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1

Ross, Alasdair. "The Bannatyne Club and the Publication of Scottish Ecclesiastical Cartularies." Scottish Historical Review 85, no. 2 (2006): 202–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/shr.2007.0024.

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Investigative research on Scottish cartularies has been grossly neglected in comparison to other European countries. In fact, over 90% of the printed Scottish cartularies were published by antiquarian groups like the Bannatyne, Maitland and Spalding Clubs between 1832 and 1893 and no substantive work on these editions has occurred since that time. They are now both commonly treated and used as primary sources in their own right. To date, nobody has delved too deeply into the methodologies employed to convert the manuscripts into printed material in the first instance. This has placed a huge burden of trust upon the accuracy and editorial skills of the men who were employed as editors by the various clubs. The focus of this investigation is the Bannatyne Club and its most prolific editor of ecclesiastical manuscripts, Cosmo Innes. It is suggested that these editions can be divided into different categories, depending on the number of source manuscripts available to Innes and his editing teams. As a rule of thumb, the greater the number of sources Innes and his scribes used, the greater the latitude for error. Using the Moray register as a stark example, it is argued that the editorial team involved in its production radically re-ordered and re-worked much of the source material to fit the editorial conventions of that time.
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2

Ferres, Kay. "The Lyceum Club and the Making of the Modern Woman." Queensland Review 21, no. 1 (2014): 62–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/qre.2014.8.

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In 1934, the editor of the Courier-Mail’s women's page, Winifred Moore, reflected on the growth and importance of women's clubs in Queensland in the early decades of the twentieth century. Moore herself had been involved in community organisations since she took up her career in journalism during World War I. She was a foundation member of the National Parks Association, a member of the Press Association, the Queensland Women's Electoral league (QWEL) and the Lyceum Club. Many of her contemporaries shared what she called ‘the club habit’, a habit that had enabled women to ‘find their tongues in public assemblies’ in the decades after they achieved the vote (Courier-Mail, 8 February 1934, 16). As she wrote her column, Moore may have been thinking of a particular woman: her friend Irene Longman (1877–1964), who had been elected to the Queensland Legislative Assembly in 1929, only to lose her seat at the next election.
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3

Hardin, Marie. "Interview With Julie Ward, Former Deputy Managing Editor, Sports, for USA Today." International Journal of Sport Communication 1, no. 3 (2008): 301–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/ijsc.1.3.301.

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Julie Ward was deputy managing editor at USA Today for nearly 2 decades, from 1989 to 2007. She joined USA Today as a general-assignment reporter in 1984 and also was an assignment editor for the NBA, golf, tennis, motor sports, boxing, colleges, and high schools. USA Today is the top-circulation daily newspaper in the United States. Ward led the USA Today team that won the 2002 Associated Press Sports Editors award for a story that revealed the 302 members of Augusta National Golf Club, which had been embroiled in controversy because of its policy to exclude women from membership. In 2007, Ward also won the Mary Garber Pioneer Award from the Association for Women in Sports Media. In December, she accepted a severance offer (buyout) and retired from working at the paper. Before joining USA Today, she was a reporter for the St. Louis Globe-Democrat and the Belleville (IL) News-Democrat, where she covered women’s sports and was a columnist.
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4

Apostol, Jane. "Life in the Open with Charles Frederick Holder." Southern California Quarterly 96, no. 2 (2014): 206–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/scq.2014.96.2.206.

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Natural scientist Charles Frederick Holder settled in Pasadena in 1885. As a prolific author, lecturer, and editor, Holder was a key promoter of the region, sport fishing, and natural science. He wrote popular children’s books as well. He is also remembered as an influential figure in education and the arts and as a founder of the Tuna Club on Santa Catalina Island and the Valley Hunt Club in Pasadena and its Tournament of Roses.
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5

Carvalho, Maurício. "DO EDITOR." Revista Médica da UFPR 2, no. 2 (2015): 54. http://dx.doi.org/10.5380/rmu.v2i2.42235.

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Em tempos difíceis costuma-se dizer que a adversidade traz consigo oportunidades. Entretanto, como avançar em tempos de crise? Talvez a resposta mais simples seja: inovar de forma genuína. E, particularmente, dentro da Universidade, promover a fina interação do binômio docência/pesquisa com o aluno. Almejar a autonomia intelectual e moral como finalidade da educação contemporânea1. Com o pensamento exposto acima, é muito oportuno nesta edição da RMU o editorial “DANC: Passado, Presente e Futuro”. O resgate científico e cultural do Diretório Acadêmico Nilo Cairo (DANC) foi um compromisso assumido pela atual gestão. A RMU abre suas páginas para todas as iniciativas de pesquisa e extensão deste importante órgão representativo dos alunos da UFPR. Entre os vários artigos desta edição, destaco o estudo sobre depressão e ansiedade no pré-operatório e a utilidade da vancocinemia em pacientes internados em unidade de terapia intensiva.Outro destaque desta edição refere-se ao Journal Club, com realce para as possibilidades terapêuticas na hepatite alcoólica. E o exercício diagnóstico do Quiz, com um caso clínico desafiador para os melhores internistas.Bom proveito,
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6

Silva, Matheus Cardoso. "Victor Gollancz: um editor socialista nos anos do Popular Front britânico." Mundos do Trabalho 8, no. 15 (2017): 87. http://dx.doi.org/10.5007/1984-9222.2016v8n15p87.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.5007/1984-9222.2016v8n15p87O artigo visa considerar a trajetória de Victor Gollancz (1893-1967), um dos mais importantes editores e ativistas humanitários britânicos do século XX. Como livreiro, Gollancz fundou sua própria editora em 1927, a Victor Gollancz Ltd., uma das mais bem sucedidas companhias britânicas do século XX. Em 1935, seria cofundador do Left Book Club em Londres, considerado o primeiro clube do livro da era moderna na Grã-Bretanha, cujos trabalhos duraram até 1947 e inspirou a criação de mais de 1500 seções locais por toda a Inglaterra e mais de 15 outras seções internacionais com filiais em todos os continentes. Como militante humanitário, Gollancz foi responsável por inúmeras campanhas de apoio aos refugiados da Guerra Civil espanhola na Inglaterra e, durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial, das vítimas civis na Alemanha, além de campanhas pela melhoria das condições das prisões na Grã-Bretanha.
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7

Maslin, Michail A. "Encyclopedia of Russian Philosophy As Scientific Project." Voprosy Filosofii, no. 3 (2021): 208–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.21146/0042-8744-2021-3-208-214.

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Press conference of the authors and editors devoted to the Third edition of Ency­clopedia Russian Philosophy had been held at January 21 in International press-center of MIA Rossiya-Segodnya [Maslin 2020]. Philosophers – authors of En­cyclopedia, members and guests of Zinoviev club, journalists took part in the event. Among the speakers were: full member of Russian Academy of Sciences A.A. Guseinov, Editor of Encyclopedia, professor Emeritus of Moscow State University M.A. Maslin, director of the publishing house “World of Philosophy” P.P. Aprishko, editor-in-chief A.P. Polyakov, vice-director of Institute of Philoso­phy Russian Academy of Sciences A.V. Chernyaev, executive director of Zi­noviev’s Center V.A. Lepekhine [Press Conference 2020]. The article is devoted to analyses of encyclopedia as philosophical genre reflected the statue of philo­sophical knowledge in Russian culture and it’s social and cultural resonance. The significance of this publication for the modern world philosophical commu­nity lies in the fact that the authors sought to bring together and present different opinions about Russia's intellectual culture and capture a holistic image of Rus­sian philosophy in the variety of its key directions.
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8

Greene, John. "Irish media: slow to get up to the pace of the game." Studies in Arts and Humanities 7, no. 1 (2021): 208–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.18193/sah.v7i1.209.

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This piece reflects on my professional and personal involvement in sport, as editor of a national newspaper and coach of a girls' youth team at my local GAA club. In so doing, it highlights some of the prejudices I saw first-hand while coaching teams which, in turn, opened my eyes to my own failures in my role as sports editor. The first camogie supplement in a Sunday newspaper sports section broke this glass ceiling. Arguably, the responsibility on native media outlets to include more coverage of women's sports is increasing as mainly UK broadcasters enter the Irish media scape.
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9

DRYDEN, EDGAR A. "Poet as Editor: Melville's Ironic Muse in the Burgundy Club Materials." Leviathan 14, no. 1 (2012): 24–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1750-1849.2011.01460.x.

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10

Valdman, Albert. "A NOTE FROM THE EDITOR." Studies in Second Language Acquisition 20, no. 4 (1998): 463–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s027226319800401x.

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On April 23rd of this year, at the initiative of the current group of editorial assistants (Elizabeth Grace Winkler, Llorenç Comajoan, and Donald F. Reindl), a symposium was organized on the Bloomington campus of Indiana University to celebrate the 20th anniversary of SSLA's founding. Presentations on the past, present, and future state of research on second language acquisition were presented by Editorial Board and Advisory Committee members Susan Gass, John Schumann, Kathleen Bardovi-Harlig, and Patsy Lightbown. It is noteworthy that this commemorative event, the creation of SSLA, would not have taken place without the direct intervention of another group of graduate students, the Indiana University Linguistics Club. Without the IULC producing and disseminating the fledgling publication that was SSLA in 1978, the journal would never have made it beyond the drawing board. In this note prefacing the last issue of Volume 20, I would like to narrate the conditions of SSLA's birth and comment on the journal's contribution to second language acquisition research.
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11

Monge-Nájera, Julián. "Letters from your editor: Should tropical researchers enter the racist “Millionaire’s Club”?" Revista de Biología Tropical 66, no. 2 (2018): 481. http://dx.doi.org/10.15517/rbt.v66i2.33375.

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Letters from your editorSometimes, the editors of the large journals published in rich countries discriminate against the authors of tropical countries because of prejudice and not because of manuscript quality. Tropical researchers have two options: insist on publishing in these journals of the so called “Millionaire’s Club”, where there is often a natural disinterest in tropical issues; or to support the development of good tropical quality journals. The second option has ethical and practical advantages for everyone.
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12

Yusman, Nova Indrayana. "PENGELOLAAN DATA ANGGOTA BERBASIS WEBSITE DI YAMAHA VIXION CLUB CABANG BANDUNG." INTERNAL (Information System Journal) 2, no. 2 (2020): 113–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.32627/internal.v2i2.80.

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Yamaha Vixion Club Bandung (YVCB) was formed on July 7, 2007 in the city of Bandung, as a place of friendship between Yamaha Vixion motorcyclists. In its organizational structure, YVCB has a Human Resource Development (HRD) division. Until now, there are more than 800 Yamaha Vixion Club Bandung members. This software is made to facilitate the work of the Yamaha Vixion Club Bandung HRD Division in processing member data. Created using Microsoft Webmatrix as an editor with the PHP programming language. The database uses MySQL with PHPMyAdmin as the software. The method used in making this software is prototyping so that between developers and customers can understand each other what the customer wants. The purpose of making web-based member data management software is that in terms of managing member data it can be done anytime and anywhere by just accessing the internet. In the use of the program, the author chose to use PHP, because PHP is the best and easiest to use in website programming language. Based on the last paragraph, the author intends to make aplication based computerized attendance so that become effective and efficient in terms of time.
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13

Taylor, Timothy. "From the Desk of the Managing Editor." Journal of Economic Perspectives 26, no. 2 (2012): 27–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1257/jep.26.2.27.

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Editing isn't “teaching” and it isn't “research,” so in the holy trinity of academic responsibilities it is apparently bunched with faculty committees, student advising, and talks to the local Kiwanis club as part of “service.” Yet for many economists, editing seems to loom larger in their professional lives. After all, EconLit indexes more than 750 academic journals of economics, which require an ever-shifting group of editors, co-editors, and advisory boards to function. Roughly one-third of the books in the annotated listings at the back of each issue of the Journal of Economic Literature are edited volumes. Here is one take on the enterprise of editing from someone who has been sitting in the Managing Editor's chair for all 100 issues of the Journal of Economic Perspectives since before the first issue of the journal mailed in Summer 1987.
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14

Rennie, Michael J., Philip Atherton, Anna Selby, et al. "Letter to the Editor on the Journal Club article by Barker and Traber." Journal of Physiology 586, no. 1 (2008): 307–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.2007.147918.

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15

Kallen, Alexander J., Chad T. Wilson, Michelle A. Russell, et al. "Group Writing of Letters to the Editor as the Goal of Journal Club." JAMA 296, no. 9 (2006): 1049. http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jama.296.9.1053.

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16

Brunton, Daniel F., and Paul M. Catling. "Thematic Collection: Alvars in Canada." Canadian Field-Naturalist 131, no. 1 (2017): 75–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.22621/cfn.v131i1.1962.

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This is the first Thematic Collection of The Canadian Field–Naturalist, an initiative of the Ottawa Field-Naturalists’ Club (OFNC) Publications Committee. Thematic Collections are editor-selected compilations ofpreviously published contributions to both The Canadian Field-Naturalist (CFN) and to the OFNC’s regional publication, Trail & Landscape (T&L), on a central theme with links to each article. The articles concern alvar landscapes, species that occur on alvars, and the conservation of alvar habitats. We estimate that the titles assembled here from those two publications represent 50% of the important papers published on Canadianalvars.
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17

Wang, Xiaobing, Chengfang Liu, Linxiu Zhang, Yaojiang Shi, Scott Rozelle, and Prashant Loyalka. "Response to the Commentary “Reassessing Disparity in Access to Higher Education in Contemporary China”." China Quarterly 220 (November 24, 2014): 1131–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741014001179.

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We thank Anning Hu for carefully reading and commenting on our report “College is a rich, Han, urban, male club: research notes from a census survey of four tier one colleges in China.” We also thank the editor of The China Quarterly for giving us the chance to respond to the commentary. The topic of assessing disparities in college access in China (and other developing countries undergoing major transitions in their higher education systems) is an important one. We hope that our China Quarterly article, Hu's commentary and our response will stimulate more research and dialogue on this topic in China and elsewhere.
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18

Slive, Daniel J. "G. Thomas Tanselle. Portraits and Reviews." RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage 18, no. 1 (2017): 64. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/rbm.18.1.64.

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G. Thomas Tanselle is a highly regarded bibliographer, textual editor, critic, and book collector. Following his undergraduate degree from Yale, he received his PhD in 1959 from the Department of English at Northwestern University with a dissertation on the twentieth-century American author Floyd Dell. Between 1960 and 1978, he taught at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, after which he served as vice president of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation from 1978 until 2006. He has also served as an adjunct professor of English at Columbia University and coeditor of the Northwestern-Newberry Edition of the Writings of Herman Melville as well as president of the Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia, the Bibliographical Society of America, the Grolier Club, and the Society for Textual Scholarship. In recognition of his scholarly contributions in the field of bibliography, Tanselle has delivered numerous prestigious lectures including the Hanes Foundation Lecture at the University of North Carolina, Robert L. Nikirk Lecture at the Grolier Club, the A.S.W. Rosenbach Lectures in Bibliography at the University of Pennsylvania, the Sandars Lectures at Cambridge University, and the George Parker Winship Lecture at Harvard University.
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19

Timofeev, Lev. "Interview." Index on Censorship 17, no. 5 (1988): 8–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03064228808534407.

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The editor of the independent journal Referendum explains the role of his publication, and why the authorities are softer on him than they were. ‘On the one hand there are still several hundred political prisoners. On the other hand those of us who have been released are at present able to operate relatively freely.’ In February 1987 Lev Timofeev was prematurely released from camp as a result of a government decree, under which a large number of political prisoners were amnestied. Together with Sergei Grigoryants, another ex-political prisoner, he set up the unofficial bulletin Glasnost last summer. Grigoryants now edits Glasnost, while Timofeev has started his own journal, Referendum. He also leads the independent ‘Press Club Glasnost’, which organised an unofficial conference on human rights in December 1987. The Press Club is planning to set up a form of open university, using a number of highly-qualified ex-political prisoners as teachers. I interviewed Lev Timofeev in Moscow in January. As we talked in his study, a neat portable computer - which had come from abroad but quickly learned to speak fluent Russian - was printing out the fourth issue of Referendum. S.L.
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20

Beckford, M., J. F. Garofalo, and Miami-Dade County. "A HISTORY OF SOUTH FLORIDA GARDENING—A REVIEW OF MABEL WHITE DORN AND MARJORY STONEMAN DOUGLAS' THE BOOK OF TWELVE FOR SOUTH FLORIDA GARDENS." HortScience 40, no. 3 (2005): 893d—893. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.40.3.893d.

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Published by the South FL Garden Club in 1928, when Mabel Dorn was president and Marjory Stoneman Douglas—famous for championing the protection of the Everglades—was garden editor of the Miami Herald, The Book of Twelve lists twelve tried and true flowering and shade trees, large to small shrubs, etc. for southern Florida, but also includes some plants which are now tried and true invasive species. The book was reviewed in July 2004 by the Univ. of Florida (FL)/Miami-Dade Florida Yards and Neighborhoods (FYN) Extension Agent in response to a request from a local garden club, which as a club project, had decided to re-print and distribute the book to its 100 members. Because it might encourage the use of invasive species, the review was discussed at a seminar on ecologically sustainable alternatives to invasive species. One recommended plant, Schinus terebinthefolius (Brazilian pepper) is now prohibited by the FL Dept of Environmental Protection and considered a noxious weed by the FL Dept of Agric and Consumer Services. The FL Exotic Plant Pest Council (FEPPC) considers five plants Category I invasives, i.e., exotics altering native plant communities, displacing natives, changing community structures or ecology, or hybridizing with natives. These include Lantana camara, Lonicera japonica, Abrus precatorius and Asparagus africanus. Ten plants are FEPPC Category II invasives, exotics increasing in abundance or frequency, but not yet altering plant communities as extensively as Category I species: Cestrum diurnum, Murraya paniculata, Sesbania punicea, Cryptostegia grandiflora, Jasminum sambac, Antigonon leptopus, Macfadyena unguis-cati, Asystasia gangetica, Wedelia trilobata, and Tradescantia fluminensis.
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21

RYAN, JAMES EMMETT. "Fight Club, 1880: Boxing, Class, and Literary Culture in John Boyle O'Reilly's Boston." Journal of American Studies 54, no. 4 (2019): 706–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021875819000884.

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Because late nineteenth-century American sport was connected to both immigrant assimilation and cultural prestige, this essay first describes Boston amateur athletics during the later nineteenth century. Ireland-born poet/lecturer/newspaper editor John Boyle O'Reilly (1844–90) provides an important example of social and intellectual class mobility from the perspective of an immigrant writer. We observe through O'Reilly's sporting experiences and literary career how the development of upper-class amateur athletics in Boston and the popularity of boxing among its Irish working classes gave him exceptional influence among both groups. His history of boxing, Ethics of Boxing and Manly Sport (1888), is examined in detail as a key statement on pugilism, masculinity, and American citizenship fame. This view of Boston's intellectual and physical cultures, observed from the standpoint of O'Reilly, a talented writer and a sort of literary counterpart of famed pugilist John L. Sullivan (his friend, occasional sparring partner, and fellow celebrity among the Irish American community), sheds light on newly available pathways to social mobility made possible by simultaneous engagement with literary and athletic cultures.
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22

Rosenthal, Robert. "A multi-platform approach to investigative journalism." Pacific Journalism Review 18, no. 1 (2012): 17. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v18i1.287.

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Robert Rosenthal began his career in journalism at The New York Times, where he was a news assistant on the foreign desk and an editorial assistant on the Pulitzer-Prize winning Pentagon Papers project. He later worked at the Boston Globe, and for 22 years at the Philadelphia Inquirer, starting as a reporter and eventually becoming its executive editor in 1998. He became managing editor of the San Francisco Chronicle in late 2002, and joined the Center for Investigative Reporting as executive director in 2008. Rosenthal has won numerous awards, including the Overseas Press Club Award for magazine writing, the Sigma Delta Chi Award for distinguished foreign correspondence, and the National Association of Black Journalists Award for Third World Reporting. He was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in international reporting, and has been an adjunct professor at Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and the University of California at Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism. The Australian Centre for Independent Journalism (ACIJ) invited Robert Rosenthal to speak about the transformational model of investigative journalism, which he has pioneered at the CIR, as the keynote speech at the ‘Back to the Source’ conference.
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Tien, Nhat, and Xuan Phong. "The khaki coat: A short story from Vietnam." Index on Censorship 17, no. 6 (1988): 15–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03064228808534470.

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Nhat Tien, now in his early fifties and one of the best-known Vietnamese writers, lived in South Vietnam until a few years after the Communist take-over in 1975. He has published 16 books (14 novels and two collections of short stories) and received the Vietnamese National Literary Award in 1961 for his novel Them Hoang (‘The abandoned veranda’) in 1961. He was vice-president of the Vietnamese PEN club, director of the Huyen Tran Publishing Co, and editor of the weekly Thieu Nhi In the late 1970s he left Vietnam as a ‘boat person’ and he is now living in the United States. The following short story is reprinted from the collection Tieng Ken (‘ Sound of a clarinet’), published in 1983 by Van Hoc, San Diego, California.
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Dumitraşcu, Dinu Iuliu, Carmen Bianca Crivii, and Iulian Opincariu. "PAPILIAN’S ANATOMY - celebrating six decades." Medicine and Pharmacy Reports 90, no. 1 (2017): 113–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.15386/cjmed-753.

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Victor Papilian was born an artist, during high school he studied music in order to become a violinist in two professional orchestras in Bucharest. Later on he enrolled in the school of medicine, being immediately attracted by anatomy. After graduating, with a briliant dissertation, he became a member of the faculty and continued to teach in his preferred field. His masters, Gh. Marinescu and Victor Babes, proposed him for the position of professor at the newly established Faculty of Medicine of Cluj.Here he reorganized the department radically, created an anatomy museum and edited the first dissection handbook and the first Romanian anatomy (descriptive and topographic) treatise, both books received with great appreciation. He received the Romanian Academy Prize. His knowledge and skills gained him a well deserved reputation and he created a prestigious school of anatomy. He published over 250 scientific papers in national and international journals, ranging from morphology to functional, pathological and anthropological topics.He founded the Society of Anthropology, with its own newsletter; he was elected as a member of the French Society of Anatomy. In parallel he had a rich artistic and cultural activity as writer and playwright: he was president of the Transylvanian Writers’ Society, editor of a literary review, director of the Cluj theater and opera, leader of a book club and founder of a symphony orchestra.
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Williams, Dennis R., Sheila K. Kori, Brenda Williams, et al. "JOURNAL CLUB: Voice Recognition Dictation: Analysis of Report Volume and Use of the Send-to-Editor Function." American Journal of Roentgenology 201, no. 5 (2013): 1069–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.2214/ajr.10.6335.

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Morley, P. S., and K. W. Hinchcliff. "Letter to the Editor regarding article on exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage at the Hong Kong Jockey Club." Equine Veterinary Journal 47, no. 3 (2015): 372–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/evj.12379.

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WILLIAMS, MEGAN E. "“Meet the Real Lena Horne”: Representations of Lena Horne in Ebony Magazine, 1945–1949." Journal of American Studies 43, no. 1 (2009): 117–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021875809006094.

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Following World War II, Ebony's creator and editor, John H. Johnson, sought to create a popular black magazine in the vein of Life and Look that would reflect the accomplishments and joys, “the happier side,” of African American life.1 Throughout the first four years of its publication, Lena Horne appeared on the magazine's cover three times – the only woman to do so during this period. In this paper, I argue that the fledgling Ebony magazine drew on Lena Horne's wartime status as a beautiful black icon and represented her as a symbol of its ideological project, broadly, and as the Ebony image of postwar black womanhood, specifically. The magazine's representation of Lena Horne acts as a useful trope for understanding how Ebony imaged postwar black femininity in terms of motherhood, work, and civil rights activism; additionally, Ebony's representation of Horne and Ebony readers' letters to the editor reveal central issues of respectability, pinup photography, colorism, hair care, and interracial relationships as they were debated within the magazine's pages.Behind the lavish make-up, gay tinsel and brilliant glitter of American's most popular Negro entertainer, Lena Horne is a wonderfully human, somewhat lonesome, amazingly-honest, militant-minded personality who is relatively unknown to a vast audience of millions of movie, radio, and night club fans.2
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Editorial, E. "Corrigendum: RAPD profiling in detecting genetic variation in Stellaria L. (Caryophyllaceae)." Genetika 53, no. 2 (2021): 942. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/gensr2102928e.

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Snezana Mladenovic Drinic, Editor of the journal Genetika request that it is necessary write exactly family name of the Corresponding author RAPD PROFILING IN DETECTING GENETIC VARIATION IN Stellaria L. (Caryophyllaceae) by Xiaobang PENG1*, Majid KHAYYATNEZHAD2 and Leila JOUDI GHEZELJEHMEIDAN3* 1Department of Biological and Medical Engineering, ShangLuo University, Shaanxi Shangluo, 726000, China 2Young Researchers Club, Ardabil Branch, Islamic Azad University, Ardabil, Iran. 3Department of Agriculture, Shabestar Branch, Islamic Azad University, Shabestar, Iran Original scientific paper https://doi.org/10.2298/GENSR2101349P published in the journal Genetika, 2021, Vol 53, No.1,349 -362 since due to typing error family name of the Corresponding author Majid KHAYATNEZHAD has not been correctly written, as: Majid KHAYYATNEZHAD But in has to be written as: Majid KHAYATNEZHAD <br><br><font color="red"><b> Link to the corrected article <u><a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/GENSR2101349P">10.2298/GENSR2101349P</a></b></u>
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Wheeler, Belinda. "Gwendolyn Bennett's “The Ebony Flute”." PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 128, no. 3 (2013): 744–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1632/pmla.2013.128.3.744.

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IntroductionGwendolyn Bennett (1902-81) is often mentioned in books that discuss the harlem renaissance, and some of her poems Occasionally appear in poetry anthologies; but much of her career has been overlooked. Along with many of her friends, including Jessie Redmond Fauset, Langston Hughes, and Countee Cullen, Bennett was featured at the National Urban League's Civic Club Dinner in March 1924, an event that would later be “widely hailed as a ‘coming out party’ for young black artists, writers, and intellectuals whose work would come to define the Harlem Renaissance” (McHenry 383n100). In the next five years Bennett published over forty poems, short stories, and reviews in leading African American magazines and anthologies, such as Cullen's Caroling Dusk (1927) and William Stanley Braithwaite's Anthology of Magazine Verse for 1927; she created magazine cover art that adorned two leading African American periodicals, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's Crisis: A Record of the Darker Races and the National Urban League's Opportunity: Journal of Negro Life; she worked as an editor or assistant editor of several magazines, including Opportunity, Black Opals, and Fire!; and she wrote a renowned literary column, “The Ebony Flute.” Many scholars, such as Cary Wintz, Abby Arthur Johnson and Ronald Maberry Johnson, and Elizabeth McHenry, recognized the importance of Bennett's column to the Harlem Renaissance in their respective studies, but their emphasis on a larger Harlem Renaissance discussion did not afford a detailed examination of her column.
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Rustin, Michael, and Jeremy Gilbert. "The New Left and its legacies." Soundings 74, no. 74 (2020): 136–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.3898/soun.74.09.2020.

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Mike Rustin discusses his lifelong involvement in the New Left, which began when he was still at school. He describes the history of the First New Left, including the role played within it by figures such as Stuart Hall, Edward Thompson and Raymond Williams, and the role of the New Left in student politics in Oxford University, where Michael was a student and a leading member of the Labour club. He looks at the changing relationships between the New Left and the Labour Party in the 1960s and the publication of the May Day Manifesto in 1967. He also discusses the founding of the New Left Review and the transition from the time of its first editor, Stuart Hall, to that of its second, Perry Anderson, as well his two terms as a member of its editorial board, and his continuing disagreements and agreements with its editorial direction. His reflections on contemporary politics include a discussion of the relationship of New Left ideas to current movements and the Labour Party, a critique of vanguardism, and the founding of Soundings.
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Editorial, E. "Corrigendum: Population differentiation and gene flow in Erodium cicutarium: A potential medicinal plant." Genetika 53, no. 2 (2021): 941. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/gensr2102927e.

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Snezana Mladenovic Drinic, Editor of the journal Genetika request that it is necessary write exactly family name of the Corresponding author POPULATION DIFFERENTIATION AND GENE FLOW IN Erodium cicutarium: A POTENTIAL MEDICINAL PLANT by Yaocheng JIA*1, Majid KHAYYATNEZHAD2, Shahram MEHRI3 1University of Yuncheng, Department of arts and crafts design, Yuncheng, Shanxi, 044000 2Young Researchers Club, Ardabil Branch, Islamic Azad University, Ardabil, Iran. 3Department of Agronomy and Plant Breeding, ParsAbad Moghan Branch, Islamic Azad University, ParsAbad Moghan, Iran Original scientific paper https://doi.org/10.2298/GENSR2003127J published in the journal Genetika, 2020, Vol 52, No.3, 1127-1144 since due to typing error family name of the Corresponding author Majid KHAYATNEZHAD has not been correctly written, as: Majid KHAYYATNEZHAD But in has to be written as: Majid KHAYATNEZHAD <br><br><font color="red"><b> Link to the corrected article <u><a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/GENSR2003127J">10.2298/GENSR2003127J</a></b></u>
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Long, Ryan A. "A Mule Deer Retrospective: Vintage Photos and Memorabilia from the Boone and Crockett Club Archives. JulieTripp, editor. 2013. The Boone and Crockett Club, Missoula, Montana, USA. 304 pp. $34.95 hardcover. ISBN 978-0940864955." Journal of Wildlife Management 79, no. 2 (2015): 349–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jwmg.820.

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Baraka, Amiri. "Still a Revolutionary …" New Theatre Quarterly 26, no. 4 (2010): 340–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266464x10000643.

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The conversation below is a follow-up to Christopher Bigsby's interview with Amiri Baraka, published in Theatre Quarterly three decades ago, in 1978. It was recorded in the artist's backstage room in Katowice, Poland, immediately after a moving performance of the Amiri Baraka Speech Quartet in the Hipnoza Jazz Club in Katowice, during the ‘Ars Cameralis Silesiae Superioris’ Festival in 2009. The interlocutors were accompanied by a leading jazz pianist, Dave Burrell, and an excellent double bass player, William Parker. The interview, originally carried out for the Er(r)go: Journal of Theory, Culture and Literary Studies, was possible thanks to the help and encouragement of one of the most inspiring Polish contemporary poets, Bartek Majzel, an unswerving propagator of culture in Silesia and throughout Poland. Paweł Jędrzejko is an Assistant Professor at the University of Silesia in Katowice. He is the author of Liquidity and Existence: the Experience of the Land and the Sea in Herman Melville's Thought (Sosnowiec-Katowice-Zabrze: BananaArt.Pl/ExMachina/MStudio, 2008). He is also a co-founder and co-editor of the Review of International American Studies and regularly works with Er(r)go Quarterly.
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Snyder, Katherine. "A Paradise of Bachelors: Remodeling Domesticity and Masculinity in the Turn-of-the-Century New York Bachelor Apartment." Prospects 23 (October 1998): 247–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0361233300006347.

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For both herman melville and Nathaniel Hawthorne, the quin-tessence of midcentury bachelor life was found across the Atlantic. Attempting to capitalize on the phenomenal success of Donald Grant Mitchell's Reveries of a Bachelor (1850), Melville in 1855 published “The Paradise of Bachelors,” with its companion sketch, “The Tartarus of Maids,” in Harper's (during Mitchell's tenure there as editor). This diptych juxtaposed the hard labor of unmarried New England female millworkers to the leisurely pleasures of English bachelor residents of the Inns of Court. For Melville, the “quiet absorption of good living, good drinking, good feeling, and good talk” was epitomized by bachelor life in London. Hawthorne made his own entry in the bachelor sweepstakes with The Blithedale Romance (1852), which portrayed the temporary residence of the bachelor Coverdale in an American Utopian community and an urban hotel. Yet Hawthorne, like Melville, associated ideal bachelor life with London. Describing a dinner he had enjoyed at the Reform Club, Hawthorne noted in his journal that “there are rooms and conveniences for every possible purpose, and whatever material for enjoyment a bachelor may need, or ought to have, he can surely find it here.”
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SOVA, Andrii. "Physical education professor Stepan Haiduchok: the formation of a worldview." Contemporary era 7 (2019): 226–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.33402/nd.2019-7-226-233.

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The study presents the first attempt to highlight the formation of Stepan Haiduchok's (1890–1976) ideological orientations based on various sources: private archives of Stepan Haiduchok (Lviv), Klavdii Bilynskyi (Sydney) and Andrii Sova (Lviv); reports of the Lviv Academic Gymnasium; Stepan Haiduchok's personal file, which was preserved at Danylo Halytskyi Lviv National Medical University; periodical of the Ukrainian gymnastic society «Sokil» – «Visti z Zaporozha»; Ivan Boberskyi's works; the memoirs of persons who knew him directly or indirectly. With the involvement of previously unavailable and little-known documents, his childhood and high school years were reconstructed. The author has demonstrated that Professor of the Lviv Academic Gymnasium Ivan Boberskyi (1873–1947), through the gymnastics classes (physical education), the activities of the Ukrainian Sports Club and the Sokil Gymnastic Society influenced the formation and choice of Stepan Haiduchok's future profession – a physical education teacher. During the high school years were formed the basis, which let him express himself as an athlete, professor of Ukrainian physical education, public and cultural person, journalist, editor, student, and follower of the «Father of Ukrainian Physical Education». The research methodology based on general scientific principles of historical objectivity, systematicity, reliability, complexity, and scientific nature. By applying the biographical method, it was more likely to reveal the objectives of the study. Keywords: Stepan Haiduchok, Lviv Academic Gymnasium, Ivan Boberskyi, worldview formation, body education, physical education, sport.
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Petry, Ann, and Gene Jarrett. "Marie of the Cabin Club." PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 121, no. 1 (2006): 245–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1632/003081206x129837.

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Over the past two centuries, countless writers in the United States and abroad have adopted noms de plume to exploit the literary marketplace. By definition a name either legally owned by another person or fictitiously derived, a pseudonym “conceal[s] some essential fact[s]” about an author's personal identity that contradict expectations held by publishers, editors, other writers, or public readers (Popkin 343). Those concealed facts tend to be the author's actual name and its locus of associations, including gender, family, class, nationality, and racial identity.
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Kinsman, Margaret, and Elizabeth Foxwell. "Editors' Comments." Clues: A Journal of Detection 26, no. 2 (2008): 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.3172/clu.26.2.3.

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Sherwood, Merryn, Matthew Nicholson, and Timothy Marjoribanks. "Access, agenda building and information subsidies: Media relations in professional sport." International Review for the Sociology of Sport 52, no. 8 (2016): 992–1007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1012690216637631.

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While much research has examined the composition of sport media and those charged with constructing it, namely sport journalists and editors, far less has explored an essential set of actors in the construction of news: sources. This study aimed to explore the construction of the sport media agenda from arguably the most important sport news sources: sport media relations managers. In particular, this paper asked: how do media staff in sports organisations influence the production of news? To answer this question, this paper is based on a qualitative, observational study of a professional Australian Rules football club in Australia, involving interviews, observations and document analysis. Research within a professional Australian Rules football club found that the club delivered high-quality information subsidies that met sports journalists’ newswork requirements. However, media access was almost solely limited to these information subsidies, which are highly subjective and negotiated, which in turn allowed the professional football club to significantly control the subsequent media agenda.
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ALLEN, DAVID. "STEARN, W. T. (editor). John Lindley 1799–1865: gardener–botanist and pioneer orchidologist. Antique Collectors' Club in association with the Royal Horticultural Society, Woodbridge, Suffolk: 1999. Pp 232. Price £ 29.50. ISBN 1-85149-296-8." Archives of Natural History 28, no. 1 (2001): 152–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.2001.28.1.152.

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Generali, Joyce A. "Journal Clubs Managed Care Pharmacy Ethics." Hospital Pharmacy 38, no. 7 (2003): 709–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/001857870303800701.

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To help readers monitor the most important developments in specialized areas of pharmacy practice in organized health systems, Hospital Pharmacy commissions Basic Bibliographies by guest editors, who have expertise in their respective fields. These guest editors survey the relevant literature and rank approximately 15 to 20 references that represent the most significant research and practice contributions in their areas. The more fundamental are listed first so that persons with limited time can select reading appropriate to their needs. A cumulative index to Basic Bibliography topics will be published semiannually in June and December.
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SIMMS, C. "SNOW, D. (editor). Birds, discovery and conservation. 100 years of the British Ornithologists' Club. Helm Information Ltd, The Banks, Mountfield, near Robertsbridge TN32 5JY: 1992. Pp viii, 198; frontispiece. Price: £ 19.95. ISBN: 1-873403-15-1." Archives of Natural History 21, no. 1 (1994): 131–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.1994.21.1.131b.

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Zhang, Pengfei. "Managing with a Book Club [Associate Editors View." IEEE Solid-State Circuits Magazine 2, no. 1 (2010): 11–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/mssc.2009.935256.

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Talburt, Nancy Ellen. "A Debt Acknowledged: Clues Founding Editor Alice Maxine "Pat" Browne." Clues: A Journal of Detection 32, no. 1 (2014): 5–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.3172/clu.32.1.5.

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44

Lee, Sang-gi. "Preface." Pure and Applied Chemistry 81, no. 2 (2009): iv. http://dx.doi.org/10.1351/pac20098102iv.

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The 17th International Conference on Organic Synthesis (ICOS 17) was held in Daejeon, Korea during 22-27 June 2008 under the joint chairmanship of Prof. Eun Lee (Seoul National University) and Prof. Sunggak Kim (Korean Advanced Institute of Science and Technology). Professor Sung Ho Kang (Korean Advanced Institute of Science and Technology) acted as Chair of the Organizing Committee for the event, which is the latest in a regular biennial series that was initiated in 1974 under the auspices of IUPAC. On this occasion, the Korean Chemical Society acted as cosponsors, and the Conference enjoyed generous financial support from the Korean Research Foundation, the Korean Federation of Science and Technology Societies, and a sponsorship club representing Korean industries.Almost 1000 participants, including 412 foreign scientists, attended from 32 countries, once again demonstrating the ongoing international appeal and topicality of organic synthesis. The scientific program of ICOS 17 was characterized by in-depth coverage of many familiar aspects of the topic, such as synthetic methodology, natural products synthesis, bioorganic chemistry, chemical biology, organic materials, and medicinal chemistry. The program was delineated in five broad themes entitled:- Discovery of new reagents and reactions- Challenges and new trends in natural products synthesis- Prospects in bioorganic chemistry and chemical biology- Visions in organic materials researches- Events in drug discovery and process developmentA total of 51 invited lectures were delivered; in addition to 36 from academia, 13 emanated from industry and 2 from research institutes. A highlight of the lecture program was the Thieme-IUPAC prize lecture presented by Prof. Dean Toste (University of California, Berkeley, USA). The poster program was particularly well supported, and no less than 533 posters were presented during two sessions.This issue of Pure and Applied Chemistry comprises a collection of 12 papers based on lectures delivered at ICOS 17. The organizers are particularly grateful to all who contributed to this issue for their timely efforts. The topics of these papers feature some of the major themes of the conference and thus furnish a representative insight into the scientific program and capture exciting new developments and trends. This series will continue in Bergen, Norway on 2-5 August 2010, and it is confidently expected that it will continue to fulfill an important scientific role in highlighting ongoing advances in modern organic synthesis.Sang-gi LeeConference Editor
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Steve, Tate. "‘YOURS TO HAND, AND THE FOLLOWING IS THE INFORMATION YOU REQUIRE . . .’: LETTERS TO THE EDITOR IN THE JAMES CATTON ARCHIVE AT ARSENAL FOOTBALL CLUB MUSEUM AND THE PRACTICALITIES OF WRITING THE NEWS ON THE EARLY TWENTIETH-CENTURY SPORTING PRESS." Archives: The Journal of the British Records Association 50, no. 130-1 (2015): 22–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/archives.2015.4.

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TULLY, I. "JONES, W. E. (editor). A new natural history of Anglesey. (Studies in Anglesey History 8) Anglesey Antiquarian Society & Field Club, Llangefni: 1990. Pp 194; illustrated. Price: £ 9.50. ISBN: 0-9500199-6-8. (Available from 6 Tyddyn Ddeici, Llanfairpwllgwyngyll LL61 5PJ.)." Archives of Natural History 20, no. 1 (1993): 134–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.1993.20.1.134a.

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Kuraś-Szczepanek, Klaudia. "On the Way to Online Communication. On the Content and the Language of “Nowy Akapit” Magazine." Social Communication 5, no. 2 (2019): 21–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/sc-2019-0006.

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Abstract The following article is devoted to the discussion about the structure, linguistic phenomena and genres occurring in the newspaper edited by the students of Polish Philology at the University of Rzeszów, who belong to the Student Journalists’ Club. Besides discussing topics of interest to young people, the article also describes the language used by the editors of the magazine, including references to poetry, songs or advertising slogans. Furthermore, press genres presented in the journal are briefly discussed. Finally, the article also draws attention to the readership of the press in Poland.
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Abbasi, Kamran. "Why the most powerful club for journal editors must change." Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 102, no. 7 (2009): 255. http://dx.doi.org/10.1258/jrsm.2009.09k042.

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Fendrich, Michael, and Timothy P. Johnson. "Editors' Introduction to this Special Issue on Club Drug Epidemiology." Substance Use & Misuse 40, no. 9-10 (2005): 1179–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1081/ja-200066999.

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Matsuda, Shinpei, Hitoshi Yoshimura, Hisato Yoshida, et al. "Usefulness of Computed Tomography Image Processing by OsiriX Software in Detecting Wooden and Bamboo Foreign Bodies." BioMed Research International 2017 (2017): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/3104018.

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Objective. The aim of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of reconstructed computed tomography (CT) images using OsiriX software in detecting wooden and bamboo foreign bodies. Methods. Four sizes of wet and dry wooden and bamboo foreign bodies were selected to be analyzed. Those in the air and in the head of edible swine were scanned with a multidetector row CT scanner. The images were evaluated with OsiriX software in the bone and the abdomen window setting as unprocessed images. Three-dimensional rendered images assigned colors and opacity by a 16-bit color look-up table (CLUT) editor in OsiriX software were evaluated as processed images. Results. In the unprocessed images, dry and wet foreign bodies in the air were not detected except a part of wet wooden foreign bodies, and all the dry and wet foreign bodies in the swine’s head mimicked air with linear shapes. In the processed images, all the dry and wet foreign bodies in the air were detected clearly, and all the wooden and some of the bamboo foreign bodies in the swine’s head were detected clearly. Conclusions. CT images processed using OsiriX software, especially with a CLUT editor, were useful in detecting wooden and bamboo foreign bodies.
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