lma

Early childhood environment rating scale / Thelma Harms, Richard M. Clifford, Debby Cryer

Harms, Thelma




lma

Mathematical structuralism / Geoffrey Hellman, Stewart Shapiro

Hayden Library - QA8.4.H45 2019




lma

Parallel Processing and Applied Mathematics: 13th International Conference, PPAM 2019, Bialystok, Poland, September 8-11, 2019, Revised Selected Papers. / Roman Wyrzykowski, Ewa Deelman, Jack Dongarra, Konrad Karczewski, editors

Online Resource




lma

Parallel Processing and Applied Mathematics: 13th International Conference, PPAM 2019, Bialystok, Poland, September 8-11, 2019, Revised Selected Papers. / Roman Wyrzykowski, Ewa Deelman, Jack Dongarra, Konrad Karczewski, editors

Online Resource




lma

Relación de la causa de Juana María, mulata: esclava, mulata y hechicera: historia inquisitorial de una mujer novohispana del siglo XVIII / edición, Alma Leticia Mejía González

Online Resource




lma

Computational neuroscience: first Latin American Workshop, LAWCN 2017, Porto Alegre, Brazil, November 22-24, 2017, Proceedings / Dante Augusto Couto Barone, Eduardo Oliveira Teles, Christian Puhlmann Brackmann (eds.)

Online Resource




lma

Ducks, Newburyport / Lucy Ellmann

Dewey Library - PR6055.L54 D83 2019




lma

Bis(ethylmaltolato)oxidovanadium(IV) inhibited the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease in triple transgenic model mice

Metallomics, 2020, 12,474-490
DOI: 10.1039/C9MT00271E, Paper
Zhijun He, Shuangxue Han, Chong Wu, Lina Liu, Huazhang Zhu, Ang Liu, Qiying Lu, Jingqiang Huang, Xiubo Du, Nan Li, Qinguo Xie, Lu Wan, Jiazuan Ni, Lingling Chen, Xiaogai Yang, Qiong Liu
BEOV activates PPARγ to affect JAK2/STAT3/SOCS1 signaling and eventually prevents Aβ generation. Meanwhile, BEOV inactivates PTP1B to affect PI3K/Akt/GSK3β signaling and finally reduces tau hyperphosphorylation.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




lma

Correction: Bis(ethylmaltolato)oxidovanadium(IV) inhibited the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease in triple transgenic model mice

Metallomics, 2020, 12,631-631
DOI: 10.1039/D0MT90008G, Correction
Open Access
  This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.
Zhijun He, Shuangxue Han, Chong Wu, Lina Liu, Huazhang Zhu, Ang Liu, Qiying Lu, Jingqiang Huang, Xiubo Du, Nan Li, Qingguo Xie, Lu Wan, Jiazuan Ni, Lingling Chen, Xiaogai Yang, Qiong Liu
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




lma

F: a novel / Daniel Kehlmann ; translated from the German by Carol Janeway

Hayden Library - PT2671.E32 F2513 2014




lma

You should have left / Daniel Kehlmann ; translated from the German by Ross Benjamin

Hayden Library - PT2671.E32 D813 2017




lma

The mentor / Daniel Kehlmann ; translated by Christopher Hampton

Hayden Library - PT2671.E32 M46 2017




lma

Salman shoots a song at his Panvel farmhouse

After 'Pyar Karona', Salman Khan is all set to release his next song 'Tere Bina' featuring Jacqueline Fernandez. Salman along with Jacqueline, Walusha De Sousa, Aayush Sharma and more stranded at superstar's Panvel farmhouse.




lma

Here's Salman-Jacky's 2nd lockdown interview

After leaving the audience stunned with a beautiful track 'Pyaar Karona', Salman Khan is all set to release a new song which is titled as 'Tere Bina’, as he had promised to deliver two more songs to the audience.




lma

Topics in Statistical Simulation [electronic resource] : Research Papers from the 7th International Workshop on Statistical Simulation / edited by V.B. Melas, Stefania Mignani, Paola Monari, Luigi Salmaso

New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 2014




lma

Advances in computer graphics : 36th Computer Graphics International Conference, CGI 2019, Calgary, AB, Canada, June 17-20, 2019 : proceedings / Marina Gavrilova, Jian Chang, Nadia Magnenat Thalmann, Eckhard Hitzer, Hiroshi Ishikawa (eds.)

Computer Graphics International (36th : 2019 : Calgary, Alta)




lma

Cloud Computing - CLOUD 2019 : 12th International Conference, held as part of the Services Conference Federation, SCF 2019, San Diego, CA, USA, June 25-30, 2019 ; proceedings / Dilma Da Silva, Qingyang Wang, Liang-Jie Zhang (eds.)

CLOUD (Conference) (12th : 2019 : San Diego, Calif.)




lma

Structural analysis: skills for practice / James H. Hanson, PhD, PE, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology

Barker Library - TA645.H374 2019




lma

Maus : a survivor's tale / Art Spiegelman

Spiegelman, Art, author




lma

Modelling nature: an introduction to mathematical modelling of natural systems / Edward Gillman, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Nottingham, Michael Gillman, School of Life Sciences, University of Lincoln

Dewey Library - QH51.G55 2019




lma

Template-based fabrication of spatially organized 3D bioactive constructs using magnetic low-concentration gelation methacrylate (GelMA) microfibers

Soft Matter, 2020, 16,3902-3913
DOI: 10.1039/C9SM01945F, Paper
Tao Sun, Yibing Yao, Qing Shi, Huaping Wang, Paolo Dario, Junzhong Sun, Qiang Huang, Toshio Fukuda
A new template-based method to apply low-concentration GelMA microfibers as building blocks for higher-order cellular assembly.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




lma

Certain elements in Pak do not want normalcy in ties: Salman Khurshid

Khurshid made it clear that dialogue is the way forward to resolve issues.




lma

Data assimilation [electronic resource] : the ensemble Kalman filter / Geir Evensen

Berlin ; New York : Springer, [2007]




lma

Environmental science / G. Tyler Miller, Scott Spoolman

Miller, G. Tyler (George Tyler), 1931- author




lma

071 JSJ JavaScript Strategies at Microsoft with Scott Hanselman

Panel Scott Hanselman (twitter github blog) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Aaron Frost (twitter github blog) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 01:14 - Scott Hanselman Introduction Community Program Manager for Web Tools at Microsoft Azure and Web Tools ASP.NET Runtime 03:17 - Microsoft and JavaScript Microsoft Build Developer Conference Scott Hanselman: Angle Brackets, Curly Braces, One ASP.NET and the Cloud Json.NET 13:40 - The Cost of Web Development Tooling Sublime Text Visual Studio 18:17 - Libraries and Frameworks Knockout 24:14 - Innovation in Software Befunge 29:48 - Apps Supporting JavaScript Create your first Windows Store app using JavaScript (Windows) Visual Studio Express 34:14 - Windows and Internet Explorer Chakra 40:42 - Microsoft’s Attitude Towards JavaScript Scott Hanselman: Azure for the non-Microsoft Person - How and Why? 45:58 - Open Source 49:12 - asm.js 52:05 - Angle Brackets Conference Picks The Wolverine (Joe) ng-conf (Joe) Cancún (Aaron) @ngconf (Aaron) Wistia (Chuck) Mumford And Sons 'Hopeless Wanderer' Music Video (Scott) Beyoncé Joins the Short Hair Club (Scott) Next Week Screencasting: Sharing What You Know Through Video Transcript [Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at BlueBox.net.]  [This episode is sponsored by Component One, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to Wijmo.com and check them out.]  [This podcast is sponsored by JetBrains, makers of WebStorm. Whether you’re working with Node.js or building the front end of your web application, WebStorm is the tool for you. It has great code quality and code exploration tools and works with HTML5, Node, TypeScript, CoffeeScript, Harmony, LESS, Sass, Jade, JSLint, JSHint, and the Google Closure Compiler. Check it out at JetBrains.com/WebStorm.] CHUCK:  Hey everybody and welcome to Episode 71 the JavaScript Jabber show. This week on our panel, we have Joe Eames. JOE:  Hey. CHUCK:  Aaron Frost. AARON:  Hello. CHUCK:  I’m Charles Max Wood from DevChat.TV. And we have a special guest that is Scott Hanselman. SCOTT:  Hello. CHUCK:  Since you’re new to the show, do you want to introduce yourself really quickly? SCOTT:  My name is Scott Hanselman. You can learn more about me on the internet by googling for Scott. I’m in an epic battle right now with the Scott toilet paper people. You’ll find me just below Scott toilet tissue. I’ve been blogging for ten years. More than ten years, 13 years. I work at Microsoft right now. Before that I worked in finance at a company called Corillian that is now Fiserv. I’ve been building big systems on the web for as long as the web’s been around. CHUCK:  Wow. What do you do at Microsoft? SCOTT:  I work in Azure and Web Tools. I’m a program manager. I’m in charge of the experience from file new project until deployment. I call myself the PM of miscellaneous. I spend time going through that experience making sure that it doesn’t suck. My focus is on web tools but also ASP.NET Runtime and what the experience is when you deploy something into Azure. That might be everything from what’s it like editing JavaScript in Visual Studio and I’ll find some issue and go and work with the guys that own that, or it might be someone’s trying to do something in Node on Azure and that experience is not good. I’m like an ombudsman or a customer liaison. But the simplest way would be to say I’m the community PM, community program manager, for web tools at Microsoft. CHUCK:  Okay. AARON:  Cool. CHUCK:  So, is JavaScript your primary focus? SCOTT:  I would say that my primary focus is just anything that makes the web better and moves the web forward. While I work for ASP.NET and most of my work is in C#,




lma

074 JSJ Grunt with Ben Alman

Panel Ben Alman (twitter github blog) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Ryan Florence (twitter github blog) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 01:34 - Ben Alman Introduction Bocoup 02:54 - “Cowboy” Cowboy Coder 06:53 - The Birth of Grunt Ender make rake jake 14:34 - Installing Globally & Plugins JSHint grunt-cli lodash async 20:43 - Managing the project and releasing new versions 22:32 - What is Grunt? What does it do? jQuery libsass SASS stylus 26:39 - Processes & Building Features node-task guard grunt-contrib-watch node-prolog 35:29 - The Node Community and reluctance towards Grunt 41:35 - Why the separation of task loading and configuration? 46:18 - Contributions and Contributing to Grunt 55:18 - What Ben would have done differently building Grunt Ease of Upgrade Picks Web Components (Ryan) Eliminate Sarcasm (Ryan) Bee and PuppyCat (Jamison) MONOPRICE (AJ) AJ O'Neal: Moving to GruntJS (AJ) The Best Map Ever Made of America’s Racial Segregation (Chuck) Clean Off Your Desk (Chuck) Polygon (Ben) My Brother, My Brother and Me (Ben) Echofon (Ben) Bocoup (Ben) Next Week Maintainable JavaScript with Nicholas Zakas Transcript RYAN:  We’re potty training my son right now. So, I was up like eight times cleaning poo off of everything. [Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at BlueBox.net.]  [This episode is sponsored by Component One, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to Wijmo.com and check them out.]  [This podcast is sponsored by JetBrains, makers of WebStorm. Whether you’re working with Node.js or building the frontend of your web application, WebStorm is the tool for you. It has great code quality and code exploration tools and works with HTML5, Node, TypeScript, CoffeeScript, Harmony, LESS, Sass, Jade, JSLint, JSHint, and the Google Closure Compiler. Check it out at JetBrains.com/WebStorm.] CHUCK:  Hey everybody and welcome to episode 74 of the JavaScript Jabber Show. This week on our panel, we have AJ O’Neal. AJ:  I’m eating beef jerky. CHUCK:  Jamison Dance. JAMISON:  Hello. CHUCK:  We have a special guest. I guess you’re a guest in filling in for Merrick and Joe and that’s Ryan Florence. RYAN:  Hey, how’s it going? I don’t know if I can fill two shoes, but I will try. CHUCK:  Well, you have two feet, right? RYAN:  Okay. Well, that’s four shoes. CHUCK:  [Chuckles] I’m Charles Max Wood from DevChat.TV. We also have another special guest and that is Ben Alman. BEN:  Yo! What’s up, everyone? CHUCK:  So, do you want to introduce your self, Ben, since you haven’t been on the show before? BEN:  I’m Ben Alman. Oh, okay. [Laughter] AJ:  That’s not conceited. RYAN:  That’s really all he needs. BEN:  That’s it. The show’s over, roll credits. So yeah, I’m Ben. You can find me online as @cowboy on Twitter or GitHub and I’m at BenAlman.com. And if you Google me, I have finally got enough SEO juice to beat the other Ben Alman who’s the Orthopedic Surgeon for sick children in Canada. So screw you, guy who helps sick kids. [Laughter] BEN:  No, it’s cool. It’s cool, right? But for a while, I was like, “Damn this guy.” But I can’t do anything because he helps sick children. So there’s another Benjamin Alman out there doing things for society and me, I just code. So, I work at Bocoup. We’re at Bocoup.com. Our logo is a rooster, Bob the Rooster, and we make a lot of cool web and open web and open source stuff. And so, I do training there. I teach people JavaScript and jQuery. But I also work on open source tools. I spend a lot of my time, actually, behind the scenes in Node writing JavaScript, experimenting, R&D, writing tools, et cetera. CHUCK:  Awesome. So,




lma

120 JSJ Google Polymer with Rob Dodson and Eric Bidelman

The panelists talk to Rob Dodson and Eric Bidelman about the Google Polymer project and Google I/O.




lma

JSJ 332: “You Learned JavaScript, Now What?” with Chris Heilmann

Panel:

Special Guests: Chris Heilmann

In this episode, the panel talks with programmer, Chris Heilmann. He has written books about JavaScript, in addition to writing a blog about it and is an educator about this program.  He currently resides in Berlin, Germany. Let’s welcome our special guest and listen to today’s episode!

Show Topics:

2:19 – Chuck talks.

2:41 – Chris: He has talked about JavaScript in Berlin upon an invitation. You can get five different suggestions about how to use JavaScript. The best practices, I have found, are on the projects I am on now. JavaScript was built in ten days. My goal is to help people navigate through JavaScript and help them feel not disenfranchised. 

5:47 – Aimee: The overall theme is...

5:54 – Panelist: I really like what you said about helping people not feeling disenfranchised.

6:47 – Chris: There is a lot of peer pressure at peer conferences

7:30 – Aimee chimes in with some comments.

7:50: Chris: I think we need to hunt the person down that put...

8:03 – Panelist: A good point to that is, I try to avoid comments like, “Well, like we ALL know...”

8:27 – Chris: There are things NOT to say on stage. It happens, but we don’t want to say certain things while we are teaching people. We are building products with different groups, so keep that in mind.

9:40 – Aimee: My experience in doing this is that I have found it very rewarding to share embarrassing experiences that I’ve had. My advice would to tell people to let their guard down. It’s encouraging for me.

10:26 – Chris: It helps to show that you are vulnerable and show that you are still learning, too. We are all learning together. 90% of our job is communicating with others.

11:05 – Chuck: Now, I do want to ask this...

11:35 – Chris answers.

12:24 – What makes you say that? (Question to Chris)

12:25 – Chris answers.

13:55 – Chuck: The different systems out there are either widely distributed or...

You will have to work with other people. There is no way that people can make that on their own. If you can’t work with other people, then you are a hindrance.

14:31 – Aimee chimes in.

14:53 – Chris: They have to be very self-assured. I want to do things that are at the next level. Each developer has his or her own story. I want to move up the chain, so I want to make sure these developers are self-assured.

16:07 – Chris: Back to the article...

18:26 – Chuck: Yes, I agree. Why go and fight creating a whole system when it exists.

18:54 – Chris chimes in with some comments.

19:38 – Panelist: I still use console logs.

19:48 – Chris: We all do, but we have to...

19:55 – Aimee: In the past year, I can’t tell you how much I rely on this. Do I use Angular? Do I learn Vue? All those things that you can focus on – tools.

10:21 – Chris: We are talking about the ethics of interfaces. Good code is about accessibility, privacy and maintainability, among others. Everything else is sugar on top. We are building products for other people.

22:10 – Chuck: That is the interesting message in your post, and that you are saying: having a deep, solid knowledge of React (that is sort of a status thing...). It is other things that really do matter. It’s the impact we are having. It’s those things that will make the difference. Those things people will want to work with and solves their problems.

23:00 – Chris adds his comments. He talks about Flash.

24:05 – Chris: The librarian motto: “I don’t know everything, but I can look “here” to find the answer.” We don’t know everything.

24:31 – Aimee: Learn how to learn.

24:50 – Chris: There is a big gap in the market. Scratch is a cool tool and it’s these puzzle pieces you put together. It was hard for me to use that system. No, I don’t want to do that. But if you teach the kids these tools then that’s good. 

24:56 – Chuck: Here is the link, and all I had to do was write React components.

26:12 – Chris: My first laptop was 5x more heavy then this one is. Having access to the Internet is a blessing.

27:24 – Advertisement

28:21 – Chuck: Let’s bring this back around. If someone has gone through boot camp, you are recommending that they get use to know their editor, debugging, etc.

Chris: 28:47 – Chris: Yes, get involved within your community. GitHub. This is a community effort. You can help. Writing code from scratch is not that necessary anymore. Why rebuild something if it works. Why fix it if it’s not broken?

31:00 – Chuck talks about his experience.

31:13 – Chris continues his thoughts.

Chris: Start growing a community.

32:01 – Chuck: What ways can people get involved within their community?

32:13 – Chris: Meetup. There are a lot of opportunities out there. Just going online and seeing where the conferences

34:08 – Chris: It’s interesting when I coach people on public speaking. Sharing your knowledge and learning experience is great!

34:50 – Chuck: If they are learning how to code then...by interacting with people you can get closer to what you need/want.

35:30 – Chris continues this conversation.

35:49 – Chris: You can be the person that helps with x, y, z. Just by getting your name known then you can get a job offer.

36:23 – Chuck: How do you find out what is really good content – what’s worth your time vs. what’s not worth your time?

36:36 –Chris says, “That’s tricky!” Chris answers the question.

37:19: Chris: The best things out there right now is...

38:45 – Chuck: Anything else that people want to bring up?

39:00 – Chris continues to talk.

42:26 – Aimee adds in her thoughts.

Aimee: I would encourage people to...

43:00 – Chris continues the conversation.

Chris: Each project is different, when I build a web app is different then when I build a...

45:07 – Panelist: I agree. You talked about abstractions that don’t go away. You use abstractions in what you use. At some point, it’s safe to rly on this abstraction, but not this one. People may ask themselves: maybe CoffeeScript wasn’t the best thing for me.

46:11 – Chris comments and refers to jQuery.

48:58 – Chris continues the conversation.

Chris: I used to work on eight different projects and they worked on different interfaces. I learned about these different environments. This is the project we are now using, and this will like it for the end of time. This is where abstractions are the weird thing. What was the use of the abstraction if it doesn’t have longevity? I think we are building things too soon and too fast.

51:04 – Chris: When I work in browsers and come up with brand new stuff.

52:21 – Panelist: Your points are great, but there are some additional things we need to talk about. Let’s take jQuery as an example. There is a strong argument that if you misuse the browser...

53:45 – Chris: The main issue I have with jQuery is that people get an immediate satisfaction. What do we do besides this?

55:58 – Panelist asks Chris further questions.

56:25 – Chris answers.

Chris: There are highly frequent websites that aren’t being maintained and they aren’t maintainable anymore.

57:09 – Panelist: Prototypes were invented because...

57:51 – Chris: It’s a 20/20 thing.

58:04 – Panelist: Same thing can be said about the Y2K.

58:20 – Panelist: Yes, they had to solve that problem that day. The reality is...

58:44 – Chris: We learned from that whole experience.

1:00:51 – Chris: There was a lot of fluff around it.

1:01:35 – Panelist: Being able to see the future would be a very helpful thing.

1:01:43 – Chris continues the conversation.

1:02:44 – Chuck: How do people get ahold of you?

1:03:04 – Twitter is probably the best way.

1:03:32 – Let’s go to picks!

1:03:36 - Advertisement

Links:

Sponsors:

Picks :

Amiee

AJ

Joe

Charles

Chris




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MJS 114: Christian Heilmann

Sponsors

  • Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan

  • CacheFly

Host: Charles Max Wood

Joined By Special Guest: Christian Heilmann

Episode Summary

Christian is a Principal Software Development Engineer at Microsoft, working out of Berlin, Germany.

Links

Picks

Christian Heilmann:

Charles Max Wood:




lma

JSJ 404: Edge on Chromium with Chris Heilmann

Guests Chris heilmann and Zohair Ali are developers for Microsoft working on the Edge project. Today they are talking about Edge on Chromium and the future of developer tools. Edge will now be built in Chromium rather than being its own engine, aligning it more with what is being used on the open web right now. The Edge team wanted to seize the opportunity to bring something into the Chromium project based on the needs of real users and contribute to the open source web. Edge on Chromium won’t be limited to Windows 10 either, but will be available on Mac, Windows 7, and Windows 8. This project is still in beta with no set release date, so the Edge team is looking for people to test it out on Mac and tell them how it works. 

Chris and Zohair talk about the different parts of a web browser and what distinguishes Chrome from Chromium.  Chromium is not just a platform, it’s an entire browser that you can install. Google adds a bunch of Google services to Chromium, such as being able to sign into your Google account,  and that’s how you get Google Chrome. Similarly, the new Edge adds its own features on top of Chromium, so you can sign into your Microsoft account. By now the browser engines are so similar to each other that the users are looking for the user experience, interface, and services around it, so it made more sense for the Edge team to contribute to Chromium than to maintain their own engine and help it improve.

Chris and Zohair talk about some of the features in Edge on Chromium. One service they’re particularly excited about is the Collections feature, where you can drag images, text, etc into Collections and export it to Excel or Word. Collections was inspired by what users need, and they talk about some of the different use cases for it. The new Edge on Chromium will also have an IE mode for products that still require IE 11. If you define what services need IE 11, Edge will open an IE 11 tab within the browser so you will not have to jump between browsers. Unfortunately, this feature is only available on Windows. Edge on Chromium will also offer an integration with VS Code, called Elements for VS Code, which takes part of the developer tools from Edge and puts it inside VS Code. Since the tools are based on Chromium, it stays in the same context all the time so you don’t have to jump back and forth, and you can see the changes live in your browser. This feature is in beta right now and they are looking for people to test it. 

The Edge team talks about their process for creating tools. They are working on putting their tools into other languages so that they are accessible to more people. They talk about how they want to avoid creating Edge specific tools as much as possible because they want to make it better for everybody. One of their biggest struggles is everybody demands developer tools, but nobody wants to contribute, so they don’t have as much feedback and not as much outside contribution. That’s why they keep calling for people to try out the new Edge on Chromium and give them feedback. They want to make that change more transparent so that they build things that people want. They will have to make some of their own tools, but they make sure that they don’t have any third party dependencies. They mention that all Chrome extensions are compatible with Edge, so if it’s available in the Chrome webstore, you can add it to Edge, you just have to be sure to allow it. They talk about some of the testing tools available. The show concludes with a discussion of the fate of Chakra Node. 

Panelists

  • AJ O’Neal

  • Aimee Knight

  • Dan Shapir

  • Steve Edwards

With special guests: Chris Heilmann and Zohair Ali

Sponsors

Links

Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter

Picks

Aimee Knight:

Steve Edwards: 

Dan Shapir:

AJ O’Neal:

Chris Heilmann:

Zohair Ali:




lma

"The yellow wall-paper" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman [electronic resource] : a dual-text critical edition / edited by Shawn St. Jean

Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, 1860-1935




lma

Young Tel Aviv [electronic resource] : a tale of two cities / Anat Helman ; translated by Haim Watzman

Helman, Anat




lma

Living in the environment / G. Tyler Miller, Scott E. Spoolman

Miller, G. Tyler (George Tyler), 1931- author




lma

Microplastics in fisheries and aquaculture : status of knowledge on their occurrence and implications for aquatic organisms and food safety / Amy Lusher, Peter Hollman, and Jeremy Mendoza-Hill

Lusher, Amy, author




lma

The garb of being : embodiment and the pursuit of holiness in late ancient Christianity / Georgia Frank, Susan R Holman, and Andrew S. Jacobs, editors




lma

What is Agile? [electronic resource] / Andrew Stellman and Jennifer Greene

Stellman, Andrew, author




lma

Selma and the Liuzzo murder trials: the first modern civil rights convictions / by James P. Turner

Dewey Library - KF224.K7 T87 2018




lma

The World Bank policy for projects on international waterways: an historical and legal analysis / Salman M.A. Salman

Online Resource




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Ending the Civil War and consequences for Congress / edited by Paul Finkelman and Donald R. Kennon

Online Resource




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Notification concerning planned measures on shared watercourses: synergies between the Watercourses Convention and the World Bank policies and practice / Salman M.A. Salman

Dewey Library - K758.S25 2019




lma

Internet law: cases & problems / James Grimmelmann, Professor of Law, Cornell Tech and Cornell Law School

Dewey Library - KF390.5.C6 G75 2018




lma

Impeach: the case against Donald Trump / Neal Katyal with Sam Koppelman

Dewey Library - KF5076.T78 K38 2019




lma

Routledge handbook of modern Japanese history / edited by Sven Saaler and Christopher W.A. Szpilman




lma

Salman's legacy : the dilemmas of a new era in Saudi Arabia / Madawi Al-Rasheed (editor)




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The Java that never was : academic theories and political practices / edited by Hans Antlöv and Jörgen Hellman




lma

Ini Fenty [kit] : a story from Halmahera




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Cytokines, stress, and depression [electronic resource] / edited by Robert Dantzer, Emmanuelle E. Wollman, Raz Yirmiya

Boston, MA : Springer US, 1999




lma

Emerging investigator series: phosphorus recovery from municipal wastewater by adsorption on steelmaking slag preceding forward osmosis: an integrated process

Environ. Sci.: Water Res. Technol., 2020, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/D0EW00187B, Paper
Biplob Kumar Pramanik, Md. Aminul Islam, Muhammad Bilal Asif, Rajeev Roychand, Sagor Kumar Pramanik, Kalpit Shah, Muhammed Bhuiyan, Faisal Hai
Phosphorus is a critical non-renewable mineral essential for sustainable crop production.
To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




lma

etting tired of your friends [electronic resource] : the dynamics of venture capital relationships / Qianqian Du, Thomas F. Hellmann

Cambridge, Mass. : National Bureau of Economic Research, 2019




lma

Making green cities: concepts, challenges and practice / Jürgen Breuste, editor ; Martina Artmann, Cristian Ioja, Salman Qureshi, co-editors

Online Resource