this would happen no later than Sunday night of the week you will lead discussion.
Editing EEBedia: To post discussion questions and links to papers, you will need to edit the EEBedia site [this page] directly. Here's some helpful information for those of you new to EEBedia.
Posting papers on EEBedia: Presenters should post a link to their chosen paper by the end of Friday the week before the presentation. Do NOT post the pdf, as this would be a copyright violation in some cases (and bloats the material stored on EEBedia). This link goes in the last column of the Topics and Readings table and should include the exproxy prefix (http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http://) followed by the web address for the paper. Be sure to test it! Include basic citation information as the displayed text.
Accessing papers from off campus: Access to some resources is through subscriptions paid for by the UConn libraries. If you try to access these resources from off-campus, you may encounter a subscription page that asks you to pay an inordinate sum. If this happens, there are two ways to authenticate yourself as a UConn user. You can either configure UConn's VPN client (see instructions here) or login with ezproxy (full instructions here); the short version of the latter is that you just need to paste the following http://ezproxy.lib.uconn.edu/login?url=http:// at the beginning of the link you are trying to access. (second http:// depends on whether your browser enters that automatically.) For both methods, you will need to login with your netid and password.
Textbook: Although no specific textbook readings are required, we highly recommend that you use one of the major Evolution textbooks as a companion for this course. It will be helpful both to refresh your knowledge of core topics and to gain additional background by reading relevant sections whenever the lecture focuses on topics you are relatively unfamiliar with. There are multiple good options:
Bergstrom and Dugatkin, Evolution
Freeman and Herron, Evolutionary Analysis
Futuyma, Evolution
Zimmer and Emlen, Evolution, Making Sense of Life
Darwin's complete writings
Classic Papers in Evolutionary Biology
Dobzhanksy-Nothing in Biology Makes Sense Except in the Light of Evolution: often quoted, less often read
Expectations and Grading
This course has a mixed lecture/discussion format. In general, Thursdays will be used for lectures that provide an overview and background information. Tuesdays will be dedicated to student presentations and student-led discussion of readings from the primary literature.
Presentations: Each student will give two presentations about papers from the primary literature, selected in consultation with the instructors. Each presenter should post a link to their paper on EEBedia by the Friday before the presentation. All students are expected to look at these papers briefly and come prepared to ask questions. More information about presentation preparation is available here.
Discussions: Each week, we will discuss in depth one paper from the primary literature. The discussion leaders should let the course instructors know if they have ideas for a paper or would like suggestions. A link to the paper will be posted on EEBedia by the Friday before the discussion. We expect everyone to participate actively in the discussion. Two students will guide the discussion, based on a list of questions they write and distribute in advance. To help prepare for discussions, all students should write a brief (<1 page) reaction piece to the weekly readings, highlighting your thoughts about the readings, connections between them or questions raised by them. (Note: this reaction piece should *not* summarize the contents of the paper.) This will be handed in each week. Discussion grades will be based on a combination of discussion participation, reaction pieces, effectiveness at leading discussions, questions during presentations.
Preproposal: Each student will write an NSF-style preproposal on a topic of your choice that is related to evolution. Ideally, your project will be closely connected to your own research interests, and also integrate multiple topics covered in class. You should receive written approval for your preproposal project no later than Thursday, Oct. 25, and are encouraged to begin discussing your ideas with the course instructors well in advance of this. The final preproposal is due by Monday Nov. 28 at 5 pm.
The Preproposal is limited to four pages (not including References) and, in addition to the title and your name, should include the following 5 sub-sections (per NSF preproposal guidelines):
1. "Conceptual Framework" or "Objectives" or "Specific Aims"
2. "Rationale and Significance" or "Background"
3. "Research Question(s)" or "Hypotheses"
4. "Research Approach" or "Experimental Plan"
5. "Broader Impacts"
There is no specific requirements for the length of each sub-section. But a good balance could be something like: Section 1, 1/4-1/3 pages; Section 2: 1/2-2/3 pages; Section 3: 1/3-2/3 pages; Section 4: 1.5-2 pages (including figures); Section 5: 1/2-2/3 pages. Before writing the preproposal, you should also familiarize yourself with the Review Criteria as listed in the next section
References Cited are limited to 3 pages. You can use a standard journal style for the reference format. Fonts should be "Arial 10-11" or "Times New Roman 11-12".
Preproposal Panel Review: Each student will be assigned three preproposals to review. We will meet during the final exam period to conduct an NSF-style panel review of the full set of proposals. Here are the Review Criteria extracted from the NSF preproposal guidelines:
"When evaluating NSF proposals, reviewers will be asked to consider what the proposers want to do, why they want to do it, how they plan to do it, how they will know if they succeed, and what benefits could accrue if the project is successful. These issues apply both to the technical aspects of the proposal and the way in which the project may make broader contributions. To that end, reviewers will be asked to evaluate all proposals against two criteria:
Intellectual Merit: The Intellectual Merit criterion encompasses the potential to advance knowledge; and
Broader Impacts: The Broader Impacts criterion encompasses the potential to benefit society and contribute to the achievement of specific, desired societal outcomes.
The following elements should be considered in the review for both criteria:
1. What is the potential for the proposed activity to
a. Advance knowledge and understanding within its own field or across different fields (Intellectual Merit); and
b. Benefit society or advance desired societal outcomes (Broader Impacts)?
2. To what extent do the proposed activities suggest and explore creative, original, or potentially transformative concepts?
3. Is the plan for carrying out the proposed activities well-reasoned, well-organized, and based on a sound rationale? Does the plan incorporate a mechanism to assess success?
4. How well qualified is the individual, team, or organization to conduct the proposed activities?
5. Are there adequate resources available to the PI (either at the home organization or through collaborations) to carry out the proposed activities?
Broader impacts may be accomplished through the research itself, through the activities that are directly related to specific research projects, or through activities that are supported by, but are complementary to, the project. NSF values the advancement of scientific knowledge and activities that contribute to achievement of societally relevant outcomes. Such outcomes include, but are not limited to: full participation of women, persons with disabilities, and underrepresented minorities in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM); improved STEM education and educator development at any level; increased public scientific literacy and public engagement with science and technology; improved well-being of individuals in society; development of a diverse, globally competitive STEM workforce; increased partnerships between academia, industry, and others; improved national security; increased economic competitiveness of the United States; and enhanced infrastructure for research and education."
Weekly Reaction paper based on discussion readings
Thursday, Oct. 25 Preproposal topic approved
Monday, Nov. 28, 5 pm Preproposal due
Friday, December 9 Preproposal reviews due
Course grade
Presentations 20%
Discussions 20%
Preproposal 50%
Panel reviews 10%
Topics and Readings
Discussion Leaders
Tu Aug. 30 Overview NA NA
Th Sept 1 (L)
Tu Sept 6 (P/D) Experimental Evolution (microbes) (YY)
Further Readings: Lenski interview
The Man Who Bottled Evolution
Suggested Papers: Tenaillon et al. 2016 Phillips et al., 2016 Lindsey et al., 2013 Plucain et al., 2013 P1: Morgan Napier
P2: Qiaoshan Lin D1: Austin Spence
D2: Mike Stankov P1: King et al. 2016
P2: Tenaillon et al. 2016
D: Maddamsetti et al. 2015
Tu Sept 13 (P/D) Experimental Evolution (eukaryotes) (EJ)
Classic Papers: Endler 1980 Muller 1932 Review: Kawecki et al. 2012 Lecture examples: Goddard et al. 2005 Becks and Agrawal 2012 P1: Jacob Kasper
P2: Amy LaFountain D1: Sarah Hurley
D2: Lisa Terlova P1: Fraser et al. 2015
P2: Helliwell et al. 2015
D: Castillo et al., 2015
Th Sept 15 (L)
Tu Sept 20 (P/D) Adaptation and Speciation 1 (EJ) P1: Kevin Bieger
P2: Genevieve Nuttall D1: Amy LaFountain
D2: Qiaoshan Lin P1: Comeault et al. 2015
P2: Burri et al. 2015
D: Stankowski et al. 2015
Tu Sept 27 (P/D) Adaptation and Speciation 2 (EJ)
Classics: Coyne and Orr (1989) Grant and Grant 1992 Reviews: Ritchie 2007 Abbott et al. 2013 Lecture Examples: Brideau et al. 2006 Turner and Hare 2014 Heliconius Genome Consurtium 2012 Recent: Marques et al. 2016 Lamichhaney et al. 2015 Smith et al. 2016 P1: Matt Sasaki
P2: Tim Pullen D1: Tanner Matson
D2: Morgan Napier P1: Picq et al. 2015
P2: Pfennig et al. 2015
D: Smith et al. 2016
Tu Oct 4 (P/D) Adaptation and Speciation 3 (YY)
Suggested Papers: Arnold et al. 2016Grossenbacher et al. 2014 P1: Tanner Matson
P2: Vandana Gurung D1: Matt Sasaki
D2: Tim Pullen P1: Filchak et al. 2000
P2: Xu et al. 2015
D: MacLeod et al. 2015
Th Oct 6 (L)
Tu Oct 11 (P/D) Diversification Patterns and Processes (EJ)
Classic: Raup and Sepkoski 1982 Farrell 1998 Lecture Examples: Alfaro et al. 2009 Ricklefs 2006 Wagner et al. 2012 Madriñan et al. 2016 Recommended: Nevado et al. 2016 P1: Austin Spence
P2: Eileen Schaub D1: Genevieve Nuttall
D2: Ellie Clark
D3: Jacob Kasper
P1: Blom et al. 2016
P2: Schwery et al. 2015
D:Joy 2013
Th Oct 13 (L)
Tu Oct 18 (P/D) Novelty 1 (YY)
Suggested Papers: Stansbury & Moczek, 2014.Nasvall et al. 2012Ruiz-Orera et al. 2015. Zhao et al. 2016 P1: Sarah Hurley
P2: Ellie Clark D1: Kevin Bieger
D2: Vandana Gurung P1: Baratte et al. 2007
P2: Stansbury & Moczek, 2014.
D: Busch & Zachgo 2007
Tu Oct 25 (P/D) Novelty 2 (EJ)
cis-regulatory review: Yáñez-Cuna et al. 2013 Lecture examples: Gompel et al. 2005 Werner et al. 2010 Arnoult et al. 2013 Recommended: Oliver et al. 2012 Dowell et al. 2016 Martin et al. 2014 Santos et al. 2014 Lynch et al. 2015 P1: Eileen Schaub
P2: Mike Stankov D1: Morgan Napier
D2: Kevin Bieger P1: Hemingway et al. 2011
P2: Dowell et al. 2016
Arnoult et al. 2013
Tu Nov 1 (P/D) Novelty 3 (YY) P1: Amy LaFountain
P2: Tim Pullen D1: Matt Sasaki
D2:Vandana Gurung
D3: Ellie Clark P1:
P2:
Th Nov 3 (L)
Tu Nov 8 (P/D) Evolution in Action: Domestication and Agriculture (YY) P1: Tanner Matson
P2: Qiaoshan Lin
D1: Lisa Terlova
D2: Amy LaFountain
D3: Eileen Schaub P1:
Th Nov 10 (L)
Tu Nov 15 (P/D) Evolution in Action: Humans as Unintentional Agents of Selection (EJ) P1: Jacob Kasper
P2: Kevin Bieger D1: Sarah Hurley
D2: Tim Pullen
D3: Tanner Matson P1:
Tu Nov 29 (P/D) Applications of Evolutionary Thinking: Medicine (YY) P1: Lisa Terlova
P2: Vandana Gurung D1: Qiaoshan Lin
D2: Austin Spence
D3: Jacob Kasper P1:
Th Dec 1 (L)
Tu Dec 6 (P/D) Applications of Evolutionary Thinking: Conservation (EJ) P1: Matt Sasaki
P2: Sarah Hurley D1: Mike Stankov
D2: Genevieve Nuttall
Th Dec 8 Wrap-up P1: Lisa Terlova
P2: Morgan Napier
P3: Genevieve Nuttall
P4: Austin Spence
P5: Ellie Clark
P6: Mike Stankov N/A
Tu Dec 13
(Final Exam Period) 3:30-5:30 pm Preproposal Review Panel NA NA
Retrieved from "http://hydrodictyon.eeb.uconn.edu/eebedia/index.php?title=EEB_5449_Fall_2016&oldid=36466"
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line65
|
__label__cc
| 0.512729
| 0.487271
|
Home» New Delhi Chapter
New Delhi Chapter
IEOM New Delhi Chapter, India
Dr. Vivek Soni
Associate Professor (Operations, SCM & Business Analytics)
Fellow – Institution of Engineers India
Member – AIMA & Indian Society of Training & Development
Esteemed Patron & Fellow:
Prof. (Dr.) Devinder Kumar Banwet, FIE
Vice Chancellor (Founding), University of Engineering & Management Kolkata
Former Professor Emeritus IIT Delhi, HOD DMS IITD, Professor HAG IITD
Chairman PEC of ASRP & Entrepreneurship Interdisciplinary Programs
Prof. Devinder Kumar Banwet, FIE, is Founding Vice Chancellor at University of Engineering & Management Kolkata India. He is an Emeritus Professor of DMS IIT Delhi in the area of Operations & Supply Chain Management and a Fellow of the Institution of Engineers (India). He is a Graduate Mechanical Engineer, with Master of Industrial Engineering and PhD from IIT Delhi. He has made significant contributions in publications related to Operations Management. His areas of research interest include Operations Management, Supply Chain and Logistics Management, Project Management, IT-enabled DSS, Industrial Systems Engineering, Total Quality Management, Manufacturing Strategy, Technology Management, Materials Management, Facilities Planning, Operations Research Modelling, Telecom Systems and Entrepreneurship Management.
Dr Patanjal Kumar currently is a faculty at GLA University Mathura (Delhi NCR India), working in the area of Sustainable Supply Chain, Supply Chain Coordination, Innovative Supply Chain, Game Theory, Optimization, Behavioral Operations Management, and Policing Research.
Dr Kumar has completed his doctoral degree in the area of Operations Management and Quantitative Techniques from Indian Institute of Management Rohtak, obtained a master degree in technology from the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, India. He has secured all India 4th, 14th, and 19th rank in Graduate Aptitude Test in Engineering (GATE) in the year 2010, 2013, and 2015 respectively.
Dr Kumar is an Associate Editor of International Journal of Mathematical, Engineering, and Management Sciences (IJMEMS), and has published in leading journals such as Business Strategy and the Environment, Applied Economics, American Business Review, Operations Management Research, Journal of Public Affairs, and so forth. He has also presented his research work in various leading conferences. He has also worked on defense, policing, and public policy projects and taught at IIM Rohtak and other leading business schools in India.
Dr. Kumar is also recipient of many outstanding awards such as Outstanding Teaching Excellence in SCM Award (IEOM Society International), the best research paper award (AGBA Society), and the best performer award (Bhartiye Kalyan Samiti, Varanasi, UP, India). He has also received a silver medal in Textile Technology from Uttar Pradesh Technical University, Lucknow (U.P.).
Executive Member:
Rajendra Baraiya is a PhD Fellow in the Operations Management and Quantitative Techniques department at the Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Indore, India. He has been awarded M.E. in Production Engineering from Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology, Patiala, India, and B.E. in Production Engineering from Government Engineering College, Bhavnagar, India.
He is an associate editor of the International Journal of Mathematical, Engineering and Management Sciences (IJMEMS). His research interests are Supply Chain Management, Supply Chain Coordination, Omni-Channel Retailing, Inventory Management, and Logistics. His research papers are published in reputed journals, and he has presented his research work at various National and International conferences.
He is also the recipient of many reputed awards such as the Outstanding Young Research Scholar Award (IEOM 2021 India Conference), Doctoral Dissertation Competition Award (IEOM 2021 India Conference), Special Prize Award (Doctoral Colloquium 2020, IRMA Anand), Best Paper Award (ICORDS 2019, IIM Visakhapatnam) and Best Paper Award in Operations Management track (Doctoral Conclave 2019, MNIT Jaipur). He is professionally affiliated with societies like IEOM Society International, POMS, and WCTRS.
Chapter Secretary
Moumita Saha, A Data Therapist, is a Postgraduate in Business Analyst and Business Intelligence from Great Lakes & McCombs School of Business, University of Texas. Moumita is delivering cutting edge analytics products to enable data driven business decisions using technologies such as SQL, R, Machine Learning and statistical techniques. She has successfully managed business processes including OTIF, OTC, RTR sales billing, sales order, FDW, and source purchasing reporting capabilities using BOBJ Tableau.
Having an engineering degree background, she keeps exploring data and conveys the information hidden in data to build sustainable data models & reports for Business cases. With her vast experience in the Sap Analytics domain with a demonstrated history of working on Supply Chain Modeling and aspires to build a sustainable future. She has received many awards for excellent technical support, leadership qualities, and client communications. She is an Agile and Design Thinking Practitioner.
Online Secretarial Assistant
Shivam is a MBA in business economics from UP Technical University and his interests are in to industrial computing systems and data mining.
Prof SG Deshmukh Dy. Director (Operations) IIT Delhi
Prof Ravi Shankar Department of Management Studies IIT Delhi
Prof S.P. Singh Department of Management Studies IIT Delhi
Dr. A. Ramesh Department of Management Studies IIT Roorkee
Prof. G. S. Dangayach MNIT Jaipur
Dr Nitin Seth Indian Institute of Foreign Trade New Delhi
Prof SK Garg Pro VC Delhi Technical University
Prof Abid Haleem Jamia Millia Islamia University New Delhi
Dr VK Gupta IMT & IIIE Mumbai
Dr. Ashish Agarwal SOET IGNOU New Delhi
Dr. Tapan Sahu, Maruti Udhyog New Delhi
Dr Ashish Trivedi OP Jindal Sonepat
Dr. Shivani Bali Jaipuria Institute of Management Noida
Dr Ankur Chauhan Jaipuria Institute of Management Noida
Contact: Dr. Vivek Soni at vivek.soni@alumni.iitd.ac.in
The New Delhi Indian Chapter to IEOM Society International aims to be the premier forum dedicated to the advancement of industrial engineering and operations management discipline for Indian character and fraternity for the betterment of humanity.
The Chapter’s core purpose is to acts as think tank of critical thinking in the field of Industrial Engineering (IE) and Operations Management (OM) by providing means to communicate and develop network among diversified people, especially in India, and other countries motivated by similar interests.
Internationalization, Global Identity, and Inclusion
Eternal optimist, Flexible, and Resilient.
Innovation, and Entrepreneurship
Student centricity and Technical skills
Professional Learning and Industrial Value
Building Partnerships among Industry, Academia, and Government
Sustainability, Tech- Sensible Character Development
Chapter’s Objectives
To encourage, promote and preserve high standards of professional integrity and ethics amongst people active in the field of Industrial Engineering and Operations Management
To provide a forum for the exchange of information, experiences and opinions in matters of common and particular interest to members.
To encourage research and development in Industrial Engineering and Operations Management and to facilitate dissemination of information on related matters.
To support and promote the IEOM societal interests of the Industrial Engineering and Operations community and to encourage participation by individuals and companies through membership of the Society.
To encourage and support special interest groups within the field of Industrial Engineering and Operations Management
To develop national links with similar organizations with in India
To lead the development of standards for industry and operations
To liaise with related organizations and government on matters of common interest
To develop policies to promote the highest quality standards in lighting and to advocate and represent the views of members active in the field of Industrial Engineering and Operations Management
Chapter activities are the following:
Holding regular meetings allowing members to meet each other and network.
Contributing and disseminating “best practices” of Industrial Engineering and Operations Management.
Facilitating academic/industry collaboration and soliciting local government/academic support of chapter activities.
Organizing joint meetings between chapters and other entities, such as national societies outside the India, chapters outside from IEOM society, and other proximate IEOM chapters.
Identifying technical needs of chapter members through survey and interviews.
Arranging seminars by high-profile speakers on topics of broad interest.
Contribute to IEOM India Conference.
Creating and maintaining a chapter meeting database with the names of speakers, topics, and other searchable data.
Join as an IEOM Professional Member
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line66
|
__label__cc
| 0.742089
| 0.257911
|
Kanye West’s Album Listening Event Breaks Apple Streaming Record
Kanye West’s album listening event for Donda has broken a new record. The event which was attended by 42,000 people broke Apple Music’s global Livestream records with over 3.3 million views.
The previous record which was set by Gucci Mane and Jeezy’s Verzuz battle earned 1.8 million views.
Kanye West has now moved into the Mercedez Benz stadium in Atlanta with a studio room set up for him to finish up the Donda album and is expected to be released on the 6th of August 2021.
Story By Samuel Addo- Kofi
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line68
|
__label__wiki
| 0.673247
| 0.673247
|
1. Submissions. Articles should be submitted as e-mail attachments to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. The file name should contain author’s name and the year.
Example: Smith 2017.doc
2. General style
Literature of the Americas follows Webster’s Eleventh Collegiate Dictionary for spelling, and strict Library of Congress transliteration of Russian.
3. Specific style points
3.1. Opener: Your name and the title of your paper should be printed in Times New Roman, font size 14, centered. The title should be short and descriptive of the content. Below is the abstract (200–250 words), keywords (5–10), Information about the author: name, patronimic (if applicable), surname, academic degree (if any), rank (if any), position, full name of the institution including postal address, zip code, city, country, ORCID ID, E-mail (font size 12).
Ivan DELAZARI
A MEDIUM OF FICTION: WILLIAM H. GASS (1924–2017)
Abstract: The article is a brief overview of the literary oeuvre and aesthetic views of William H. Gass, who passed away in December 2017. One of the brightest American prose writers of the 1960–1970s, prolifically active till very recently, Gass is virtually unknown to readers of Russian and insufficiently attended to by the US academia. I derive his relative invisibility from the fact that too much is lost in, and even prior to, translation (whether interlingual or intralingual, in Roman Jakobson’s terms) of his texts and from Gass’s self-conscious stance as an unrepentant formalist. Gass gave priority to linguistic constructions over content-centered narrations/descriptions not only in theory but also in practice, in fictions as well as in essays. Despite his repute as a radical innovator, Gass held to rather conservative aesthetic beliefs, which, considering their well-articulated nature, do not need the extra medium of academic criticism for reaching out to Gass’s future audiences.
Keywords: William H. Gass, 20th-century American fiction, American essay, formalist criticism, formalist aesthetics, American postmodern fiction
© 2018 Ivan A. Delazari, PhD, part-time lecturer, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong, 224 Waterloo Rd., Kowloon Tong, Hong Kong, HKSAR. ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8083-1810. E-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
3.2. Text: The text should be printed in Microsoft Word, format А4, margins 25 mm at all sides, font Times New Roman, font size – 12, line spacing 1,5, indentation (new paragraph) 1,25, portrait orientation without hyphens. Foreign words should be translated whenever possible. Those that must remain in a foreign language should be in italics and transliterated according to the Library of Congress system of translation. Numbers one to ten should be spelled out; those 11 and over must be in numerals. Exceptions: If the number is the first word in the sentence, it should be written out, regardless of size (Eight hundred men went to the army). Dates: LoA uses day month year (1 October 2003).
3.3. Footnotes and References:
Please use Chicago style (The Chicago Manual of Style, 2017) for the footnotes and references.
Footnotes are placed at the bottom of a page. They cite comments or references to archived documents and other historical sources (old periodicals and editions) that are not included in the list of references (bibliography). Please insert automatic footnotes. Footnote font: Times New Roman, size — 11. The footnote number is placed immediately after the word to which the footnote citation refers.
Please do not use “op. cit.” Use short titles instead. “Ibid.” may be used (and is never italicized), but avoid “op. cit.”
Please do not use “idem.”! Repeat the author’s or editor’s name instead of using “idem.”
Footnotes in Spanish retain the original language.
Archival materials. In references to archives, write out the full name of the archive at the first reference and thereafter cite it by the standard acronym. Please identify fonds and documents on first use, if possible.
Example (1st reference):
The Russian State Archive of Literature and Arts (RGALI) f. 1 (Maxim Gorky Papers), inv. 1, it. 336:1 (M.Gorky’s Letter to V. Lenin, 12 October 1920).
Example (2nd reference):
RGALI, f. 1, inv. 1, it. 336:l.
Book editions:
Please include publishers in the notes.
Harriet Beecher Stowe, Uncle Tom’s Cabin; or Life Among the Lowly (Boston: John P. Jewitt, 1952), 172.
Beecher Stowe, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, 24.
William E.B. DuBois, “Criteria of the Negro Art,” Crisis 32, no. 6 (October 1926): 290–297.
DuBois, “Negro Art,” 291.
Ramón Doll, “Rasskolnikof y el juez de instrucción,” Nosotros: revista mensual de letras, arte, historia, filosofía y ciencias sociales 61, núm. 232 (septiembre 1928): 28–35.
Doll, “Rasskolnikof,” 32.
Please include author’s name, article title and, whenever possible, page numbers. For online references, include the website address (see below).
Gamaliel Bailey, “A New Story by Mrs Stowe,” National Era, May 8, 1851.
Bailey, “New Story.”
Please include author’s name, article / book title, place, publisher’s name, date, and page number(s) whenever possible before the website address.
Michael Kellogg, “Harriet Beecher Stowe and the Power of Faith” (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2003), 80–81, http://utc.iath.michigan.edu /essays/2003/kell0gg.html.
Kellogg, “Harriet Beecher Stowe,” 121.
References in brackets should be included in the body of the text; the citation should include author’s (or editor’s) last name, the year of publication and page number(s):
[Frazer 1997: 5–12], [White, Smith 2006: 14], [Graham et al. 2021: 123–187].
List of References:
At the end of the article, add a numbered list of references organized in alphabetical order.
The list is divided into two sections: “Литература” (publications in Cyrillic, if any), “Translit” (Cyrillic references transliterated into Latin) and “References” (publications in Latin).
References in Cyrillic:
All the references in Cyrillic are to be transliterated. Please use the website https://translit.ru/ and select a variant of the Library of Congress (LC) Library. Copy and paste the transliterated text into the References list. Please copyedit the transliterated list in accordance with the Chicago style (The Chicago Manual of Style, 2017). Add translations of the book titles and titles of the articles after transliterated titles in brackets.
The access date should be specified for all online references in Cyrillic.
Зверев 1979 — Зверев А.М. Модернизм в литературе США: формирование, эволюция, кризис. М.: Наука, 1979.
Соколов 1978 — Соколов И.Н. Бестиарий в романе Э. Золя «Человек-зверь» // Литературная история французского натурализма / ред. С.П. Петров. М.: Знание, 1978. С. 211–278.
Никольский 2008 — Никольский С.А. Мировоззрение русского земледельца в романной прозе И.С. Тургенева // Вестник МГОУ. 2008. № 5. С. 80-95.
Мессерер 2011 — Мессерер Б. Промельк Беллы // Знамя. 2011. № 9. URL: http://magazines.russ.ru/znamia/2011/9/me11.html (дата обращения: 23.10.20).
Zverev, Aleksei M. Modernizm v literature SShA: formirovanie, evolutsia, krisis [Modernism in American Literature: Emergence, Evolution, Crisis]. Moscow: Nauka Publ. 1979. (In Russ.)
Sokolov, Ivan N. “Bestiarii v romane Emile Zola ʻChelovek-zver’” [“Bestiary in Emile Zola’s La Bête humaine”]. In Literaturnaya istoria franzuskogo naturalisma [History of the French Literary Naturalism], edited by Sergei P. Petrov, 211–278. Moscow: Znanie Publ., 1978. (In Russ.)
Nikol'skii, Sergei A. “Mirovozzrenie russkogo zemledeltsa v romannoi prose I.S. Turgeneva” [“The Word Outlook of a Russian Peasant in I.S. Turgenev’s Prose”]. Vestnik MGOU [Bulletin MRSU], no. 5 (2008): 80–95. (In Russ.)
Messerer, Boris. “Promel’k Belly” [“Bella’s Flashing”]. Znamya, no. 9 (2011). http://magazines.russ.ru/znamia/2011/9/me11.html. (In Russ.)
References in Latin:
Please copyedit the list of references in Latin in accordance with Chicago style (The Chicago Manual of Style, 2017).
When referencing a book-length publication, it is mandatory to include the publisher.
Volumes of the multivolume collected works and multivolume dictionaries are not included separately; give only general bibliographic description is given about such editions and include the numbers of cited volumes in the body of the text citation just after the years of publication, for example: [Dostoevsky 1972–1990, 12: 178–179], [Eliot 2011–2021, 6: 108].
References in Spanish retain the original language.
Rampersad 2007 — Rampersad, Arnold. Ralph Ellison: A Biography. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2007.
Pérez Diatto 2006 — Pérez Diatto, Laura. Dostoievsky, una bibliografía en español. Segunda edición aumentada. Buenos Aires: Sociedad Argentina de Información, 2006.
Edited collections and volumes:
Egan, Jennifer, ed. The Best American Short Stories, 2014. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2014.
Menchu, Rigoberta. Crossing Borders. Translated and edited by Ann Wright. New York: Verso, 1999.
Articles/chapters in a collection / edited volume:
Burke 1964 — Burke, Kenneth. “Literature as Equipment for Living.” In Perspectives by Incongruity, edited by Stanley E. Hyman, 100–109. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1964.
Jian 2010 — Jian, Chen. “China and the Cold War after Mao.” In The Cambridge History of the Cold War, edited by Amelia Fossil. Vol. 3, Endings, edited by Melvyn P. Leffler and Odd Arne Westad, 181–200. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.
Sáenz Hayes 1987 — Sáenz Hayes, Ricardo. “Un ensayo sobre Dostoievski.” En Antiguos y modernos, editado por Alberto Quesada, 83–91. Buenos Aires: Cooperativa Editorial “Buenos Aires”, 1987.
Murray 2000 — Murray, Jeffrey W. “Bakhtinian Answerability and Levinasian Responsibility: Forging a Fuller Dialogical Communicative Ethics.” Southern Journal of Communication 65, no. 2–3 (Winter/Spring 2000): 133–150.
Natella 1972 — Natella, Arthur Arístides. “Ernesto Sábato y el hombre superfluo,” Revista Iberoamericana 38, núm. 81 (octubre–diciembre 1972): 671–679.
Bent 2007 — Bent, Henry E. "Professionalization of the Ph.D. Degree.” College Composition and Communication 58, no. 4 (2007): 0–145. http://www.jstor.org/stable/1978286.
Magazines:
Wilson 1937 — Wilson, Edmund. “ʻEvgeni Onegin’: In Honor of Pushkin, 1799–1837.” New Republic, December 9, 1937.
YoungSmith 2009 — YoungSmith, Barron. “Date Local: The case against long-distance relationships.” Green Room. Slate, October 22, 2008. http://www.slate.com/id/2202431.
Fernández 1953 — Fernández, José. “Dostoievski y la iglesia.” Criterio, núm. 1180, 22 de enero de 1953, 25–26.
Morris 1952 — Morris, Wright. “‘The World Below.’ Review of Invisible Man, by Ralph Ellison.” New York Times, April 13, 1952.
Peltzer 2001 — Peltzer, Federico J. M. “Despertar de un superhombre: el próximo viernes la nueva Biblioteca La Nación presentará Crimen y castigo de Dostoievski,” La Nación, 25 de febrero de 2001.
For local newspapers a city name (and state/province if needed) should be added:
Sniff 200 — Sniff, Mike. “Next Time, Give It to Arnold.” Lake Forester (Lake Forest, IL), March 23, 2000.
Sewall 1700 — Sewall, Samuel. The Selling of Joseph: A Memorial. Boston (MA): Printed by Bartholomew Green and John Allen, 1700. http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Selling_of_Joseph.
Germano, William. “Futurist Shock.” Lingua Franca (blog). Chronicle of Higher Education, February 15, 2017. http://www. chronicle.com/blogs/linguafranca/2017/02/15/futurist-shock/.
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line72
|
__label__cc
| 0.572195
| 0.427805
|
Appellate courts
The concept Appellate courts represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in Biddle Law Library - University of Pennsylvania Law School.
The Resource Appellate courts
34 Items that share the Concept Appellate courts
A history of the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
Unpublished dispositions : problems of access and use in the courts of appeals, by Donna Stienstra
A primer on the jurisdiction of the U.S. Courts of Appeals, Thomas E. Baker
A reevaluation of the Civil Appeals Management Plan, by Anthony Partridge and Allan Lind
A union list of appellate court records and briefs : federal and state, Michael Whiteman & Peter Scott Campbell
Administering the Federal judicial circuits : a survey of chief judges' approaches and procedures, by Russell R. Wheeler and Charles W. Nihan
An act respecting a court of appeal for Manitoba : being chapter 43 of the Consolidated statutes of Manitoba, 1913
An evaluation of limited publication in the United States courts of appeals : the price of reform, William L. Reynolds, William M. Richman
Analysis of briefing requirements in the United States Courts of Appeals : report to the Judicial Conference Advisory Committee on Appellate Rules, Marie Leary
Appeals expediting systems : an evaluation of second and eighth circuit procedures, Larry C. Farmer
Bemerkungen über das Verhältnis der regiminellen Gewalt zur Justizpflege in Mecklenburg : in Bezug auf die Errichtung des Ober-Appellations-Gerichts, vom Hof- und Landgerichts-Assessor Baron v. Nettelbladt zu Güstrow
Borrowed judges : visitors in the U.S. Courts of Appeals, by Stephen L. Wasby
Case management procedures in the Federal Courts of Appeals, Judith A. McKenna, Laural L. Hooper, Mary Clark
Court of Appeals, Geo. W. Munford, C.H.D
Deciding cases without argument : a description of procedures in the courts of appeals, by Joe Cecil and Donna Stienstra
Deciding cases without argument : an examination of four courts of appeals, Joe S. Cecil and Donna Stienstra
Diversity matters : judicial policy making in the U.S. Courts of Appeals, Susan B. Haire and Laura P. Moyer
It's not personal : politics and policy in lower court confirmation hearings, Logan Dancey, Kjersten R. Nelson and Eve M. Ringsmuth
Lois instituant les tribunaux d'appel : réorganisant le Tribunal de cassation, sur l'organisation judiciaire, fixant les conditions de nomination des juges dans les différents tribunaux
Managing appeals in federal courts, edited by Michael Tonry, Robert A. Katzmann
Mediation & conference programs in the federal courts of appeals : a sourcebook for judges and lawyers, Robert J. Niemic
Practice and procedure of the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal of New Zealand, edited by Alexander J. Johnston
Stalking the increase in the rate of federal civil appeals, Carol Krafka, Joe S. Cecil, and Patricia A. Lombard
Structural and other alternatives for the Federal Courts of Appeals : report to the United States Congress and the Judicial Conference of the United States, Judith A. McKenna, project director
The Federal appellate judiciary in the twenty-first century, Cynthia Harrison and Russell R. Wheeler, editors
The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit : a history, 1982-1990
The appellate jurisdiction of the House of Lords and of the full Parliament, by J.W. Gordon, of the Middle Temple, barrister-at-law
The cases of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, by Gordon Bermant, Patricia A. Lombard, and Carroll Seron ; assisted by Rama Bar-Adon, Joseph Matta, and Sam Spina
The impact of word processing and electronic mail on United States Courts of Appeals, by J. Michael Greenwood and Larry Farmer
The role of staff attorneys and face-to-face conferencing in non-argument decisionmaking : a view from the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, Donna Stienstra and Joe S. Cecil
The view from the bench and chambers : examining judicial process and decision making on the U.S. Courts of Appeals, Jennifer Barnes Bowie, Donald R. Songer, and John Szmer
Uebersicht der sämmtlichen Ortschaften in dem Departement des Königl. Preuss. Appellations-Gerichts zu Naumburg : nebst Angabe des betreffenden Ortsgerichts und des Kreisgerichts, zu welchem das erstere gehört, so wie der bei jedem Gericht des gedachten Departements angestellten Rechts-Anwälte, nach amtlichen Mittheilungen und den besten Quellen bearbeitet
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit : a history : 1990-2002, compiled by members of the Advisory Council to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in celebration of the Court's twentieth anniversary
Context of Appellate courts
A primer on the jurisdiction of the U.S. Courts of Appeals
A reevaluation of the Civil Appeals Management Plan
A union list of appellate court records and briefs : federal and state
Administering the Federal judicial circuits : a survey of chief judges' approaches and procedures
An evaluation of limited publication in the United States courts of appeals : the price of reform
Analysis of briefing requirements in the United States Courts of Appeals : report to the Judicial Conference Advisory Committee on Appellate Rules
Appeals expediting systems : an evaluation of second and eighth circuit procedures
Bemerkungen über das Verhältnis der regiminellen Gewalt zur Justizpflege in Mecklenburg : in Bezug auf die Errichtung des Ober-Appellations-Gerichts
Borrowed judges : visitors in the U.S. Courts of Appeals
Case management procedures in the Federal Courts of Appeals
Deciding cases without argument : a description of procedures in the courts of appeals
Deciding cases without argument : an examination of four courts of appeals
Diversity matters : judicial policy making in the U.S. Courts of Appeals
It's not personal : politics and policy in lower court confirmation hearings
Managing appeals in federal courts
Mediation & conference programs in the federal courts of appeals : a sourcebook for judges and lawyers
Practice and procedure of the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal of New Zealand
Stalking the increase in the rate of federal civil appeals
Structural and other alternatives for the Federal Courts of Appeals : report to the United States Congress and the Judicial Conference of the United States
The Federal appellate judiciary in the twenty-first century
The appellate jurisdiction of the House of Lords and of the full Parliament
The cases of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
The impact of word processing and electronic mail on United States Courts of Appeals
The role of staff attorneys and face-to-face conferencing in non-argument decisionmaking : a view from the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals
The view from the bench and chambers : examining judicial process and decision making on the U.S. Courts of Appeals
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit : a history : 1990-2002
Unpublished dispositions : problems of access and use in the courts of appeals
<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.law.upenn.edu/resource/UYnZDehh6j0/" typeof="CategoryCode http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Concept"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.law.upenn.edu/resource/UYnZDehh6j0/">Appellate courts</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.law.upenn.edu/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="http://link.law.upenn.edu/">Biddle Law Library - University of Pennsylvania Law School</a></span></span></span></span></div>
Data Citation of the Concept Appellate courts
|
cc/2022-05/en_middle_0047.json.gz/line78
|
End of preview.