sho

Churches Should Not Be the First to Reopen

The demographics of many US congregations make sanctuaries a risky place for gatherings to resume.




sho

Construction and analysis of safe, secure, and interoperable smart devices [electronic resource] : second international workshop, CASSIS 2005, Nice, France, March 8-11, 2005 : revised selected papers / Gilles Barthe [and others] (eds.)

Berlin ; New York : Springer, [2006]




sho

Construction and analysis of safe, secure, and interoperable smart devices [electronic resource] : international workshop, CASSIS 2004, Marseille, France, March 10-14, 2004 : revised selected papers / Gilles Barthe [and others] (eds.)

Berlin ; New York : Springer, [2005]




sho

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




sho

Talks with experts: No strategy, only want to show the glimpses, says Rahul

According to Congress sources, in the series of Rahul Gandhi's talks with experts, the will be a conversation with German virologist and several personalities from other fields on Covid-19




sho

Advanced 96-microtiter plate based bioelectrochemical platform reveals molecular short cut of electron flow in cytochrome P450 enzyme

Lab Chip, 2020, 20,1449-1460
DOI: 10.1039/C9LC01220F, Paper
Ronny Frank, Christoph Prönnecke, Ronny Azendorf, Heinz-Georg Jahnke, Annette G. Beck-Sickinger, Andrea A. Robitzki
We developed a novel 96-well microtiter plate based bioelectrochemical platform with a vertical divided cell three-electrode architecture and a 96-multipotentiostat to perform fully parallelised bioelectrocatalytic screenings on redox enzymes.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




sho

Bishops in flight: exile and displacement in late antiquity / Jennifer Barry

Online Resource




sho

Rhythms of religious ritual: the yearly cycles of Jews, Christians, and Muslims / Kathy Black with Bishop Kyrillos, Jonathan L. Friedmann and Tamar Frankiel, Hamid Mavani and Jihad Turk

Online Resource




sho

When bishops meet: an essay comparing Trent, Vatican I, and Vatican II / John W. O'Malley

Online Resource




sho

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




sho

To the ear and back again - advances in auditory biophysics: proceedings of the 13th Mechanics of Hearing Workshop: conference date, 19-24 June 2017: location, St Catharines, Canada / editors, Christopher Bergevin, Sunil Puria

Online Resource




sho

Sexual selection: a very short introduction / Marlene Zuk & Leigh W. Simmons

Hayden Library - QL761.Z849 2018




sho

Computational neuroscience: Second Latin American Workshop, LAWCN 2019, São João Del-Rei, Brazil, September 18-20, 2019, proceedings / Vinícius Rosa Cota, Dante Augusto Couto Barone, Diego Roberto Colombo Dias, Laila Cristina Moreira Dam

Online Resource




sho

Women centre stage: eight short plays by and about women.

Hayden Library - PR1246.W65 W66 2018




sho

The short plays / Harold Pinter ; with a foreword by Antonia Fraser

Lewis Library - PR6066.I53 A6 2018




sho

With no fresh content, broadcasters rely on old classics, web shows to entertain viewers

Confined to her home during the lockdown, Gwalior-based 37-year old Mansha Kasture is reliving childhood memories with her 8 year-old daughter, Mishika, watching Ramanand Sagar’s epic 'Ramayana' on DD National.




sho

Half of India's adolescents are either short, thin, overweight or obese, says NITI Aayog-UNICEF report

The new report reveals that almost all adolescents in India have unhealthy or poor diets. This is the main cause for all forms of malnutrition.




sho

Shojo Across Media [electronic resource]: Exploring "Girl" Practices in Contemporary Japan




sho

Sociology Short Cuts: Crime and Deviance : Part 3: Crimes of the Powerful [electronic resource]




sho

Sociology Short Cuts: Crime and Deviance : Part 2: Functions of Crime [electronic resource]




sho

Sociology Short Cuts: Crime and Deviance : Part 4: Gender and Crime [electronic resource]




sho

Sociology Short Cuts: Crime and Deviance : Part 6: Hate Crime [electronic resource]




sho

Sociology Short Cuts: Crime and Deviance : Part 1: Moral Panics [electronic resource]




sho

Sociology Short Cuts: Crime and Deviance : Part 5: Policing the Night [electronic resource]




sho

Sociology Short Cuts: Crime and Deviance : Part 7: Situational Crime Prevention [electronic resource]




sho

The study of levels from redox-active elements in cerebrospinal fluid of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients carrying disease-related gene mutations shows potential copper dyshomeostasis

Metallomics, 2020, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/D0MT00051E, Paper
Federica Violi, Nikolay Solovyev, Marco Vinceti, Jessica Mandrioli, Marianna Lucio, Bernhard Michalke
Gene-environment interaction is as a possible key factor in the development of ALS. The levels of redox species of Cu, Fe, and Mn were assessed in cerebrospinal fluid, showing a possible positive association between Cu and genetic ALS.
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




sho

Annual Report to the Nation: Overall cancer mortality continues to decline; Special section on adults ages 20 to 49 shows higher cancer incidence and mortality for women than men

The 2019 Annual Report to the Nation on the Status of Cancer finds overall cancer death rates continue to decline and cancer incidence dropped in men and remained stable in women. A special section reports on recent cancer trends in younger adults.




sho

Han yu shou bu dong zuo chang yong ci yan bian yan jiu : yi "Shi shuo xin yu" yu liao wei zhong xin / Xie Zhixiang zhu

Xie, Zhixiang, 1972- author




sho

Liu shou er tong de she hui xing fa zhan wen ti yu she hui zhi chi xi tong = Liushou ertong de shehuixing fazhan wenti yu shehui zhichi xitong / Chen Xu zhu bian




sho

Shōshō omuzukari no goyōsu / Takenaka Naoto

Takenaka, Naoto, 1956-




sho

Kenshō jūgun ianfu / Uesugi Chitoshi

Uesugi, Chitoshi,1927-




sho

Buraku jittai chōsa no shoshiteki kenkyū : kenkyū dainibu kingendai genjōhan kyōdō kenkyū hōkokusho / Sekai jinken mondai kenkyū sentā




sho

Testing efforts hit another hurdle as labs face shortage of VTMs

The latest bottleneck to confront the Indian healthcare system in scaling up molecular diagnostic testing for Covid-19 is shortage of tools and equipment needed to collect and transport samples called the viral transport mediums (VTM).




sho

Short of breath, Government to let in used ventilators

In a memorandum dated April 1, the ministry of environment, forest and climate change relaxed the import policy to facilitate use of second-hand ventilators by hospitals.




sho

As senior GPs, doctors of private hospitals sit at home, medical students run the Covid show in Mumbai

Resident doctors, MBBS students and those serving their bond are at the frontline in the fight against Covid-19 in the city as senior clinicians stay away from their duty, leaving the young team of medical professionals firefighting the crisis on their own.




sho

Yumna Kassab shortlisted for the 2020 Victorian Premier’s Literary Award for Fiction




sho

Four Giramondo authors shortlisted for the 2020 NSW Literary Awards




sho

Nowhere ending sky / Marlen Haushofer ; translated into English by Amanda Prantera

Hayden Library - PT2617.A425 H6513 2013




sho

Goethe: a very short introduction. / Ritchie Robertson

Hayden Library - PT2177.R654 2016




sho

Blackbirds in September: selected shorter poems / of Jürgen Becker ; translated by Okla Elliott

Hayden Library - PT2662.E293 A2 2015




sho

The Little Paris Bookshop: a novel / Nina George ; translated by Simon Pare

Hayden Library - PT2707.E59 L3813 2016




sho

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

Hayden Library - PT2671.E32 D813 2017




sho

The shocking predatory strike of the electric eel and a news roundup (5 December 2014)

Kenneth Catania takes a close look at how exactly electric eels stun their prey. Online news editor David Grimm brings stories on pushing back the earliest abstract art by a few millennia, how our primate ancestors handled their liquor, and murderous sea mammals. Hosted by Sarah Crespi. [Img: © Kenneth Catania]




sho

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]




sho

<i>Science</i>’s Breakthrough of the Year, our best online news, and science books for your shopping list

Dave Grimm—online news editor for Science—talks with Sarah Crespi about a few of this year’s top stories from our online news site, like ones on a major error in the monarch butterfly biological record and using massive balloons to build tunnels, and why they were chosen. Hint: It’s not just the stats. Sarah also interviews Staff Writer Adrian Cho about the 2017 Breakthrough of the Year. Adrian talks about why Science gave the nod to the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory team for a second year in a row—for the detection of a pair of merging neutron stars. Jen Golbeck is also back for the last book review segment of the year. She talks with Sarah about her first year on the show, her favorite books, what we should have covered, and some suggestions for books as gifts. Listen to previous podcasts. [Image: f99aq8ove/Flickr; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




sho

The places where HIV shows no sign of ending, and the parts of the human brain that are bigger—in bigger brains

Nigeria, Russia, and Florida seem like an odd set, but they all have one thing in common: growing caseloads of HIV. Science Staff Writer Jon Cohen joins host Sarah Crespi to talk about this week’s big read on how the fight against HIV/AIDS is evolving in these diverse locations. Sarah also talks with Armin Raznahan of the National Institute of Mental Health in Bethesda, Maryland, about his group’s work measuring which parts of the human brain are bigger in bigger brains. Adult human brains can vary as much as two times in size—and until now this expansion was thought to be evenly distributed. However, the team found that highly integrative regions are overrepresented in bigger brains, whereas regions related to processing incoming sensory information such as sight and sound tend to be underrepresented.  This week’s episode was edited by Podigy. Listen to previous podcasts. [Image: Misha Friedman; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




sho

Should we prioritize which endangered species to save, and why were chemists baffled by soot for so long?

We are in the middle of what some scientists are calling the sixth mass extinction and not all at-risk species can be saved. That’s causing some conservationists to say we need to start thinking about “species triage.” Meagan Cantwell interviews freelance journalist Warren Cornwall about his story on weighing the costs of saving Canada’s endangered caribou and the debate among conservationists on new approaches to conservation. And host Sarah Crespi interviews Hope Michelsen, a staff scientist at Sandia National Laboratories in Livermore, California, about mysterious origins of soot. The black dust has been around since fire itself, but researchers never knew how the high-energy environment of a flame can produce it—until now. Michelsen walks Sarah through the radical chemistry of soot formation—including its formation of free radicals—and discusses soot’s many roles in industry, the environment, and even interstellar space. Check out this useful graphic describing the soot inception process in the related commentary article. This week’s episode was edited by Podigy. Download a transcript of this episode (PDF) Listen to previous podcasts. About the Science Podcast [Image: Darren Bertram/Flickr; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




sho

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.




sho

Protests against opening of TASMAC shops

TIRUCHI Protests by public against opening of TASMAC liquor outlets were held at different places in the district on Friday.The protest by a group of




sho

'We should not think just about ourselves'

'Every morning, when I had to step out, my wife would cry.'