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1

Workshop on Latex Proteins (1993 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia). Latex proteins and glove industry: A report of the proceedings of the International Rubber Technology Conference 1993, Workshop on Latex Proteins, held in Kuala Lumpur on 16 June 1993. Rubber Research Institute of Malaysia, 1994.

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2

1968 -- četrdeset godina posle: 1968 - forty years later. Institut za noviju istoriju Srbije, 2008.

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Richards, Susan C. Protect your parents and their financial health--: Talk with them before it's too late. Dearborn Financial, 1999.

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4

Rosen, Mark L. Physician's malpractice survival guide: 10 steps to protect your assets before it's too late. 2nd ed. Xlibris, 2008.

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Kainth, Nisha Rani. The effects of storage on the proteins of commercial high ammonia Hevea brasiliensis latex with special reference to their potential allergenicity. University of Birmingham, 1999.

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6

Douglas, Aiton, ed. Popular protest in late medieval English towns. Cambridge University Press, 2012.

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7

Barker, David. The best start in life: How a woman's diet can protect her child from disease in later life. Century, 2003.

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8

The revolution before the revolution: Late authoritarianism and student protest in Portugal. Berghahn Books, 2016.

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9

From slogans to mantras: Social protest and religious conversion in the late Vietnam War era. Syracuse University Press, 2001.

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10

Car accidents: The best treatments and worst pitfalls to avoid : find out the truth about car accident injuries and how to protect yourself before it's too late! Marc S. Gottlieb, 2009.

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11

I, Suh Kwang, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., eds. Sizing of colloidal particles and protein molecules in a hanging fluid drop. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1995.

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12

Latex allergy: Protect yourself, protect your patients. American Nurses Association, 2000.

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13

Turley, Robert H. Enhancement of 'Scio' barley seed protein by late foliar applications of urea-ammonium nitrate. 1985.

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14

Passavant, Paul A. Policing Protest. Duke University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9781478013013.

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In Policing Protest Paul A. Passavant explores how the policing of protest in the United States has become increasingly hostile since the late 1990s, moving away from strategies that protect protesters toward militaristic practices designed to suppress protests. He identifies reactions to three interrelated crises that converged to institutionalize this new mode of policing: the political mobilization of marginalized social groups in the Civil Rights era that led to a perceived crisis of democracy, the urban fiscal crisis of the 1970s, and a crime crisis that was associated with protests and c
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15

Jr, Cohn Samuel K., and Douglas Aiton. Popular Protest in Late Medieval English Towns. Cambridge University Press, 2015.

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16

Prunty, Helen, Jamie L. Fraser, Charles P. Venditti, and Robin H. Lachmann. Branched Chain Amino Acids. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199972135.003.0016.

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This chapter describes the four most common disorders affecting the degradation of branched chain amino acids: maple syrup urine disease, methylmalonic acidemia, propionic acidemia and isovaleric acidemia. These conditions most commonly present with encephalopathy in the newborn period, although cases with later onset have also been described. Although adult patients are less prone to acute metabolic decompensations, they do develop a number of long-term complications, both neurological and visceral. Management shares features with other disorders of protein metabolism and centers on a low-pro
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17

Kline, Cohn Samuel, ed. Popular protest in late medieval Europe: Italy, France, and Flanders. Manchester University Press, 2004.

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18

Graves, Michael V. Analysis of two highly expressed genes from Chlorella virus PBCV- 1: Prote in characterization and the DNA sequences of the major capsid protein gene and the early/late 33-kDa protein gene. 1991.

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19

Milne, Alisoun. Mental Health in Later Life. Policy Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447305729.001.0001.

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Focusing on mental health rather than mental illness, this book adopts a life course approach to understanding mental health and wellbeing in later life. Drawing together material from the fields of sociology, psychology, critical social gerontology, the mental health field, and life course studies, it analyses the meaning and determinants of mental health amongst older populations and offers a critical review of existing discourse. The book explores the intersecting influences of lifecourse experiences, social and structural inequalities, socio-political context, history, gender and age-relat
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20

Turner, Neil. Postural proteinuria (benign orthostatic proteinuria). Edited by Neil Turner. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199592548.003.0051.

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Postural proteinuria, synonymous with the condition known as benign orthostatic proteinuria, describes increased levels of protein excretion associated with normalization first thing in the morning. It is usually diagnosed in children, for whom it is the most common explanation for proteinuria picked up incidentally on dipstick testing. In children, it generally resolves with age and is thought to have a benign long-term prognosis, with the caveat that numbers with very long follow-up times are few. It is also seen in teenagers but becomes much less common in early adulthood. Its aetiology is
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21

Sunseri, Jun Oeno. Pobladores of New Mexico. Edited by Barbara Mills and Severin Fowles. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199978427.013.29.

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Eighteenth-century New Mexican buffer villages located on the most exposed margins of the Spanish colony were built by pluralistic communities that included people of Spanish descent, nomadic Native American groups, and Pueblo allies. These grants of land on the late colonial frontier were settled by communities for whom an ability to mobilize multiple and situational identities was a critical survival skill during a time of increased captive raiding by nomadic groups. Positioned to protect administrative centers, their physical and social distance created opportunities for new kinds of identi
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22

St John, Taylor. Conversion. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198789918.003.0008.

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This chapter analyzes the purposes that American officials ascribe to investor–state arbitration in their investment treaties, using internal documents from all pre-NAFTA American investment treaty negotiations. Officials drafting the initial US model treaty in the late 1970s saw ISDS as a narrow tool to protect investment, but a decade later, it was reimagined as a way to lock in domestic liberalization reforms in former Soviet or Latin American states. Similarly, the American investment treaty program was not intended to facilitate outward investments, but rhetoric has changed: in the early
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23

Brown, Kate Pride. Saving the Sacred Sea. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190660949.001.0001.

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Lake Baikal is like no place on Earth. More than a mile deep, Baikal contains a fifth of the world’s freshwater. Thousands of endemic species reside in its watershed. It is an ecological treasure trove and a natural reservoir of global proportions. The region is also home to a strong environmentalist community that works tirelessly to protect Baikal from human harm. Environmentalists around Baikal began their campaign in the late 1950s, sparking the first national protest against the Soviet government’s planned industrial development. They have remained active in some form ever since, across t
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24

Vincent, Angela. Neuroimmunology. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199658602.003.0015.

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This chapter relates to antibody-mediated disorders throughout the nervous system. Early papers recall how use of bungarotoxin, passive transfer experiments in mice, and clinical response to plasma exchange confirmed the role of acetylcholine receptor antibodies in myasthenia gravis. Cutting edge techniques subsequently discovered other key neuromuscular junctional proteins, including muscle-specific kinase an additional target for antibodies. Later papers report the link between brain inflammation and severe amnesia, paraneoplastic and non-paraneoplastic, and the identification of the first p
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25

Robertson, Iain J. M. Landscapes of Protest in the Scottish Highlands After 1914: The Later Highland Land Wars. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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26

Landscapes of Protest in the Scottish Highlands after 1914: The Later Highland Land Wars. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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27

Chakera, Aron, William G. Herrington, and Christopher A. O’Callaghan. Prevention of kidney disease. Edited by Patrick Davey and David Sprigings. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199568741.003.0345.

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A number of factors are known to predispose to renal disease, such as diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and exposure to certain drugs or substances (e.g. mercury and other heavy metals). In people who are at risk for these reasons, renal function should be regularly monitored as part of routine care. Kidney diseases are identified by elevations in the serum creatinine; the presence in the urine of blood, protein, or elevated levels of certain electrolytes; or evidence of anatomical abnormalities. Due to the large functional reserve of the kidneys, symptoms of impaired renal function usually occ
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28

Cui, Zhao, Neil Turner, and Ming-hui Zhao. Alport post-transplant antiglomerular basement membrane disease. Edited by Neil Turner. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199592548.003.0075.

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Alport antiglomerular basement membrane (anti-GBM) disease is a rare example of disease caused by allo-sensitization after renal transplantation, first described in 1992. Because the recipient lacks a specific glomerular basement membrane (GBM) protein, they can become sensitized to the normal molecule present in the GBM of the donor kidney. The disease is restricted to the allograft. Interestingly severe disease arises from this only arises rarely, certainly less than 1 in 20, probably closer to 1 in 50. It characteristically causes late graft loss in a first transplant with accelerated tempo
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29

Brusse, Esther, Pascal Laforêt, and Ans T. van der Ploeg. Danon Disease. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199972135.003.0056.

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Danon disease, like Pompe disease, is a muscle disorder caused by a primary defect in lysosomal proteins. Danon disease (OMIM #300257) is an X-linked dominant disorder, with males being more severely affected than female carriers. In males, mean disease onset is in their early teens and in females in their late twenties. Clinical hallmarks are a severe cardiomyopathy, muscle weakness, and mild mental retardation. Retinal, liver, and pulmonary disease may also occur. Milder, sometimes isolated cardiac phenotypes without mental retardation are also described. Regular cardiac evaluation, even in
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30

Scott, Tom, and Sara Naheedy. Stack the Legal Odds in Your Favor: Understand America's Corrupt Judicial System-Protect Yourself Now and Boost Chances of Winning Cases Later. Smart Play Publishing, 2016.

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31

Wood, Andy. Brave Minds and Hard Hands. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198806899.003.0004.

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This chapter focuses upon a small but significant subgenre of dramatic work produced in the 1590s: a set of plays, including 2 Henry VI and Jack Straw, that represented plebeian rebellion and its causes. Sketching the period’s harrowing conditions for the poor, it brings to these plays the evidence of archives concerning contemporary politics and protest. With rich historical contextualization, it traces in these dramas the sustained protests of poorer commoners, against hunger, social contempt from the elite, and the fate of infinite physical drudgery. It demonstrates the period accuracy of b
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32

Sedel, Frédéric. Niemann-Pick Disease Type C. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199972135.003.0053.

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Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) is a fatal neurovisceral lipid storage disease of autosomal inheritance resulting from mutations in either the NPC1 (95% of families) or NPC2 gene. The encoded proteins appear to be involved in lysosomal/late endosomal transport of cholesterol, glycolipids, and other molecules, but their exact function is still unknown. The clinical spectrum of the disease ranges from a neonatal rapidly fatal disorder to an adult-onset chronic neurodegenerative disease characterized prominently by psychiatric disorders, cerebellar ataxia, cognitive decline, and vertical supran
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33

McPhee, Peter. A Social Revolution? Rethinking Popular Insurrection in 1789. Edited by David Andress. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199639748.013.010.

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To what extent should the Revolution of 1789 be understood as a crisis of legitimacy expressed widely across society as well as a collapse of arrangements of power among ruling elites? Was it from the outset a social as well as a political revolution? This chapter argues that, while there was no one point at which ‘peasants’ or ‘urban working people’ became politicized or revolutionary, they were inherently and incipiently revolutionary well before the massive revolt of July–August 1789. While some historians have questioned the level of political awareness of the urban and rural masses, even
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34

Baracos, Vickie E., Sharon M. Watanabe, and Kenneth C. H. Fearon. Aetiology, classification, assessment, and treatment of the anorexia-cachexia syndrome. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199656097.003.0205.

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Anorexia-cachexia is a heterogeneous and multifactorial syndrome most likely driven by systemic inflammation and neuroendocrine activation. Key diagnostic features include reduced appetite, weight loss, and muscle wasting. Key clinical problems include management of anorexia without resort to artificial nutritional support, and muscle wasting that cannot be completely arrested/reversed even with such intervention. Assessment should cover domains such as body stores of energy and protein, food intake, performance status, and factors resulting in excess catabolism. Intervention should be early r
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35

Margulies, Ivone. In Person. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190496821.001.0001.

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In Person: Reenactment in Postwar and Contemporary Cinema delineates a new performative genre based on replay and self-awareness. The book argues that in-person reenactment, an actual person reenacting her past on camera, departs radically from other modes of mimetic reconstruction. In Person theorizes this figure’s protean temporality and revisionist capabilities, and it considers its import in terms of social representativity and exemplarity. Close readings of select, historicized examples define an alternate, confessional-performative vein to understand the self-reflexive nature of postwar
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36

Pila, Justine. Definitions and Intellectual Property Subject Matter. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199688616.003.0001.

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This chapter considers the relative absence of scholarly attention to the meaning of the terms used to denote the subject matter that IP rights protect and the nature of those subject matter themselves. It then outlines the aims and methods of the definitional task undertaken in later chapters, and the stages in which that task proceeds. Using the distinction drawn by Richard Robinson, it proposes a nominal word:thing definitional exercise, rather than a word:word exercise, that considers recent use of the terms to be defined by European and UK legal officials. Drawing on the stipulative natur
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37

Hoerl, Kristen. The Bad Sixties. University Press of Mississippi, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496817235.001.0001.

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Over the past four decades, a wide range of Hollywood films and television programs have referenced events and individuals associated with the 1960s counterculture, anti-war, and Black Power movements. This book analyses narrative patterns and recurring character types across a wide variety of fictionalized film and television portrayals of the late sixties to illustrate how Hollywood has consistently derided and trivialized the period’s protest movements. The Bad Sixties argues that Hollywood has promulgated selective amnesia by decontextualizing spectacular events that have come to define th
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38

Hoover, Jesse A. The Apocalypse that Never Was. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198825517.003.0002.

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Chapter 1 focuses on the ways in which Donatist appeals to the apocalyptic have been understood by those outside the dissident communion. Four patterns in particular are discussed. In the militant rhetoric of its early opponents, Donatist eschatological claims were dismissed as evidence of “madness.” By the nineteenth century, Donatists were no longer seen as madmen, but their apparent preoccupation with the end of the world caused many to brand them as anachronistic in an age of Christian emperors. Later reassessments would attempt to link apocalyptic rhetoric with socioeconomic protest again
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39

Demshuk, Andrew. Demolition on Karl Marx Square. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190645120.001.0001.

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Communist East Germany’s demolition of Leipzig’s intact medieval University Church in May 1968 was an act widely decried as “cultural barbarism”. Although overshadowed by the crackdown on Prague Spring mere weeks later, the willful destruction of this historic landmark on a central site called Karl Marx Square represents an essential turning point in relations between the Communist authorities and the “people” they claimed to serve. As the largest case of East German protest between the 1953 Uprising and 1989 Revolution, this intimate local trauma exhibits how the inner workings of a “dictator
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40

Stuewer, Roger H. Artificial Radioactivity. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198827870.003.0011.

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Frédéric Joliot discovered artificial radioactivity on January 11, 1934, when he bombarded aluminum with polonium alpha particles and produced a radioactive isotope of phosphorus that decayed by emitting a positron. He detected it with a Geiger–Müller counter that Wolfgang Gentner had constructed for him. Two months later, Enrico Fermi, motivated in part by an insight of his first assistant, Gian Carlo Wick, decided to see if neutrons also could produce artificial radioactivity. The transformation of a neutron into a proton in a nucleus should create an electron, so to increase their number an
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41

Kent, Stephen A. From Slogans to Mantras: Social Protest and Religious Conversion in the Late Vietnam Era (Religion and Politics). Syracuse University Press, 2001.

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42

Kent, Stephen A. From Slogans to Mantras: Social Protest and Religious Conversion in the Late Vietnam Era (Religion and Politics). Syracuse University Press, 2001.

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43

Haggenmacher, Peter. Sources in the Scholastic Legacy. Edited by Samantha Besson and Jean d’Aspremont. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198745365.003.0002.

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This chapter enquires into the sources of international law in the scholastics. In fact the concept of sources of law obtained general currency in legal discourse, and how international law took shape as a legal discipline only after the heyday of scholasticism. But the two main pillars of what was to become classical international law in the eighteenth century—natural law and the law of nations—were both part of the theologians’ teachings of moral philosophy, especially with the Dominicans and later the Jesuits. Examining the two concepts handed down from Antiquity, Thomas Aquinas had assigne
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44

Bowles, Adam. Law during Emergencies. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198702603.003.0020.

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This chapter traces concepts underpinning āpaddharma (“law during emergencies”) from their earliest articulations in the Dharmaśāstras. It argues that “law during emergencies” first appears as a way to ameliorate problems arising when circumstances render normative occupations unviable. Therefore, the core principle of āpaddharma permits a conditional occupational mobility, typically in a socially downward direction. Later texts—particularly the Mānavadharmaśāstra and the Mahābhārata, in which the compound āpaddharma is first coined—develop and extend this concept into other areas, especially
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45

Laats, Adam. Nightmare on College Avenue. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190665623.003.0008.

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During the late 1960s and early 1970s, a wave of protest and counterprotest rocked college campuses nationwide. Evangelical and fundamentalist schools were no different, though the protests usually took on the tones of the evangelical/fundamentalist family feud. Students fought for and against a list of reform ideas, including ideas about American policy in Vietnam, free speech for students, and greater freedom from traditional lifestyle rules for students. Perhaps more important than these headline-grabbing protests, however, were the radical changes in demography and college attendance fuele
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46

Kersten, Rikki. Japan. Edited by R. J. B. Bosworth. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199594788.013.0029.

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Japanese in Meiji Japan (1868–1912) came to realize that socio-political and economic change occurred as an interactive exercise with culture. Indeed, from the late Meiji onwards culture became the object of a defensive attempt to ‘protect’ Japaneseness from Western emasculation. This became an important aspect of the fascist transformation that occurred in inter-war Japan. It was in an atmosphere of anti-Western, pro-Japanese feeling that fascism entered the socio-political lexicon of modern Japan. This article holds that asking whether Japan is fascist is a conceptual quagmire. It also discu
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47

Case, George. Takin' Care of Business. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197548813.001.0001.

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We usually associate the sounds of classic rock ‘n’ roll with youthful rebellion, by juvenile delinquents, student demonstrators, idealistic hippies, or irreverent punks. But an important strain of rock from the late 1960s onward spoke to and for a very different audience: the regular working-class fans who didn’t want to change the world as much as they wanted to protect their place in it. From Creedence Clearwater Revival to Bruce Springsteen, from Lynyrd Skynyrd to AC/DC, and from Judas Priest to Ted Nugent, the music provided the anthems of an increasingly distinct—and increasingly vulnera
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48

Forrest, Alan. Poverty. Edited by William Doyle. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199291205.013.0010.

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Poverty was an endemic condition across Europe from the later middle ages until the end of the eighteenth century. It was the most intractable of the social problems which beset Europeans and offered a constant rebuke to monarchs and church leaders alike, proving almost as difficult to define as it was impossible to cure. This was an age before social science or social medicine, when there were still no agreed definitions of what constituted poverty, no clear sense of who was and was not poor; and there was little understanding of basic levels of subsistence in terms of protein or diet. Nor we
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49

Burton, Derek, and Margaret Burton. Metabolism, homeostasis and growth. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198785552.003.0007.

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Metabolism consists of the sum of anabolism (construction) and catabolism (destruction) with the release of energy, and achieving a fairly constant internal environment (homeostasis). The aquatic external environment favours differences from mammalian pathways of excretion and requires osmoregulatory adjustments for fresh water and seawater though some taxa, notably marine elasmobranchs, avoid osmoregulatory problems by retaining osmotically active substances such as urea, and molecules protecting tissues from urea damage. Ion regulation may occur through chloride cells of the gills. Most fish
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50

Meyer, Stephen. The Challenge to White Manhood. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252040054.003.0008.

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This chapter considers how the increase in numbers of African American men at the workplace brought differing and contentious visions of manhood to the automotive factory. White men, who had long dominated the better jobs, divided into two groups: those who strove for the respectability of high-paid union jobs and those who resented others, fearing the loss of their exclusive white privileges. When black men fought for workplace equity, the more conservative whites conducted racial hate strikes to protect traditionally “white” jobs. In reaction, African American workers conducted what might be
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