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Join us for skywatching!

May 31 at Jordan Lake State Park.




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Skywatching in December

Join us for Skywatching on Dec. 12 at Little River Regional Park and Dec. 13 at Jordan Lake




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The Gentlemen - Guy Ritchie

The Gentlemen
Guy Ritchie
Genre: Action & Adventure
Price: $14.99
Rental Price: $5.99
Release Date: January 24, 2020

Mickey Pearson is an American expatriate who became rich by building a marijuana empire in London. When word gets out that he's looking to cash out of the business, it soon triggers an array of plots and schemes from those who want his fortune.

© © 2020 STX Financing, LLC. All Rights Reserved.




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‘Guruvayur Devaswom donation subject to final outcome of cases’

Division Bench refers petition to Full Bench




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World coronavirus dispatch: How the wealth management industry is changing

From US-China talks to end trade deadlock, to FDA nod for Moderna drug's Phase-II trials, and an Amsterdam restaurant with 'quarantine greenhouses' - read these and more in today's world dispatch




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India coronavirus dispatch: Should healthcare be a fundamental right?

From the role of civil society in times of crises, to returning to the office, and why Bengaluru's migrant construction workers are marching home - read these and more in today's India dispatch




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Stretching DNA to twice the normal length with single-molecule hydrodynamic trapping

Lab Chip, 2020, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C9LC01028A, Paper
Open Access
Yan Jiang, Theodore Feldman, Julia A. M. Bakx, Darren Yang, Wesley P. Wong
High-speed hydrodynamic trapping enables combined surface-free force spectroscopy and fluorescence imaging of single DNA molecules at extreme forces.
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




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ECM-based microchannel for culturing in vitro vascular tissues with simultaneous perfusion and stretch

Lab Chip, 2020, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/D0LC00254B, Paper
Azusa Shimizu, Wei Huang Goh, Shun Itai, Michinao Hashimoto, Shigenori Miura, Hiroaki Onoe
A perfusable and stretchable gelatin-based microfluidic system that can apply both simultaneous fluidic shear stress and stretch stress to in vitro endothelial 3D tissues is presented.
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




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[ASAP] Matched Molecular Series Analysis for ADME Property Prediction

Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.0c00269




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Spirit on the move: Black women and Pentecostalism in Africa and the diaspora / edited by Judith Casselberry and Elizabeth A. Pritchard

Hayden Library - BR1644.3.S65 2019




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Race, religion, and politics: toward human rights in the United States / Stephanie Y. Mitchem, University of South Carolina

Dewey Library - BL2525.M575 2019




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Innate: how the wiring of our brains shapes who we are / Kevin J. Mitchell

Hayden Library - QP398.M58 2018




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A new companion to Malory / edited by Megan G. Leitch and Cory James Rushton

Hayden Library - PR2045.N48 2019




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Close reading with computers: textual scholarship, computational formalism, and David Mitchell's Cloud atlas / Martin Paul Eve

Online Resource




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Adapting Frankenstein: the monster's eternal lives in popular culture / edited by Dennis R. Cutchins and Dennis R. Perry

Dewey Library - PR5397.F73 A33 2018




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The witch who courted death / Maria Lewis

Hayden Library - PR9619.4.L49 W58 2018




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Frankenstein 200: the birth, life, and resurrection of Mary Shelley's monster / Rebecca Baumann ; photographs by Jody Mitchell

Dewey Library - PR5397.F73 B384 2018




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Does regularly drinking water prevent coronavirus infection? Here is the FactCheck

A claim that drinking water every 15 minutes may help prevent people from getting infected is false.




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Against the grain [electronic resource] : advances in postcolonial organization studies / Anshuman Prasad (editor)




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Immunotherapy drug improves outcomes for some children with relapsed leukemia

For children and young adults with certain relapsed B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL), the immunotherapy drug blinatumomab is superior to standard chemotherapy, an NCI-sponsored Children’s Oncology Group trial shows.




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[ASAP] Deciphering a Reaction Network for the Switchable Production of Tetrahydroquinoline or Quinoline with MOF-Supported Pd Tandem Catalysts

ACS Catalysis
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.0c00899




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The tower: a novel / Uwe Tellkamp ; translated by Mike Mitchell

Hayden Library - PT2682.E45 T694 2014




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Goethe: a very short introduction. / Ritchie Robertson

Hayden Library - PT2177.R654 2016




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Of all that ends / Günter Grass ; translated by Breon Mitchell

Hayden Library - PT2613.R338 V5813 2016




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Podcast: Building a portable drug factory, mapping yeast globally, and watching cliffs crumble

Online news editor David Grimm shares stories on yeasty hitchhikers, sunlight-induced rockfalls, and the tiniest gravity sensor.   Andrea Adamo joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss a revolutionary way of making drugs using a portable, on-demand, and reconfigurable drug factory.     [Image: Tom Evans]




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Podcast: Tracking rats in a city slum, the giraffe genome, and watching human evolution in action

Online News Editor David Grimm shares stories on finding clues to giraffes’ height in their genomes, evidence that humans are still evolving from massive genome projects, and studies that infect humans with diseases on purpose.  Warren Cornwall joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss an intense study of slum-dwelling rats. [Image: Mauricio Susin]




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Podcast: The rise of skeletons, species-blurring hybrids, and getting rightfully ditched by a taxi

This week we chat about why it’s hard to get a taxi to nowhere, why bones came onto the scene some 550 million years ago, and how targeting bacteria’s predilection for iron might make better vaccines, with Online News Editor Catherine Matacic. Plus, Science’s Alexa Billow talks with news writer Elizabeth Pennisi about the way hybrids muck up the concept of species and turn the evolutionary tree into a tangled web.   Listen to previous podcasts   [Image:  Raul González Alegría; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




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Podcast: Watching shoes untie, Cassini’s last dive through the breath of a cryovolcano, and how human bias influences machine learning

This week, walk like an elephant—very far, with seeds in your guts, Cassini’s mission to Saturn wraps up with news on the habitability of its icy moon Enceladus, and how our shoes manage to untie themselves with Online News Editor David Grimm. Aylin Caliskan joins Sarah Crespi to discuss how biases in our writing may be perpetuated by the machines that learn from them. Listen to previous podcasts. Download the show transcript. Transcripts courtesy of Scribie.com. [Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




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Sketching suspects with DNA, and using light to find Zika-infected mosquitoes

DNA fingerprinting has been used to link people to crimes for decades, by matching DNA from a crime scene to DNA extracted from a suspect. Now, investigators are using other parts of the genome—such as markers for hair and eye color—to help rule people in and out as suspects. Staff Writer Gretchen Vogel talks with Sarah Crespi about whether science supports this approach and how different countries are dealing with this new type of evidence. Sarah also talks with Jill Fernandes of the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia, about her Science Advances paper on a light-based technique for detecting Zika in mosquitoes. Instead of grinding up the bug and extracting Zika DNA, her group shines near-infrared light through the body. Mosquitoes carrying Zika transmit this light differently from uninfected ones. If it’s successful in larger trials, this technique could make large-scale surveillance of infected mosquitoes quicker and less expensive. In our monthly books segment, Jen Golbeck talks with author Sarah-Jayne Blakemore about her new work: Inventing Ourselves: The Secret Life of the Teenage Brain. You can check out more book reviews and share your thoughts on the Books et al. blog. This week’s episode was edited by Podigy. Listen to previous podcasts. [Image: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




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The South Pole’s IceCube detector catches a ghostly particle from deep space, and how rice knows to grow when submerged

A detection of a single neutrino at the 1-square-kilometer IceCube detector in Antarctica may signal the beginning of “neutrino astronomy.” The neutral, almost massless particle left its trail of debris in the ice last September, and its source was picked out of the sky by the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope soon thereafter. Science News Writer Daniel Clery joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss the blazar fingered as the source and how neutrinos from this gigantic matter-gobbling black hole could help astronomers learn more about mysterious high-energy cosmic rays that occasionally shriek toward Earth. Read the research. Sarah also talks with Cornell University’s Susan McCouch about her team’s work on deep-water rice. Rice can survive flooding by fast internodal growth—basically a quick growth spurt that raises its leaves above water. But this growth only occurs in prolonged, deep flooding. How do these plants know they are submerged and how much to grow? Sarah and Susan discuss the mechanisms involved and where they originated. This week’s episode was edited by Podigy. Download a transcript of this episode (PDF) Listen to previous podcasts. [Image: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




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Will a radical open-access proposal catch on, and quantifying the most deadly period of the Holocaust

Plan S, an initiative that requires participating research funders to immediately publish research in an open-access journal or repository, was announced in September 2018 by Science Europe with 11 participating agencies. Several others have signed on since the launch, but other funders and journal publishers have reservations. Host Meagan Cantwell speaks with Contributing Correspondent Tania Rabesandratana about those reservations and how Plan S is trying to change publishing practices and research culture at large. Some 1.7 million Jewish people were murdered by the Nazis in the 22 months of Operation Reinhard (1942–43) which aimed to eliminate all Jews in occupied Poland. But until now, the speed and totality of these murders were poorly understood. It turns out that about one-quarter of all Jews killed during the Holocaust were murdered in the autumn of 1942, during this operation. Meagan talks with Lewi Stone, a professor of biomathematics at Tel Aviv University in Israel and mathematical science at RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia, about this shocking kill rate, and why researchers are taking a quantitative approach to characterizing genocides. This week’s episode was edited by Podigy. Download the transcript (PDF) Listen to previous podcasts. About the Science Podcast [Image: Michael Beckwith; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




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Clues that the medieval plague swept into sub-Saharan Africa and evidence humans hunted and butchered giant ground sloths 12,000 years ago

New archaeological evidence suggests the same black plague that decimated Europe also took its toll on sub-Saharan Africa. Host Sarah Crespi talks with Contributing Correspondent Lizzie Wade about diverse medieval sub-Saharan cities that shrank or even disappeared around the same time the plague was stalking Europe. In a second archaeological story, Meagan Cantwell talks with Gustavo Politis, professor of archaeology at the National University of Central Buenos Aires and the National University of La Plata, about new radiocarbon dates for giant ground sloth remains found in the Argentine archaeological site Campo Laborde. The team’s new dates suggest humans hunted and butchered ground sloths in the late Pleistocene, about 12,500 years ago. This week’s episode was edited by Podigy. Download the transcript (PDF) Listen to previous podcasts. About the Science Podcast [Image: Ife-Sungbo Archaeological Project; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




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Creating chimeras for organ transplants and how bats switch between their eyes and ears on the wing

Researchers have been making animal embryos from two different species, so-called “chimeras,” for years, by introducing stem cells from one species into a very early embryo of another species. The ultimate goal is to coax the foreign cells into forming an organ for transplantation. But questions abound: Can evolutionarily distant animals, like pigs and humans, be mixed together to produce such organs? Or could species closely related to us, like chimps and macaques, stand in for tests with human cells? Staff Writer Kelly Servick joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss the research, the regulations, and the growing ethical debate. Also this week, Sarah talks with Yossi Yovel of the School of Zoology and the Sagol School of Neuroscience at Tel Aviv University in Israel about his work on sensory integration in bats. Writing in Science Advances, he and his colleagues show through several clever experiments when bats switch between echolocation and vision. Yossi and Sarah discuss how these trade-offs in bats can inform larger questions about our own perception. For our monthly books segment, Science books editor Valerie Thompson talks with Lucy Jones of the Seismological Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena about a song she created, based on 130 years of temperature data, for an instrument called the “viola de gamba.” Read more on the Books et al. blog. Download a transcript (PDF) This week’s episode was edited by Podigy. Ads on the show: MagellanTV; KiwiCo Listen to previous podcasts. About the Science Podcast [Image: The Legend Kay/Flickr; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




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Areas to watch in 2020, and how carnivorous plants evolved impressive traps

We start our first episode of the new year looking at future trends in policy and research with host Joel Goldberg and several Science News writers. Jeffrey Mervis discusses upcoming policy changes, Kelly Servick gives a rundown of areas to watch in the life sciences, and Ann Gibbons talks about potential advances in ancient proteins and DNA. In research news, host Meagan Cantwell talks with Beatriz Pinto-Goncalves, a postdoctoral researcher at the John Innes Centre, about carnivorous plant traps. Through understanding the mechanisms that create these traps, Pinto-Goncalves and colleagues elucidate what this could mean for how they emerged in the evolutionary history of plants. This week’s episode was edited by Podigy. Ads on this week’s show: KiwiCo Download a transcript (PDF) Listen to previous podcasts. About the Science Podcast  




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Product :: Apple Watch Book, The: Master the most personal computer in your life




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Product :: Build watchOS Apps: Develop and Design




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The Canada-US border in the 21st century [electronic resource] : trade, immigration and security in the age of Trump / John B. Sutcliffe and William P. Anderson.

Abingdon, Oxon : Routledge, 2019.




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Java : an introduction to problem solving & programming / Walter Savitch (University of California, San Diego) ; contributor, Kenrick Mock (University of Alaska Anchorage)

Savitch, Walter J., 1943- author




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Principles of electronic materials and devices / S.O. Kasap (University of Saskatchewan, Canada)

Kasap, S. O. (Safa O.), author




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ITC’s (GST/HST) – Beyond the Basics

One of the objectives of a value-added tax system is to simplify the administration of taxes, and this is accomplished by taxing almost everything and everyone, but allowing input tax credits (ITCs) for those who are not considered to be the final consumer of supplies. While many accounting and finance professionals understand the basic rules for claiming ITCs for GST/HST paid on property and services acquired in relation to an organization’s commercial activities, few have the time to explore some of the more complex issues associated with ITCs.  

Available Sessions for this Seminar:

March 04, 2015 12:00 PM - 2:00 PM EST




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'F1 season likely to hit glitch'

'If we want to go to Asia, or America, I think it's going to be when we get on planes and have to fly overseas where I think the risk will start to potentially get greater.'




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Tunnels and underground cities: engineering and innovation meet archaeology, architecture and art. Proceedings of the WTC 2019 ITA-AITES World Tunnel Congress (WTC 2019), May 3-9, 2019, Naples, Italy / editors, Daniele Peila, Giulia Viggiani, Tarcisio Cel

Online Resource




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A nation on the line: call centers as postcolonial predicaments in the Philippines / Fan M. Padios

Barker Library - HE8789.P6 P33 2018




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Phrarātchadamrat læ sunthō̜nphot top Phō̜.Sō̜. 2493-2531 = Royal addresses of welcome and reply speeches [1954-1988]




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Phrarātchadamrat læ sunthō̜nphot top Phō̜.Sō̜. 2533-2552 = Royal addresses of welcome and reply speeches [1990-2009]




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A concise history of India / Barbara D. Metcalf and Thomas R. Metcalf

Metcalf, Barbara Daly, 1941-




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Postcolonial interruptions, unauthorised modernities / Iain Chambers

Chambers, Iain, author




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Iran without borders : towards a critique of the postcolonial nation / Hamid Dabashi

Dabashi, Hamid, 1951- author




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Hawkesbury River saga : ships, shipbuilders, wrecks, piracy, native forays, smuggling, larceny, floods, etc. / by Charles Swancott

Swancott, Charles




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The Oxford handbook of Greek and Roman coinage / edited by William E. Metcalf