scholarly journals Overview Of Additional Issue Of Shares And Debt In The Process Of Value Appraisal Of Shares And Planning Of Additional Issue Parameters

2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuriy V. Kozyr
Keyword(s):  
1998 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 6-7

Welcome to volume 4 (22) of Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School (MTMS)! In it you will find several new features as well as old favorites that have been a regular part of MTMS since its inception. Among these is the inclusion of one (20) additional issue. which increases to eight (23) the number of journals arriving in your mailbox this academic year. In addition, look for exciting articles about innovative classroom practices. professional development, and student learning to empower your teaching and energize your professional growth.


2021 ◽  
pp. 95-108
Author(s):  
Jonathan L. Kvanvig

In the last chapter, we got a glimpse of some difficulties faced by PBT. One issue is that of sustaining monotheism, and another is the issue of explaining the personhood of God. In this chapter, I want to press these points further, showing how they are related to an additional issue involving a proper understanding of contingency. We first outline the Creator Theology account of contingency and remind us of its parsimonious ontology of the divine. We then reveal the structure of Perfect Being Theology and how it culminates with an ontological argument. I then argue that this structure threatens ontological profligacy and, relatedly, invites suspicion about its understanding of contingency.


1989 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 33-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
LCDR John E. Deaton ◽  
Michael Barnes ◽  
Nancy Lindsey ◽  
Janettarose Greene ◽  
Jonathan Kern

During the upgrade of the F-14 to the F-14D, pilots have expressed their concerns regarding the obscuration of the forward field-of-view due to the new Head-up Display (HUD) supports in conjunction with preexisting windscreen bows. An additional issue involves the proposed use of the HUD as the primary flight reference instrument. The HUD pitch ladder has been criticized for not providing enough information to enhance recovery from unusual attitudes. The purpose of the present study was twofold: (1) to measure the levels of “target” detection with and without windscreen bows, and (2) to measure unusual attitude recovery performance using two different HUD pitch ladder formats. During simulated flight, 12 subjects were required to make visual detections of enemy aircraft with and without the bows. Subjects were also required to recover from various pitch/roll combinations. Removal of the bows improved target detection. Results of the obscuration study showed that in the first 5 seconds into the flight 80% of the targets were detected with bows off, while only 60% were detected with bows on. Evaluation of the two HUD pitch ladder formats revealed that, at severe negative pitch attitudes, there was a marked performance benefit with the Enhanced HUD vice the Standard HUD. Possible improvements in current HUD pitch ladder formats were suggested which would convey more cues to accurately and rapidly determine aircraft attitude.


Author(s):  
Yuan Lei

‘Humidification, Nebulization, and Gas Filtering’ describes the therapies, which, while not essential to ventilation, are frequently applied together with it. This chapter provides a comprehensive discussion of these devices, including the clinical needs for them and their operating principles, options, and common complications. It describes the composition and operating principle of active heated humidifiers. Artificial humidification brings with it the additional issue of circuit rainout, which may require that heated wires be added to the breathing circuit. The chapter includes a table for troubleshooting issues related to active humidification. Heat and moisture exchangers or HMEs, an alternative to humidifiers, are also discussed. Finally, the chapter turns to the use of in-line nebulizers or aerosol therapy. The chapter ends with a discussion of respiratory gas filtering, which, for all the benefit a bacteria filter brings, also introduce the risk of occlusion.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Darren Naish

The vastness of the vertebrate fossil record and its literature makes any effort to review it in entirety a difficult task; ‘a review’ is understood to be a work that discusses the evolution and diversity of a group, drawing in knowledge on taxonomy, morphology, ecology and distribution, with representative illustrations. Existing reviews of the entire vertebrate record have mostly been designed with teaching in mind and have focused on groups, trends and processes deemed of interest to students. As goes more specific reviews, some groups (Mesozoic dinosaurs in particular) are frequently reviewed; others are afflicted by their association with idiosyncratic authors, others have only been given partial treatment, and others are woefully under-represented. Biographical information on vertebrate palaeontologists themselves is scattered. An additional issue is that several excellent volumes (notably the Handbook volumes) are prohibitively expensive, rare or otherwise hard to obtain. Cenozoic fishes – in particular actinopterygians, the largest and richest vertebrate radiation – remain essentially untouched and it might not be obvious to non-specialists just how rich the fish record is. Indeed, an enormous number of lineages scarcely known to experts on modern fishes are present in the fossil record. The result of this skewed coverage is that both popular and technical perceptio n of the vertebrate fossil record is biased. Not only are there a huge number of groups that fail to attract students, a large number of research questions relevant to these groups remain un- or under-investigated because so few researchers are aware of their existence.


Author(s):  
Vassilis Bourdakis ◽  
Alex Deffner

One of the recent main problems in urban planning is to find ways in order to employ practical, very broad and commonly used theoretical principles such as participation. An additional issue is the exploitation of the possibilities of new technologies. The process of developing a flexible three-part (common core, public and planners) curriculum in the case of Agia Varvara (Athens, Greece) in the framework of the Leonardo project PICT (2002-2005) showed that ICT (Information Communication Technologies) can help in participation, mainly because it constitutes a relatively simple method of recording the views of both the public and the planners in a variety of subjects (both ‘open’ and ‘closed’).


Author(s):  
Fanny Forsberg Lundell ◽  
Christina Lindqvist

In her overview of research on the advanced L2 learner, Bartning (1997) aims at characterizing the advanced learner variety. This characterization is above all based on morphosyntactic traits. The aim of this contribution is to present additional characteristics of the advanced learner as defined by Bartning (1997), as well as to describe even more advanced levels based on recent research concerning spoken L2 French. More specifically, the main issue under investigation is whether two vocabulary measures, viz. lexical richness and lexical formulaic sequences, can be used to distinguish between different advanced levels and thus contribute to the characterization of the advanced learner of French. An additional issue investigated here is whether these two lexical aspects correlate with each other or whether they develop at different rates.


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