Reports Required by Government Auditing Standards and OMB 2 CFR 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Au
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Economic Mission to the Republic of Indonesia 9 March - 13 March 2020 3 Index
Economic mission to the Republic of Indonesia 9 March - 13 March 2020 3 Index The Netherlands Foreword by Sigrid Kaag 7 HYDRODIESEL 89 FMO 125 Foreword by Hans de Boer 9 IDN Liveable Cities 90 Geesinknorba 126 Map of the Netherlands 13 Innovam 91 Holland Circular Hotspot 127 Introducing the Netherlands 14 LV Shipping & Transport 92 HyET Solar 128 Indonesia - the Netherlands 2020 16 MARIN | Maritime Research Hyva 129 Institute Netherlands 93 IHE Delft Institute for Water Ministry of Finance 94 Education 130 Naturalis Biodiversity Center 95 LeapFrog Waste Management 131 Company profiles Netherlands Maritime Technology 96 Machinefabriek Boessenkool 132 Agri & Food 21 Enraf-Nonius 54 Netherlands Water Partnership 97 MetaSus 133 Aeres Training Centre International 22 Erasmus MC, University Medical Port of Rotterdam 98 MVO Nederland 134 Agricultural Laboratory North- Center 55 Rabobank 99 Natural Resources & Technologies 135 Netherlands (ALNN) 23 Frans Seda Foundation 56 Rohill Engineering 100 Nazava Water Filters 136 Agriprom 24 HealthInc - Empowering Royal HaskoningDHV 101 Netherlands Water Partnership 137 Agriterra 25 entrepreneurs in Health 57 Royal IHC 102 Paqell 138 AsiAspire 26 Hospitainer 58 STC International 103 ROM 139 Capital 4 Development Partners 27 IDBH Senso 59 STC-NESTRA 104 Royal HaskoningDHV 140 Coolfinity 28 Incision Group 60 Sweco 105 The Great Bubble Barrier 141 CTC Group 29 Leiden University Medical Center 61 Teqplay 106 The Ocean Cleanup 142 East-West Seed 30 LifeSense Group 62 TOS | People & Ship Delivery 107 TNO 143 -
ACCESSIONS Compiled by Tessa Caroline, Assistant Director 746.432 ROB Roberts, Luise
ACCESSIONS Compiled by Tessa Caroline, Assistant Director 746.432 ROB Roberts, Luise. First knits.- BOOKS BOEKE Collins & Brown, 2005. Social Science Q 621.3893 WHI NON-FICTION Sosiale Wetenskap White, Paul. Crash course 746.44 COX home recording.- SMT, c2004. Cox, Ann. Sylintborduurwerk vir 305.892 SCHO beginners.- Lapa, 2004. VAKLEKTUUR 629.1331 BOD Schoenfeld, Gabriel. The return Boddington, David. Radio- 747 ADA of anti-Semitism.- Politico’s, General controlled model aircraft.- Adams, Heather. Designing a 2005. Algemeen Crowood P., 2004. home with wood.- Stewart, 306.36 BEY Tabori, 2004. 002.075 LAN Q 629.892 MAL Beyond the apartheid work- Q 747.94 ROM Lansky, Aaron. Outwitting his- Malone, Robert. Ultimate ro- place.- KwaZulu-Natal U.P., Rompilla, Ethel. Color for inte- tory.- Souvenir, 2005. bot.- Dorling Kindersley, 2004. 2005. rior design.- Abrams, 2005. 028.534 VAN 641.534 HAR 326.9762 HUF 751.73 GAN Van Patrys-hulle tot Hanna Harper, Sandy. The cool lunch- Huffman, Alan. Mississippi in Ganz, Nicholas. Graffiti world.- Hoekom: ’n gids tot die box.- Struik, 2004. Africa.- Gotham Bks., c2004. Thames, 2004. Afrikaanse kinder- en jeugboek.- Q 641.5638 STE 355.02 GRA Lapa, 2005. Steenkamp, Gabi. Sustained 778.5992 OZE Gray, Collin S. Another bloody Ozer, Jan. MyDVD 5 for Win- 070.4 ANS energy for kids.- Tafelberg, 2006. century.- Weidenfeld, 2005. dows.- Peachpit P., c2004. Ansell, Gwen. Introduction to Q 641.5638 STE 362.1969 HIV journalism.- Jacana, 2005. Steenkamp, Gabi. Volgehoue Q 779.9968 DOB HIV/AIDS and democratic energie vir kinders.- Tafelberg, Dobson, Richard Mark. Karoo governance in South Africa: illus- Philosophy and Psychology 2006. -
BMT CTN PROTOCOL 0201 Version 8.0 Study Chairperson
A Phase III Randomized, Multicenter Trial Comparing G-CSF Mobilized Peripheral Blood Stem Cell with Marrow Transplantation from HLA Compatible Unrelated Donors BMT CTN PROTOCOL 0201 Version 8.0 Study Chairperson Claudio Anasetti, M.D. 1 Protocol Team Colleen Allen 2 Stephanie J. Lee, M.D. 8 Paolo Anderlini, M.D. 3 Susan Leitman, M.D. 9 William Bensinger, M.D. 1 Brent Logan, Ph.D. 6 Michael R. Bishop, M.D. 4 Phyllis Mitchell, M.S. 10 Shelly Carter, Sc.D. 2 Scott D. Rowley, M.D. 11 Dennis L. Confer, M.D. 5 Edmund K. Waller, M.D., Ph.D. 12 Mary Horowitz, M.D., M.S. 6 Daniel Weisdorf, M.D. 13 Chatchada Karanes, M.D. 7 John R. Wingard, M.D. 14 Roberta J. King, M.P.H. 5 Sponsored by the National Institutes of Health National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute National Cancer Institute and the National Marrow Donor Program 1 Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center 7 City of Hope 2 The EMMES Corporation 8 Dana Farber Cancer Institute 3 M.D. Anderson Cancer Center 9 NIH Department of Transfusion Medicine 4 National Cancer Institute 10 National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute 5 National Marrow Donor Program 11 Hackensack University Medical Center 6 Center for International Blood and Marrow 12 Emory University Hospital Transplant Research, Medical College of 13 University of Minnesota Wisconsin 14 University of Florida, Shands Hospital BMT CLINICAL TRIALS NETWORK Core Study Participants: Non-Core Study Participants: City of Hope National Medical Center Baylor College of Medicine City of Hope Samaritan Baylor University Medical Center Dana Farber/Partners Cancer Center CancerCare Manitoba Duke University Medical Center Centre Hospitalier L’hotel Dieu de Quebec Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center CHA Hôpital L’Enfant – Jésus Hackensack University Medical Center (PBMTC) Emory University Hospital Karmanos Cancer Institute (PBMTC) Hackensack Univ Medical Center (Adults) Oregon Health Sciences University (CWRU/PBMTC) Hamilton Health Sciences Schneider Children's Hospital (PBMTC) Hôpital Maisonneuve – Rosemont St. -
August 2017 1
Minnesota Women’s Press, August 2017 1 Changing the Universe through Women’s Stories Body Awareness issue What do you love about your body? Jennifer Almanza: Midwife with a cause Lara Tate: Menopausal Superhero! Learning how to live and die Girls on the Run Women at the Fringe DAWN ROSSBACH DAWN AUGUST 2017 Volume 33, Issue 8 www.womenspress.com Are you ... 2 Minnesota Women’s Press, August 2017 Program Information Program Outcomes I have become more WHO? articulate in voicing my under- The Women In Leadership program is designed for you We welcome all women. Women who runWomen “standing of leadershipin and whyA seriesAreto of explore fouryou and retreats set your ... own for path companies, small businesses, manage de- I make the decisions I do. women seekingLearn how tonew use differences insight to create collective partments, or provide informal leadershipLeadership –WIL Participant • find benefit from these gatherings. wisdom. 20132018 PROGRAMProgram • Increase personal power and leadership integrity. WHEN? WIL is about finding your own leadership style and getting Develop a clear sense of personal purpose and vocation. Women In Leadership meets four times. • “the space and the time to reflect The three-day retreats • Gain momentum for personal transformation. for 2013 are held on: Bringingon what kind our of leader whole you selves into the world March 20-22: ARC could be. Not to make yourself • Learn how to create conditions for effective teamwork If you are into something else, but giving May 15-17: ARC and community. you the time to discover what July 17-19: Lutsen b Asking questions about identity, meaning and you have inside of yourself. -
Algol Türü Örten Çift Yildizlarin Işikölçüm Ve Tayf Gözlemleri
XVI. Ulusal Astronomi Kongresi ve V. Ulusal Öğrenci Astronomi Kongresi-2008, Çanakkale ALGOL TÜRÜ ÖRTEN ÇİFT YILDIZLARIN IŞIKÖLÇÜM VE TAYF GÖZLEMLERİ C. İBANOĞLU, S. EVREN, G. TAŞ, Ö. ÇAKIRLI, Z. BOZKURT, M. AFŞAR, E.SİPAHİ, H. A. DAL, O. ÖZDARCAN, D. Z. ÇAMURDAN, M. ÇAMURDAN Ege Üniversitesi, Astronomi ve Uzay Bilimleri Bölümü, 35100 Bornova İzmir Özet: Hipparcos uydusu ile keşfedilen 13 örten çift yıldızın ışıkölçüm ve tayf gözlemleri yapılmıştır. Örten çift olduğu daha önceden bilinen zonklayan yıldız bileşenli HD 172189 ve kuvvetli salma çizgileri gösteren disk yapılı AW Peg yıldızı da listeye alınmıştır. AW Peg’in ışıkölçüm verileri daha önce elde edildiğinden yalnızca tayf gözlemleri yapılmıştır. Seçilen yıldızlardan 14’ünün ışıkölçüm ve tayf gözlemleri iki yıl gibi kısa bir sürede bitirilmiştir. CP Psc sönük olduğundan tayfı alınamamıştır. Işıkölçüm gözlemleri Ege Üniversitesi Gözlemevi’nin 48, 40 ve 35 cm’lik teleskopları ile yapılmıştır. Üç kanallı hızlı ışıkölçeri, CCD kameralar ve UBV süzgeçleri kullanılmıştır. Tayf gözlemler Catania Astrofizik Gözlemevi’nin 91 cm, TÜBİTAK TUG’un 150 ve David Dunlap Gözlemevi’nin 188 cm’lik teleskopları ile yapılmıştır. UBV ışıkölçümleri standart düzeneğe dönüştürülmüş, renk- renk diyagramları ve yıldızlararası ortamın etkisinden bağımsız geniş-band Q-parametresi kullanılarak E(B-V) ve baş yıldızın etkin sıcaklığı Te belirlenmiştir. Bu sıcaklık yıldızın tayfı ile karşılaştırılmıştır. Işık eğrilerinin analizinde temel öğe olan baş yıldızın etkin sıcaklığı duyarlı olarak bulunduktan sonra ışık eğrileri ve dikine hız verileri ortak olarak analiz edilmiş, bileşen yıldızların temel öğeleri kütle, yarıçap, sıcaklık ve ışıtmaları bulumuştur. Yıldızların bulunan salt öğeleri kuramsal modellerle karşılaştırılmış, evrim durumları ortaya çıkartılmıştır. Bileşenlerin ışınımsal özellikleri ve yıldızlararası kızıllaşma değerleri kullanılarak uzaklıklar hesaplanmıştır. -
Abstracts of Extreme Solar Systems 4 (Reykjavik, Iceland)
Abstracts of Extreme Solar Systems 4 (Reykjavik, Iceland) American Astronomical Society August, 2019 100 — New Discoveries scope (JWST), as well as other large ground-based and space-based telescopes coming online in the next 100.01 — Review of TESS’s First Year Survey and two decades. Future Plans The status of the TESS mission as it completes its first year of survey operations in July 2019 will bere- George Ricker1 viewed. The opportunities enabled by TESS’s unique 1 Kavli Institute, MIT (Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States) lunar-resonant orbit for an extended mission lasting more than a decade will also be presented. Successfully launched in April 2018, NASA’s Tran- siting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) is well on its way to discovering thousands of exoplanets in orbit 100.02 — The Gemini Planet Imager Exoplanet Sur- around the brightest stars in the sky. During its ini- vey: Giant Planet and Brown Dwarf Demographics tial two-year survey mission, TESS will monitor more from 10-100 AU than 200,000 bright stars in the solar neighborhood at Eric Nielsen1; Robert De Rosa1; Bruce Macintosh1; a two minute cadence for drops in brightness caused Jason Wang2; Jean-Baptiste Ruffio1; Eugene Chiang3; by planetary transits. This first-ever spaceborne all- Mark Marley4; Didier Saumon5; Dmitry Savransky6; sky transit survey is identifying planets ranging in Daniel Fabrycky7; Quinn Konopacky8; Jennifer size from Earth-sized to gas giants, orbiting a wide Patience9; Vanessa Bailey10 variety of host stars, from cool M dwarfs to hot O/B 1 KIPAC, Stanford University (Stanford, California, United States) giants. 2 Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology TESS stars are typically 30–100 times brighter than (Pasadena, California, United States) those surveyed by the Kepler satellite; thus, TESS 3 Astronomy, California Institute of Technology (Pasadena, Califor- planets are proving far easier to characterize with nia, United States) follow-up observations than those from prior mis- 4 Astronomy, U.C. -
Astronomy Magazine 2011 Index Subject Index
Astronomy Magazine 2011 Index Subject Index A AAVSO (American Association of Variable Star Observers), 6:18, 44–47, 7:58, 10:11 Abell 35 (Sharpless 2-313) (planetary nebula), 10:70 Abell 85 (supernova remnant), 8:70 Abell 1656 (Coma galaxy cluster), 11:56 Abell 1689 (galaxy cluster), 3:23 Abell 2218 (galaxy cluster), 11:68 Abell 2744 (Pandora's Cluster) (galaxy cluster), 10:20 Abell catalog planetary nebulae, 6:50–53 Acheron Fossae (feature on Mars), 11:36 Adirondack Astronomy Retreat, 5:16 Adobe Photoshop software, 6:64 AKATSUKI orbiter, 4:19 AL (Astronomical League), 7:17, 8:50–51 albedo, 8:12 Alexhelios (moon of 216 Kleopatra), 6:18 Altair (star), 9:15 amateur astronomy change in construction of portable telescopes, 1:70–73 discovery of asteroids, 12:56–60 ten tips for, 1:68–69 American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO), 6:18, 44–47, 7:58, 10:11 American Astronomical Society decadal survey recommendations, 7:16 Lancelot M. Berkeley-New York Community Trust Prize for Meritorious Work in Astronomy, 3:19 Andromeda Galaxy (M31) image of, 11:26 stellar disks, 6:19 Antarctica, astronomical research in, 10:44–48 Antennae galaxies (NGC 4038 and NGC 4039), 11:32, 56 antimatter, 8:24–29 Antu Telescope, 11:37 APM 08279+5255 (quasar), 11:18 arcminutes, 10:51 arcseconds, 10:51 Arp 147 (galaxy pair), 6:19 Arp 188 (Tadpole Galaxy), 11:30 Arp 273 (galaxy pair), 11:65 Arp 299 (NGC 3690) (galaxy pair), 10:55–57 ARTEMIS spacecraft, 11:17 asteroid belt, origin of, 8:55 asteroids See also names of specific asteroids amateur discovery of, 12:62–63 -
Macrocosmo Nº33
HA MAIS DE DOIS ANOS DIFUNDINDO A ASTRONOMIA EM LÍNGUA PORTUGUESA K Y . v HE iniacroCOsmo.com SN 1808-0731 Ano III - Edição n° 33 - Agosto de 2006 * t i •■•'• bSÈlÈWW-'^Sif J fé . ’ ' w s » ws» ■ ' v> í- < • , -N V Í ’\ * ' "fc i 1 7 í l ! - 4 'T\ i V ■ }'- ■t i' ' % r ! ■ 7 ji; ■ 'Í t, ■ ,T $ -f . 3 j i A 'A ! : 1 l 4/ í o dia que o ceu explodiu! t \ Constelação de Andrômeda - Parte II Desnudando a princesa acorrentada £ Dicas Digitais: Softwares e afins, ATM, cursos online e publicações eletrônicas revista macroCOSMO .com Ano III - Edição n° 33 - Agosto de I2006 Editorial Além da órbita de Marte está o cinturão de asteróides, uma região povoada com Redação o material que restou da formação do Sistema Solar. Longe de serem chamados como simples pedras espaciais, os asteróides são objetos rochosos e/ou metálicos, [email protected] sem atmosfera, que estão em órbita do Sol, mas são pequenos demais para serem considerados como planetas. Até agora já foram descobertos mais de 70 Diretor Editor Chefe mil asteróides, a maior parte situados no cinturão de asteróides entre as órbitas Hemerson Brandão de Marte e Júpiter. [email protected] Além desse cinturão podemos encontrar pequenos grupos de asteróides isolados chamados de Troianos que compartilham a mesma órbita de Júpiter. Existem Editora Científica também aqueles que possuem órbitas livres, como é o caso de Hidalgo, Apolo e Walkiria Schulz Ícaro. [email protected] Quando um desses asteróides cruza a nossa órbita temos as crateras de impacto. A maior cratera visível de nosso planeta é a Meteor Crater, com cerca de 1 km de Diagramadores diâmetro e 600 metros de profundidade. -
D D M M Y Y D D M M Y Y This Form Is Produced by the Human
Following MST, the eggs containing your mitochondria will be fertilised with the intended This form is produced by the Human father’s (or a donor’s) sperm to create embryos Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA), which will be used in the intended mother's the UK’s independent regulator of fertility treatment. This means that the intended mother, treatment and human embryo research. For not you, will be the genetic parent of any child more information about us, visit that is born. www.hfea.gov.uk. In PNT, your eggs will be fertilised with the intended father’s (or a donor’s) sperm to create Fill in this form if you are donating eggs and/or embryos. The nuclear genetic material within embryos created with your eggs for use in these embryos will then be removed and another person’s mitochondrial donation discarded. It will be replaced with the nuclear treatment so that they can avoid passing on genetic material removed from embryos created inheritable mitochondrial diseases to their using the intended mother’s eggs and father’s children. (or donor’s) sperm. This means that they, not you, will be the genetic parents of the child. If you’re unsure of anything, please ask your clinic for more information. You will be donating eggs (containing your mitochondria) to women who have mitochondria containing gene abnormalities, for use in IVF- based treatment so that they can avoid passing Before you fill in this form, you should have on an inheritable mitochondrial disease to their completed the ‘Mitochondrial Donor Registration child. -
Hydrogen Subordinate Line Emission at the Epoch of Cosmological Recombination M
Astronomy Reports, Vol. 47, No. 9, 2003, pp. 709–716. Translated from Astronomicheski˘ı Zhurnal, Vol. 80, No. 9, 2003, pp. 771–779. Original Russian Text Copyright c 2003 by Burgin. Hydrogen Subordinate Line Emission at the Epoch of Cosmological Recombination M. S. Burgin Astro Space Center, Lebedev Physical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Profsoyuznaya ul. 84/32, Moscow, 117997 Russia Received December 10, 2002; in final form, March 14, 2003 Abstract—The balance equations for the quasi-stationary recombination of hydrogen plasma in a black- body radiation field are solved. The deviations of the excited level populations from equilibrium are computed and the rates of uncompensated line transitions determined. The expressions obtained are stable for computations of arbitrarily small deviations from equilibrium. The average number of photons emitted in hydrogen lines per irreversible recombination is computed for plasma parameters corresponding to the epoch of cosmological recombination. c 2003 MAIK “Nauka/Interperiodica”. 1. INTRODUCTION of this decay is responsible for the appreciable differ- When the cosmological expansion of the Universe ence between the actual degree of ionization and the lowered the temperature sufficiently, the initially ion- value correspondingto the Saha –Boltzmann equi- ized hydrogen recombined. According to [1, 2], an librium. A detailed analysis of processes affectingthe appreciable fraction of the photons emitted at that recombination rate and computations of the temporal time in subordinate lines survive to the present, lead- behavior of the degree of ionization for various sce- ingto the appearance of spectral lines in the cosmic narios for the cosmological expansion are presented background (relict) radiation. Measurements of the in [5, 6]. -
Introduction
JFIXXX10.1177/0192513X14563795Journal of Family IssuesHertz and Nelson 563795research-article2014 Article Journal of Family Issues 1 –14 Introduction © The Author(s) 2014 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav DOI: 10.1177/0192513X14563795 jfi.sagepub.com Rosanna Hertz1 and Margaret Nelson2 Keywords assisted reproduction technology, biotechnology, biomedicalization, kinship, family Almost four decades after the first IVF (in vitro fertilization) baby, the new complexities of reproduction have galvanized the attention of a broad range of scholars. These scholars have analyzed how developments in the realm of assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs) intersect with existing notions of relatedness to create new understandings of who is kin. These scholars also explore issues related to new kinds of equalities and inequalities created through the intertwining of biomedicine, technology and science, the expan- sion of the Internet, the commercialization of gametes and surrogacy, and the global involvement of capital. And these scholars raise the profound moral uncertainties produced by these same developments. This interdisciplinary volume touches on each of these three issues. It is an outgrowth of a special session of the American Sociological Association in San Francisco, August 2014. That session, “Biogenetics, New Reproductive Technologies and the Creation of New Kinship,” included some of the key scholars in different fields whose work is at the cutting edge of the intersec- tions among the polity, the economy, technology, and family. These scholars approach the issues of kinship, inequalities, and moral complexities with some similar lenses and some quite different ones. The excitement generated through the complementary analyses provided the impetus for bringing them together in print. -
November 2018 Authority Papers and Agenda.Pdf
Authority meeting - agenda 14 November 2018, Church House, Deans Yard Westminster, London SW1P 3NZ Agenda item Time 1. Welcome, apologies and declaration of interests 12.45pm 2. Minutes of 12 September 2018 Authority meeting 12.50pm HFEA (14/11/18) 893 For decision 3. Chair’s report (verbal) 12.55pm 4. Chief Executive’s report (verbal) 1.05pm 5. Committee chairs’ reports (verbal) 1.15pm 6. Performance report 1.25pm HFEA (14/11/18) 894 For information 7. National patient survey 1:35pm HFEA (14/11/18) 895 For information 8. Draft business plan 2019-2020 2:20pm HFEA (14/11/18) 896 For decision Break 2:40pm 9. Donor conceived register 2:50pm HFEA (14/11/18) 897 For decision 10. Strategic risk register 3.25pm HFEA (14/11/18) 898 For decision 11. Consensus statement on treatment add-ons 3.40pm HFEA (14/11/18) 899 For Information 12. Any other business 3:55pm 13. Close 4:00pm Minutes of Authority meeting 12 September 2018 Strategic delivery: ☐ Safe, ethical ☐ Consistent ☐ Improving standards effective outcomes and through intelligence treatment support Details: Meeting Authority Agenda item 2 Paper number HFEA (14/11/18) 893 Meeting date 14 November 2018 Author Catherine Burwood, Senior Governance Manager Output: For information or For decision decision? Recommendation Members are asked to confirm the minutes as a true and accurate record of the meeting. Resource implications Implementation date Communication(s) Organisational risk ☒ Low ☐ Medium ☐ High Annexes Minutes of Authority meeting 12 September 2018 Human Fertilisation and Embryology