... other hand, are pre-sent in approximately 25% of MZ. Therefore, we suggest that the reported incidence rate of mir-ror-imaging of AC is probably underestimated. To improve the diagnosis rate, ... accumulation of CSF surrounded by an arachnoid membrane. Vernooij et al. 15 found that AC has a prevalence of approximately 1% in the normal population. There are two hypotheses: pri-mary anomalies ... who are revealed incidentally, usually have a lack of sys-tematic monitoring and follow-up. Therefore, a large percentage of patients with AC are probably undis-covered. Mirror images, on the...
... chapter, Nathan Bedford Forrest Klavern No. 1, At-lanta, Realm of Georgia. During the war, the Adventures of Superman program had por-trayed its hero fighting Hitler and Mussolini and Hirohito. ... in-terests of their customers. But like the funeral director and the car salesman and the life-insurance company, the real-estate agent has also seen her advantage eroded by the Internet. After all, ... country at war trumped its message of separatism. But within a few years, there were already signs ofa massive revival. As wartime anxiety gave way to postwar uncertainty, Klan member-ship flourished....
... grand-daughter of Sir Francis Freeling, and daughter of Sir Henry Freeling, and who was actually born in the General Post Office, St. Martin's-le-Grand, London, where her father had a residence ... Journal under date of January 14th, 1804, is that of " ;the lady of Francis Freeling, Esq., ofthe General Post Office," and another part ofthe paper contains the following paragraph:[Pg ... had wanted the fostering hand ofa superior. Sir Francis was always found to be the ready and liberal patron of talent in every department of literature, science, and the fine arts. Considering...
... not want. It was apparent that theydid not want literary art, or even the appearance of it; they wanted their effects primary; they wanted theiremotions raw, or at least saignantes from the ... practical approval is a warrant of quality.VI.Under the regime ofthe great literary periodicals the prosperity of literary men would be much greater than itactually is, if the magazines were altogether ... a poem, and sold it to a magazine, the scandal is greater than when a painter has sold a picture to a patron, or a sculptor has modelled a statue to order. These are artists less articulate and...
... Auditor Generaland the Treasury Board Secretariat have been the primary promoters of reforms across the federal government.While there have been variations in the reform packages implemented in the ... of their developing country partners.In particular, a number of these factors can complicate the donor agencies’ efforts to compare and aggregateresults across projects and programs to higher ... from the AMBs are stored in a centralized automated databasethat – along with project financial data – will be used for annual agency performance reporting across the portfolio and for accrual...
... feedback to a user and do not require large amounts of data storage, as the raw data are typically summarized inreal-time before storage or transmission. The use of sum-marized data also reduces ... systems5,12,22,23,25,46,59are used when the weight ofthe wearable system is a key factor, as a datastorage or a data processing unit can be replaced by a minia-ture transmitter.Howeverdata forwarding wearables, ... Wearable data forwarding systems, the lightestwearable option, are suited to the frail and housebound asthey analyze the data in real-time and can raise immediatealerts. Data-logging wearables...
... CGGGGATCCGCATCGGAACAAAACAATAC BamHIrFnBPB37480 R AATCCCGGGTTACTTTAGTTTATCTTTGCCG SmaIrFnBPB163463F GGGGGATCCGGTACAGATGTAACAAATAAAG BamHIrFnBPB163463 R ATTCCCGGGTAATTTTTCCAAGTTAAATTACTTG SmaIrFnBPB163–308F ... GGGGGATCCGGTACAGATGTAACAAATAAAG BamHIrFnBPB163–308 R CTCCCCGGGCTATTGAATATTAAATATTTTGCTAA SmaIrFnBPB309–480F CCCGGATCCTATTTAGGTGGAGTTAGAGATAAT BamHIrFnBPB309–480 R AATCCCGGGTTACTTTAGTTTATCTTTGCCG ... SmaIrFnBPB163–480NF F GAATTATCTTTAGCTCTAGCTATTGATCCrFnBPB163–480NF F GGATCAATAGCTAGAGCTAAAGATAATTCFnBPB(–142–480)F GCAGAATTCGTCGGCTTGAAATACGCTG EcoRIFnBPB(–142–480) R AATGGATCCTTACTTTAGTTTATCTTTGCCG...
... penetrated along the easy pathway ofthe plains. South ofthe great granaries of North America and Eurasia the plains are broken, but occur again in the Orinoco region of South America and the Sahara ... continent of Antarctica, where it coalesces once more with the other great tetrahedral ridges of Africa and Australia. It is easy to see that these great cordilleras have turned most ofthe earth's ... more favored tracts in northern New England and southern Canada. Nevertheless most ofthe evergreen forests ofthe north must always remain the home of wild animals and trappers, a backward region...
... Henry Vane, son ofa baronet, had already gone toAmerica, and such men as Lord Saye and Sele, Lord Brooke, and Sir Arthur Haslerigg were thinking of migrating and had prepared a refuge at Saybrook ... was a university man, had made the grand tourofthe Continent, and was familiar withofficial traditions and the ways ofthe court. Soon after his arrival in England, he became a member of the Royal ... servants. A few were of the aristocracy, such as Lady Arabella Johnson, daughter ofthe Earl of Lincoln, Sir Richard Saltonstall,Lady Deborah Moody, members ofthe Harlakenden family, young Henry Vane,...
... architecture, narratives, language, ceremonies, and norms of behavior and symbols that are shared. All of them are tangible and audible results of activity that are grounded in values and assumptions. ... three levels of corporate culture. The highest one and also the visible part ofthe iceberg is artifact. At the surface, they are visible artifacts and observable behaviors – mission statement, ... a brief review ofthe development process and describe the cultural evaluation of quantitative and qualitative research study of theory, measurement of the CC need to be quantitative research...
... regardless of whetherthey were aware of their scale, and the creditors of the institution were able to pass the debts of the company to its acquirer. The financial systemis now aware ofthe dangers of ... mortgages to the GSEs. A second approach is to identify the mort-gages by borrower characteristics: The Board of Governors ofthe Federal Reserve System, the Office ofthe Comptroller ofthe Currency, ... were very much aligned. At everystage, profits could be made by providing assetswith characteristics that the buyer required, andproviding there was another buyer farther up the chain, the risk...
... assistance vary considerably across bilateral donors. Whereas some donors are still in the early stages of elaborating ICT strategies, others, for example, the Japan Bank for International ... 2002Chart 4: Bilateral Donors' Commitments for ICT InfrastructureJapanFranceGermanyUnited KingdomECCanadaAustraliaAustriaBelgiumDenmarkFinlandGreeceIrelandItalyLuxembourgNetherlandsNew ... Chart 3 illustrates the magnitude of DAC bilateral donor commitments to the ICT infrastructure in total values and as a share of DAC countries’ total bilateral sector allocable ODA. Over the...