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Journal articles on the topic "CRAJEP (Association)"

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Chavez, Luis O., Sharon Einav, and Joseph Varon. "When Terminal Illness Is Worse Than Death: A Multicenter Study of Health-Care Providers’ Resuscitation Desires." American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine® 34, no. 9 (August 3, 2016): 820–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1049909116662195.

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Purpose: To investigate how a terminal illness may affect the health-care providers’ resuscitation preferences. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional survey in 9 health-care institutions located in 4 geographical regions in North and Central America, investigating attitudes toward end-of-life practices in health-care providers. Statistical analysis included descriptive statistics and χ2 test for the presence of associations ( P < 0.05 being significant) and Cramer V for the strength of the association. The main outcome measured the correlation between the respondents’ present code status and their preference for cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) in case of terminal illness. Results: A total of 852 surveys were completed. Among the respondents, 21% (n = 180) were physicians, 36.9% (n = 317) were nurses, 10.5% (n = 90) were medical students, and 265 participants were other staff members of the institutions. Most respondents (58.3%; n = 500) desired “definitely full code” (physicians 73.2%; n = 131), only 13.8% of the respondents (physicians 8.33%; n = 15) desired “definitely no code” or “partial support,” and 20.9% of the respondents (n = 179; among physicians 18.4%; n = 33) had never considered their code status. There was an association between current code status and resuscitation preference in case of terminal illness ( P < .001), but this association was overall quite weak (Cramer V = 0.180). Subgroup analysis revealed no association between current code status and terminal illness code preference among physicians ( P = .290) and nurses ( P = .316), whereupon other hospital workers were more consistent ( P < .01, Cramer V = .291). Conclusion: Doctors and nurses have different end-of-life preferences than other hospital workers. Their desire to undergo CPR may change when facing a terminal illness.
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Green, J. "Associations of rotifers in Australian crater lakes." Journal of Zoology 193, no. 4 (August 20, 2009): 469–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7998.1981.tb01498.x.

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GREEN, J. "Zooplankton associations in some Ethiopian crater lakes." Freshwater Biology 16, no. 4 (August 1986): 495–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2427.1986.tb00992.x.

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Kemps, Eva, Marika Tiggemann, Rachel Martin, and Mecia Elliott. "Implicit approach–avoidance associations for craved food cues." Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied 19, no. 1 (2013): 30–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0031626.

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Almoznino, Galit, Avraham Zini, Ron Kedem, Noam E. Protter, Dorit Zur, and Itzhak Abramovitz. "Hypertension and Its Associations with Dental Status: Data from the Dental, Oral, Medical Epidemiological (DOME) Nationwide Records-Based Study." Journal of Clinical Medicine 10, no. 2 (January 6, 2021): 176. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm10020176.

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Conflicting results have been published regarding the associations between dental status and hypertension. This study aims to explore whether or not hypertension is associated with dental status among young to middle-aged adults. To that end, data from the Dental, Oral, Medical Epidemiological (DOME) study were analyzed. The DOME is a cross-sectional records-based study that combines comprehensive socio-demographic, medical, and dental databases of a nationally representative sample of military personnel. Included were 132,529 subjects aged 18–50 years who attended the military dental clinics for one year. The prevalence of hypertension in the study population was 2.5% (3363/132,529). Following multivariate analysis, the associations between hypertension and dental parameters were lost and hypertension retained a positive association with obesity (Odds ratio (OR) = 4.2 (3.7–4.9)), diabetes mellitus (OR = 4.0 (2.9–5.7)), birth country of Western Europe vs. Israeli birth country (OR = 1.9 (1.6–2.2)), male sex (OR = 1.9 (1.6–2.2)), cardiovascular disease (OR = 1.9 (1.6–2.3)), presence of fatty liver (OR = 1.8 (1.5–2.3)), the birth country Asia vs. Israeli birth country (OR = 1.6 (1.1–2.3)), smoking (OR = 1.2 (1.05–1.4)), and older age (OR = 1.05 (1.04–1.06)). Further analysis among an age-, smoking- and sex matched sub-population (N = 13,452) also revealed that the dental parameters lost their statistically significant association with hypertension following multivariate analysis, and hypertension retained a positive association with diabetes (OR = 4.08 (2.6–6.1)), obesity (OR = 2.7 (2.4–3.2)), birth country of Western Europe vs. Israel (OR = 1.9 (1.6–2.3)), cardiovascular disease (OR = 1.8 (1.5–2.2)), fatty liver (OR = 1.7 (1.3–2.3)), high school education vs. academic (OR = 1.5 (1.3–1.8)), and low socio-economic status (SES) vs. high (OR = 1.4 (1.03–1.8)). We analyzed the associations between C-reactive protein (CRP) and dental parameters and combined the statistically significant variables to create a dental inflammation score (DIS). This crated a final model with the appropriate weights written as follows: DIS = (periodontal disease × 14) + (the number of teeth that required crowns × 11) + (missing teeth × 75). The mean DIS was 10.106 ± 25.184, and it exhibited a weak positive association with hypertension in the univariate analysis (OR = 1.011 (1.010–1.012)). Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis of the DIS against hypertension produced a failed area under the curve (AUC) result (0.57 (0.56–0.58)). Moreover, the DIS also lost its statistical significance association with hypertension following multivariate analysis. We conclude that hypertension had no statistically significant nor clinically significant association with dental status. The study established a profile of the “patient vulnerable to hypertension”, which retained well-known risk factors for hypertension such as older age, male sex, smoking, diabetes, obesity, and fatty liver but not dental parameters.
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Kurniawan, Muhammad. "Pendapatan Komprehensif Lain Perusahaan Sektor Aneka Industri di Indonesia." Jurnal Riset Akuntansi & Perpajakan (JRAP) 4, no. 02 (December 4, 2017): 258–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.35838/jrap.v4i02.200.

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ABSTRACT The purpose of this study was conducted to investigate how the implementation of the presentation of other comprehensive income after the implementation of the International Financial Reporting Standards. Research subjects are various industry sectors. Other comprehensive income components tested are foreign exchange differences, employee benefits, available financial instruments sold, hedges, asset revaluation, associations and venture. The research object is 42 company data of miscellaneous industry sector. The data analysis method used is cross-tabulation and test of Cramer-V difference. The results of the study conclude that the other components of comprehensive income that are presented differently in the research subjects are foreign exchange differences, available financial instruments for sale, hedging, asset revaluation and association. While the other comprehensive component of the presented income is no different is the employee benefits and joint venture. ABSTRAK Pujuan penelitian ini dilakukan untuk menginvestigasi bagaimana implementasi penyajian other comprehensive income setelah penerapan International Financial Reporting Standars. Subyek penelitian adalah sector aneka industry. Komponen penghasilan komprehensif lain yang diuji adalah selisih kurs, imbalan kerja, instrument keuangan yang tersedia dijual, lindung nilai, revaluasi aset, asosiasi, dan ventura. Obyek penelitian adalah 42 data perusahaan perusahaan sector aneka industry. Metode analisis data yang digunakan adalah tabulasi silang dan uji beda Cramer-V. Hasil penelitian menyimpulkan bahwa komponen penghasilan komprehensif lain yang tersaji berbeda pada subyek penelitian adalah selisih kurs, instrument keuangan yang tersedia dijual, hedging, revaluasi aset dan asosiasi. Sedangkan komponen penghasilan komprehensif lain yang tersaji tidak berbeda adalah imbalan kerja dan ventura bersama. JEL Classification: M41, M16, E42
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Kurniawan, Muhammad. "Pendapatan Komprehensif Lain Perusahaan Sektor Aneka Industri di Indonesia." Jurnal Riset Akuntansi & Perpajakan (JRAP) 4, no. 02 (December 4, 2017): 258–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.35838/jrap.2017.004.02.21.

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ABSTRACT The purpose of this study was conducted to investigate how the implementation of the presentation of other comprehensive income after the implementation of the International Financial Reporting Standards. Research subjects are various industry sectors. Other comprehensive income components tested are foreign exchange differences, employee benefits, available financial instruments sold, hedges, asset revaluation, associations and venture. The research object is 42 company data of miscellaneous industry sector. The data analysis method used is cross-tabulation and test of Cramer-V difference. The results of the study conclude that the other components of comprehensive income that are presented differently in the research subjects are foreign exchange differences, available financial instruments for sale, hedging, asset revaluation and association. While the other comprehensive component of the presented income is no different is the employee benefits and joint venture. ABSTRAK Pujuan penelitian ini dilakukan untuk menginvestigasi bagaimana implementasi penyajian other comprehensive income setelah penerapan International Financial Reporting Standars. Subyek penelitian adalah sector aneka industry. Komponen penghasilan komprehensif lain yang diuji adalah selisih kurs, imbalan kerja, instrument keuangan yang tersedia dijual, lindung nilai, revaluasi aset, asosiasi, dan ventura. Obyek penelitian adalah 42 data perusahaan perusahaan sector aneka industry. Metode analisis data yang digunakan adalah tabulasi silang dan uji beda Cramer-V. Hasil penelitian menyimpulkan bahwa komponen penghasilan komprehensif lain yang tersaji berbeda pada subyek penelitian adalah selisih kurs, instrument keuangan yang tersedia dijual, hedging, revaluasi aset dan asosiasi. Sedangkan komponen penghasilan komprehensif lain yang tersaji tidak berbeda adalah imbalan kerja dan ventura bersama. JEL Classification: M41, M16, E42
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Bacon, Charles R., and Joel E. Robinson. "Postglacial faulting near Crater Lake, Oregon, and its possible association with the Mazama caldera-forming eruption." GSA Bulletin 131, no. 9-10 (February 14, 2019): 1440–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/b35013.1.

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Abstract Volcanoes of subduction-related magmatic arcs occur in a variety of crustal tectonic regimes, including where active faults indicate arc-normal extension. The Cascades arc volcano Mount Mazama overlaps on its west an ∼10-km-wide zone of ∼north-south–trending normal faults. A lidar (light detection and ranging) survey of Crater Lake National Park, reveals several previously unrecognized faults west of the caldera. Postglacial vertical separations measured from profiles across scarps range from ∼2 m to as much as 12 m. Scarp profiles commonly suggest two or more postglacial surface-rupturing events. Ignimbrite of the ca. 7.6 ka climactic eruption of Mount Mazama, during which Crater Lake caldera formed, appears to bury fault strands where they project into thick, valley-filling ignimbrite. Lack of lateral offset of linear features suggests principally normal displacement, although predominant left stepping of scarp strands implies a component of dextral slip. West-northwest–east-southeast and north-northwest–south-southeast linear topographic elements, such as low scarps or ridges, shallow troughs, and straight reaches of streams, suggest that erosion was influenced by distributed shear, consistent with GPS vectors and clockwise rotation of the Oregon forearc block. Surface rupture lengths (SRL) of faults suggest earthquakes of (moment magnitude) Mw6.5 from empirical scaling relationships. If several faults slipped in one event, a combined SRL of 44 km suggests an earthquake of Mw7.0. Postglacial scarps as high as 12 m imply maximum vertical slip rates of 1.5 mm/yr for the zone west of Crater Lake, considerably higher than the ∼0.3 mm/yr long-term rate for the nearby West Klamath Lake fault zone. An unanswered question is the timing of surface-rupturing earthquakes relative to the Mazama climactic eruption. The eruption may have been preceded by a large earthquake. Alternatively, large surface-rupturing earthquakes may have occurred during the eruption, a result of decrease in east-west compressive stress during ejection of ∼50 km3 of magma and concurrent caldera collapse.
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Asendorpf, Jens B. "What Do the Items and Their Associations Refer to in a Network Approach to Personality?" European Journal of Personality 26, no. 4 (July 2012): 432–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/per.1867.

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It is hard to judge the potential usefulness of a network approach to personality research because Cramer et al. (2012) mix up applications to one individual, inter–individual differences and intra–individual processes. From each perspective, the network units, their associations and causal interpretations of such associations have a completely different meaning, and it depends on the particular perspective, the level of aggregation and whether one wants to model measurement error whether latent variables have a place in network models in personality research. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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Xu, Sarah Chaoying, Lisa Canter, Ahmad Zeeshan, and John Elefteriades. "Deep Crater in Heavily Calcified Aortic Valve Leaflet." AORTA 03, no. 05 (October 2015): 172–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.12945/j.aorta.2015.15.010.

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AbstractThe association of severe calcific aortic stenosis with clinically significant stroke has not been well established. This case vividly describes the relationship with clinical and pathological (gross and microscopic) findings in a 62-year-old man with a severely calcified bicuspid aortic valve. Eleven months prior to aortic valve surgery, the patient had stigmata of cerebral embolic events in the absence of any other embolic source. During the aortic valve replacement surgery for aortic stenosis, he was found to have a large atheroma on the aortic valve cusp with a crater containing friable debris in its center. These findings support the potential for embolic stroke in patients with severe calcific aortic stenosis. We recommend that the aortic valve be considered as an embolic source in patients with an otherwise cryptogenic cerebrovascular accident.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "CRAJEP (Association)"

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Ames, Doreen Elizabeth. "Geology and regional hydrothermal alteration of the crater-fill, Onaping Formation, association with Zn-Pb-Cu mineralization, Sudbury Structure, Canada." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk3/ftp04/nq48305.pdf.

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Ames, Doreen E. "Geology and regional hydrothermal alteration of the crater-fill, onaping formation : association with Zn-Pb-Cu mineralization, Sudbury Structure, Canada." Ottawa, 1999.

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Battaglia, Sofia Luciana [Verfasser], and Patrick [Akademischer Betreuer] Cramer. "RNA-dependent chromatin association of transcription elongation factors and Pol II CTD kinases : in vivo and in vitro elongation factor-RNA interaction data provide a missing link in understanding how processive elongation complexes are formed on active genes and disassembled at the end of genes / Sofia Luciana Battaglia ; Betreuer: Patrick Cramer." München : Universitätsbibliothek der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, 2017. http://d-nb.info/1135572887/34.

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Gary, Duim, Bernard Zylstra, and George Vandervelde. "Perspective vol. 17 no. 4 (Oct 1983)." 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10756/251283.

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Books on the topic "CRAJEP (Association)"

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Assises intercaribéennes de la jeunesse (1985 Campus universitaire de Schoelcher). Cahier des Assises intercaribéennes de la jeunesse. [Fort de France]: CRAJEP, 1985.

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North Carolina Association of County Commissioners., ed. Call from Craven: Story of the North Carolina Association of County Commissioners. Raleigh, N.C: North Carolina Association of County Commissioners, 1986.

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Sung, Hou-mei. Reflection. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199375967.003.0006.

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Representations of animals in traditional Chinese painting are among the oldest known motifs and are filled with rich symbolic implications. Animal paintings make animals a part of the harmonious existence of all living beings in the universe. To the Chinese, animals are more than merely beasts in nature; they are living symbols with philosophical, historical, and metaphorical associations. This explains why in early Chinese painting animals are typically portrayed with distinct attitudes or in particular poses, for example, dragons emerging from the clouds, tigers roaring with the wind, cranes calling toward heaven, carp leaping above the waves, and minnows darting playfully among water weeds. Many of these early conceptual depictions of animals were directly linked to the ancient Chinese ...
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Rebeggiani, Stefano. Hercules in the Thebaid. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190251819.003.0004.

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This chapter considers Statius’ use of Hercules and Herculean imagery in the Thebaid, and shows that Statius’ handling of Hercules reflects an attempt at constructing a new model of heroism in the political arena. It begins by showing that the myth of Hercules had unfavorable associations under Domitian because of Nero’s extensive appropriation of this mythical figure. Statius’ investigation of the Hercules paradigm in the Thebaid contributes to showing that, although Domitian recovered the Hercules comparison abandoned by his father Vespasian and exploited by Nero, he was no Nero. In the process, Statius redefines Herculean heroism in light of stoic theories of passions, relying on Seneca’s De Clementia and on a subtle reading of Seneca’s Hercules Furens. In particular, the chapter focuses on a series of passages featuring Tydeus, Polynices, Capaneus and Menoeceus. It also provides a reading of the ekphrasis of Hercules’ crater in book 6.
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Book chapters on the topic "CRAJEP (Association)"

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Martinsen, O. J. "Namurian (Late Carboniferous) Depositional Systems of the Craven-Area, Northern England: Implications for Sequence-Stratigraphic Models." In Sequence Stratigraphy and Facies Associations, 247–81. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing Ltd., 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781444304015.ch14.

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"Portrait: Martha Louise Craven Nussbaum." In American Philosophical Association Centennial Series, 672. Philosophy Documentation Center, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/apapa201397.

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Hull, Richard T. "Biography: Martha Louise Craven Nussbaum." In American Philosophical Association Centennial Series, 673–78. Philosophy Documentation Center, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/apapa201398.

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Cooper, Melissa L. "The 1920s and 1930s Voodoo Craze." In Making Gullah. University of North Carolina Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469632681.003.0003.

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This chapter explores the 1920s and 1930s "voodoo craze" by examing the way that negative ideas about "Africa" and "Africans" during these years, and the prevelance of the common association between Africa and spiritual primitivism (superstitions, the belief in black magic, and dark rituals) became a prominent theme in assessments of Gullah folk's African connection. Using newspapers that circulated in popular migration destinations, films, plays, and travel writers' accounts to trace popular ideas about African survivals, this chapter charts a mounting obsession with southern black voodoo and superstition that reenergizes the debate over African survivals in the academe.
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Cheang, Sarah. "Fashion, Chinoiserie and Modernism." In British Modernism and Chinoiserie. Edinburgh University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9780748690954.003.0008.

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Fashion, chinoiserie and Modernism do not necessarily make easy bedfellows. Fashion’s dynamic of continuous experimentation and renewal can be aligned with Modernism’s agenda of artistic reinvention, self-conscious newness and cultural improvement. Dress and interior design were certainly of interest to Modernist designers, and Chinese culture had a significant influence on British avant-garde literature, theatre and the arts. Yet, fashion’s strong conceptual associations with the feminine, with irrational desire and with Western modernity create a complex picture for expressions of Chineseness, and Chinese design often connoted flights of fancy, locations of private pleasure and an intense nostalgia that is antithetical to the progressive and disruptive anti-traditional stance of interwar Modernism. This chapter examines the impact of fashionable chinoiseries in Britain as a culturally important but as yet under-theorised phenomenon of twentieth-century modernity, an equivalent trend to the negrophilia craze of the 1920s and the Primitivist art movement, a hybrid cosmopolitanism and an imperialist Orientalism. The wearing of Mandarin robes as evening coats, the collecting of jades, the lacquering of dressing tables, and the nurturing of Pekingese lapdogs offer new and stimulating ways to reappraise and shed light on the role of the Orient within British Modernism.
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Colls, Robert. "Moderns." In This Sporting Life, 234–77. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198208334.003.0009.

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Chapter 8 examines the zeal for Association Football as the game moderns play. It starts by leaving the playing fields of Eton to describe an altogether different sort of sporting life on the streets of industrial Britain. Jack London remarked in People of the Abyss (1902) that a whole new sub race had grown up there, ‘the pavement people’ he called them, and although he doesn’t mention it, they were playing football far more than they were suffering from racial degeneration. For many working-class boys, football was a passion, their first craze, like rock n’ roll it was a way of feeling free in another otherwise hostile environment. Football for the workers was released by the factory acts in 1853 and by the 1880s it was an integral part of ‘the weekend’—a consumer economy that ushered in a new kind of urban life. Boys played football almost anytime anywhere. The chapter asks why the girls wouldn’t, or couldn’t. In the 1960s Arthur Hopcraft said football was ‘inherent in the people’ and so it was. Along with cinema, dancing, and popular music, it created new liberties and belongings. England won the World Cup in 1966. This was the pinnacle of footballing achievement by a class and a country that had given the world its favourite sport. Very soon after however, British football was in the doldrums, and it was violence that seemed inherent now.
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Wothers, Peter. "Fire and Brimstone." In Antimony, Gold, and Jupiter's Wolf. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199652723.003.0009.

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Sulfur has long been associated with the fiery domain of hell, and with its god. In the fifteenth-century poem The Assembly of Gods, after describing Othea, the goddess of wisdom, the anonymous author continues with an account of the god of the underworld: . . . And next to her was god Pluto set Wyth a derke myst envyroned all aboute His clothynge was made of a smoky net His colour was both wythin & wythoute Full derke & dӯme his eyen grete & stoute Of fyre & sulphure all his odour waas That wo was me while I behelde his faas . . . Even more terrifying is the account from the Vatican Mythographers, in which Pluto is described as ‘an intimidating personage sitting on a throne of sulphur, holding the sceptre of his realm in his right hand, and with his left strangling a soul’. This association between sulfur and the fiery underworld is perhaps understandable given that the element is often found in the vicinity of volcanoes. In Mundus Subterraneus, one of many books written by the seventeenth-century polymath Athanasius Kircher (1602–80), the author describes a night-time visit to Vesuvius in the year 1638—just seven years after the great eruption of 1631. He tells us that after arriving at the crater, ‘I saw what is horrible to be expressed, I saw it all over of a light fire, with an horrible combustion, and stench of Sulphur and burning Bitumen. Here forthwith being astonished at the unusual sight of the thing; Methoughts I beheld the habitation of Hell; wherein nothing else seemed to be much wanting, besides the horrid fantasms and apparitions of Devils.’ Kircher believed that the volcanoes were fed by massive fires deep underground, as he tells us in the opening of his book: . . . That there are Subterraneous Conservatories, and Treasuries of Fire (even as well, as there are of Water, and Air, &c.) and vast Abysses, and bottomless Gulphs in the Bowels and very Entrals of the Earth, stored therewith, no sober Philosopher can deny; If he do but consider the prodigious Vulcano’s, or fire-belching Mountains; the eruptions of sulphurous fires not only out of the Earth, but also out of the very Sea; the multitude and variety of hot Baths every where occurring. . . .
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Everett, David. "Finding a Voice and a Style." In A Field Guide for Science Writers. Oxford University Press, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195174991.003.0010.

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I once took a graduate course, from a well-published and finely educated writer, on the topic of voice. In the first moments of the class, several of us audaciously asked the instructor to define the term. A few minutes into her answer, I sensed confusion in the classroom. After 10 more minutes of wandering discussion, it became clear that our teacher couldn't handle this most basic query. She knew it when she read it, she said to our amazement, but who could hope to define voice or its literary twin, style? Today, after years of teaching voice myself—and of continuing my own writing—I finally understand my instructor's confusion. While all writers crave an individual style, and while we yearn for a distinctive voice for ourselves or the subjects we profile, those goals remain among our greatest challenges, and even experienced practitioners can retreat into debates over their mystery. Many science writers also must contend with journalistic precepts that subjugate or even eliminate individual style. In this chapter I review the complications and examine the tools of voice and style, concluding with exercises that should help writers identify and hone their own. When writers for the New York Times or the Modern Language Association or the New England Journal of Medicine talk of style, they often mean the strict rules of spelling, punctuation, abbreviation, and other usage as set forth in hallowed style manuals. Style is also used, more colloquially, to describe writing according to purpose or profession: academic, scientific, journalistic, digital, bureaucratic, literary, postmodern, and so forth. For academics, style has classical roots in Aristotle, Cicero, and that granddaddy of Rhetoric, Hermogenes, who rated style as grand, middle, or plain. Writer Ben Yagoda, in his The Sound on the Page: Style and Voice in Writing (2004), defines style as how a writer “uses language to forge or reflect an attitude toward the world.” For the purpose of this chapter, let's define voice as a writer's personality on the page. Style is the personality imposed on our writing by outside rules and/or our own techniques and mindset. Voice is an individual writing personality, whether distinctively our own, one we recount or create, or, sometimes inescapably, both.
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Harding, Dennis. "Defining issues." In Death and Burial in Iron Age Britain. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199687565.003.0006.

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The universality of human mortality is the commonest of truisms, but the prospect of mortality evidently has weighed differently on different societies over the course of human history, from the oppressive burden of the later Middle Ages to the more relaxed live-for-the-present-ism of the current generation. The disposal of the dead is at basis a hygienic necessity that is recognized in all but the most socially disrupted circumstances, but the manner of disposal may reveal attitudes of society towards death and the concept of afterlife, or the role of the dead in the continuing life of the community. Even in our contemporary secular society, relatives of the victims of murder or abduction or of death in foreign parts crave the recovery of bodies for due burial, without which they apparently cannot ‘achieve closure’, a condition of grace that might have been considered essential to the dead, but which evidently matters equally to the bereaved. The discipline of archaeology is methodologically disposed to distort the reality of the past in that it seeks to recognize ordered patterns where in reality diversity and apparent irrationality must have been inherent. The keystone of Childe’s approach, the identification of archaeological cultures, was dependent upon recurrence of diagnostic types in association, which would permit the comparison of one cultural assemblage with another in time or space. Even in processual and post-processual approaches the essence is to reduce the ever-burgeoning data-base to some semblance of order, without which it is impossible for interpretation to proceed, other than intuitively, empathically, or experientially, that is, based upon imaginative reconstruction rather than being inferred, however inadequately, from archaeological data. The consequence of this process of classification has been to emphasize certain outstanding classes of data, like long barrows, stone circles, or hillforts, as typical of their period or region, at the expense of a subtler analysis of the many possible variations of settlement or burial sites that are detectable, even from the surviving archaeological record. In recent years there has been a significant shift in archaeological approaches to burial data.
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Conference papers on the topic "CRAJEP (Association)"

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Sherfey, Steven K. "Structural Seismic Analysis of a Nuclear Fuel Handling Machine." In ASME 2012 Pressure Vessels and Piping Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/pvp2012-78879.

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All nuclear plants in the United States use Fuel Handling Machines (FHM). These complex machines are rail mounted, motorized, and computer controlled for precise positioning of the fuel that must be transferred around, over, into, and through the spent fuel pool. These machines are very top heavy and difficult to seismically qualify. Special analysis techniques are required to consider sliding along the rails or back driving of the drive motor/gearing mechanism in order to minimize the seismic response. This paper documents the seismic qualification of a FHM, using the machine’s back drive force for limiting the seismic effect in the direction of the rail. Qualification consideration is given to the member stresses and joint connections using the AISC Steel Manual 9th Edition (Allowable Stress Design) and CMAA-70-2000, “Specifications for Top Running Bridge & Gantry Type Multiple Girder Electric Overhead Traveling Cranes” by the Crane Manufacturers Association of America.
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2

Wang, Zhixin, Xiong Hu, and Zhaoneng Chen. "Mining Association Rules on Data of Crane Health-Condition Monitoring." In First International Conference on Transportation Engineering. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/40932(246)336.

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3

Bacon, Charles R., and Joel E. Robinson. "POSTGLACIAL FAULTING NEAR CRATER LAKE, OREGON, AND ITS POSSIBLE ASSOCIATION WITH THE MAZAMA CALDERA-FORMING ERUPTION." In 115th Annual GSA Cordilleran Section Meeting - 2019. Geological Society of America, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2019cd-329186.

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4

Sun, Ning, Yongchun Fang, Yiming Wu, and He Chen. "Adaptive positioning and swing suppression control of underactuated cranes exhibiting double-pendulum dynamics: Theory and experimentation." In 2016 31st Youth Academic Annual Conference of Chinese Association of Automation (YAC). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/yac.2016.7804870.

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5

Wang, Feng, Qiang Long, Chang Wang, and Linlin Jiang. "Meteorological Risk Analysis of Port Crane Operations and Warning Managements." In 7th Annual Meeting of Risk Analysis Council of China Association for Disaster Prevention (RAC-2016). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/rac-16.2016.66.

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6

Mynderse, James, Selin Arslan, and Liping Liu. "Using a Funded Capstone Project to Teach Fluid Power and Advanced Mechanical Design." In ASME 2014 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2014-39166.

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The A. Leon Linton Department of Mechanical Engineering at Lawrence Technological University offered a new senior capstone project to a small group of students, funded by a teaching grant from the National Fluid Power Association. All mechanical engineering students at Lawrence Tech must complete a capstone project: either an SAE competition team or a project addressing a particular industry need. The team that worked on the current project consisted of students with various concentrations in mechanical engineering and included an international visiting student from Brazil. Three faculty in Mechanical Engineering, each with different areas of expertise: thermodynamics, heat transfer, fluid mechanics and mechatronics, mentored and worked closely with the students at every step of this project. The objective of this project was to design and fabricate a classroom-scale gantry crane for material handling. The undergraduate students were not only involved in the design of a fluid powered system, but also worked on the modeling of mechanical components and the mechanical system as well as circuit design for an operator interface. The self-guided and real-world design aspect of the project increases the effectiveness of teaching by the faculty and retention of the subject by the students involved in the project.
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7

Alon, Lital, Gregory Ravikovich, Matan Mandelbrod, Udi Eilat, Zafrir Schop, and Dror Tamari. "Computer-Based Management of Mirror-Washing in Utility-Scale Solar Thermal Plants." In ASME 2014 8th International Conference on Energy Sustainability collocated with the ASME 2014 12th International Conference on Fuel Cell Science, Engineering and Technology. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/es2014-6562.

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BrightSource solar power plants consist of fields of tens of thousands of mirrors, spread across kilometers of open areas. These huge mirrors are in constant motion, reflecting the sun’s rays on to the solar thermal collector. Maintaining high reflectivity of the mirrors is essential for the solar field’s performance, a task that becomes complex when expanded to encompass the solar field’s features. The solution for mirror cleaning must be efficient, cost-effective, time-saving, and easy to maintain for dozens of years. BrightSource has designed and constructed a system of GPS-based mirror washing machines (MWMs) that are controlled and managed by end-to-end software. The system generates optimized cleaning tasks, positions the mirrors, and efficiently controls the navigation and state of the MWMs with their 25-meter-long extendable cranes. All of these actions together provide an optimal mirror cleaning solution. This article describes the BrightSource cleaning control technology, for example, in the Ivanpah project, the world’s largest solar thermal facility. The Ivanpah solar field includes 173,500 heliostats divided among three solar fields. Each heliostat holds two mirrors of approximately 2.5 × 3.5 meters, all of which require periodic cleaning. Specifically, this article addresses issues such as the following: • The mirror washing machine (MWM) types: truck and tractor-based, and their differing usage in the solar field • Designation and choice of the cleaning area • Estimation of the stopping points in the designated area, and association of the mirrors to clean from each stopping point • Cleaning time optimization: stopping point density, order in which to clean heliostats, and heliostat position during cleaning • Heliostat positioning: opening clear corridors through which the MWM can travel, and setting heliostats in cleaning orientations • Receiving and responding to callback messages from the MWMs, such as cleaning progress and machine faults • Working in the real world: resources shared with the power plant, and recovery from system faults
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