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Installing Chevy & GM Engines in TJ / LJ W Rangler
Introduction Individuals have been successfully installing popular Chev- rolet and GM engines to Jeep vehicles since the 1960’s. The Jeep TJ is certainly more sophisticated than their early CJ predecessors, but the swaps can actually be even more successful. Below is a summary of the information we’ve gathered since our first TJ conversion in 2000, and in- cludes the valuable insight of our many customers gained during their installs. The Novak Guide to Despite whatever your experience with this type of work may be, we strongly advise you to read these instructions well. Contained in these instructions are the requirements, tips, hints and tricks of years of performing these conversions, both in our own facility and information we’ve gained from discussing these swaps with our customers. Put this information to good use. Failure to implement the practices and information in these pages may jeopardize the quality of your work, as well as the product warranty. About Your Engine Mounts Novak’s bolt-in / weld-in engine mounts for the Jeep TJ & LJ Wranglers provide immense strength and a rapid and pre- cise GM V6 & V8 engine installation. Ease of Installation Of the four styles of engine mounts discussed in this instruction guide, we have sought the greatest ease of installation achievable with each of them without compromising engineering. Strength The Novak mounts feature a thick 3/16 steel construc- tion and a welded box design for the maximum strength available. They employ the best engineering and geometry to assure that they’ll survive even the wildest of engines. -
On Kernels, Β-Graphs, and Β-Graph Sequences of Digraphs Kevin D
On Kernels, b-graphs, and b-graph Sequences of Digraphs By Kevin D. Adams Submitted to the Department of Mathematics and the Graduate Faculty of the University of Kansas in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Margaret Bayer, Chairperson Committee members Jeremy Martin Yunfeng Jiang Date defended: 5-1-2015 The Master’s Thesis Committee for Kevin D. Adams certifies that this is the approved version of the following master’s thesis : On Kernels, b-graphs, and b-graph Sequences of Digraphs Margaret Bayer, Chairperson Date approved: 5-1-2015 ii Abstract We begin by investigating some conditions determining the existence of kernels in various classes of directed graphs, most notably in oriented trees, grid graphs, and oriented cycles. The question of uniqueness of these kernels is also handled. Attention is then shifted to g-graphs, structures associated to the minimum dominating sets of undirected graphs. I define the b-graph of a given digraph analogously, involving the minimum absorbant sets. Finally, attention is given to iterative construction of b- graphs, with an attempt to characterize for what classes of digraphs these b-sequences terminate. iii Acknowledgements I would like to thank my advisor Professor Marge Bayer for her patience and guid- ance, as well as my committee members Professors Jeremy Martin and Yunfeng Jiang for teaching me some very interesting algebra and combinatorics. Thanks to all of the professors from whom I’ve learned so very much during my time at KU. Thank you to my lovely fiancée Elise for her constant support and encouragement, even across long distances. -
Acquisition of L2 Phonology – Spanish Meets Croatian
ACQUISITION OF L2 PHONOLOGY – SPANISH MEETS CROATIAN Maša Musulin University of Zagreb Article History: Submitted: 10.06.2015 Accepted: 08.08.2015 Abstract: The phoneme is conceived as a mental image that is stored in our mind and then represented by sounds in speech and graphemes in writing for phonologically based alphabets. The acquisition of L2 phonology includes two very important skills – reading and writing. The information stored in the mind of a speaker interferes with new information produced by the L2 (Robinson, Ellis 2008; Nathan, 2008). What is similar or equal in the target language to one's native language is, while unknown, incorporated one way or another into an existing model, based on prototypicality (Pompeian, 2004, Moreno Fernández, 2010). The process of teaching the sounds, letters and alphabet to foreign students is much shorter than for native speakers because to a foreign student must be given a tool for writing as soon as possible as they have to write what they are learning and memorize new language units (Celce-Murcia, Brinton, Goodwin, 1996). This paper discusses one type of difficulties Spanish learners of Croatian as L2 face when they are introduced to phonology through letters which represent Croatian sounds in order to display the influence of their preexisting phonological concepts. The subjects are ten students from Spain and Latin America. Their task was to read a group of words containing sounds that were predictably hard for them, minimal pairs and a short text. Keywords: phoneme, grapheme, letter, phonological awareness, foreign language 1. INTRODUCTION As literacy has a big impact on phonological awareness in languages with phonological writing, the graphemes that represent the phonemes, including letters, make an integral part of their mental image. -
A Stochastic Approach to “Dynamic-Demand” Refrigerator Control David Angeli, Senior Member, IEEE, and Panagiotis-Aristidis Kountouriotis
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON CONTROL SYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY, VOL. 20, NO. 3, MAY 2012 581 A Stochastic Approach to “Dynamic-Demand” Refrigerator Control David Angeli, Senior Member, IEEE, and Panagiotis-Aristidis Kountouriotis Abstract—Dynamic demand management is a very promising In order for such (supply) regulation to be possible, however, research direction for improving power system resilience. This it is required that “frequency response services”, as well as suffi- paper considers the problem of managing power consumption by cient reserves, are included in the system.1 This is essential not means of “smart” thermostatic control of domestic refrigerators. In this approach, the operating temperature of these appliances only for instantaneous frequency balancing, but, more impor- and thus their energy consumption, is modified dynamically, tantly, for the ability to respond to sudden power plant failures, within a safe range, in response to mains frequency fluctuations. which would otherwise lead to severe blackouts. Previous research has highlighted the potential of this idea for From an economic perspective, frequency response services responding to sudden power plant outages. However, deterministic and reserve power are costly and any method which manages control schemes have proved inadequate as individual appliances tend to “synchronize” with each other, leading to unacceptable to reduce the magnitude of these services, without sacrificing levels of overshoot in energy demand, when they “recover” their system stability, is of significant importance [16]. In recent steady-state operating cycles. In this paper we design decentral- years, research has been initiated on the possibility of using ized random controllers that are able to respond to sudden plant frequency responsive loads, commonly referred to as “dynamic outages and which avoid the instability phenomena associated demand control”, so as to reduce the amount of frequency with other feedback strategies. -
Alphabets, Letters and Diacritics in European Languages (As They Appear in Geography)
1 Vigleik Leira (Norway): [email protected] Alphabets, Letters and Diacritics in European Languages (as they appear in Geography) To the best of my knowledge English seems to be the only language which makes use of a "clean" Latin alphabet, i.d. there is no use of diacritics or special letters of any kind. All the other languages based on Latin letters employ, to a larger or lesser degree, some diacritics and/or some special letters. The survey below is purely literal. It has nothing to say on the pronunciation of the different letters. Information on the phonetic/phonemic values of the graphic entities must be sought elsewhere, in language specific descriptions. The 26 letters a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, l, m, n, o, p, q, r, s, t, u, v, w, x, y, z may be considered the standard European alphabet. In this article the word diacritic is used with this meaning: any sign placed above, through or below a standard letter (among the 26 given above); disregarding the cases where the resulting letter (e.g. å in Norwegian) is considered an ordinary letter in the alphabet of the language where it is used. Albanian The alphabet (36 letters): a, b, c, ç, d, dh, e, ë, f, g, gj, h, i, j, k, l, ll, m, n, nj, o, p, q, r, rr, s, sh, t, th, u, v, x, xh, y, z, zh. Missing standard letter: w. Letters with diacritics: ç, ë. Sequences treated as one letter: dh, gj, ll, rr, sh, th, xh, zh. -
A Bijective Proof of the Hook-Length Formula for Skew Shapes
A BIJECTIVE PROOF OF THE HOOK-LENGTH FORMULA FOR SKEW SHAPES MATJAZˇ KONVALINKA Abstract. Recently, Naruse presented a beautiful cancellation-free hook-length formula for skew shapes. The formula involves a sum over objects called excited diagrams, and the term corresponding to each excited diagram has hook lengths in the denominator, like the classical hook-length formula due to Frame, Robinson and Thrall. In this paper, we present a simple bijection that proves an equivalent recursive version of Naruse's result, in the same way that the celebrated hook-walk proof due to Greene, Nijenhuis and Wilf gives a bijective (or probabilistic) proof of the hook-length formula for ordinary shapes. In particular, we also give a new bijective proof of the classical hook-length formula, quite different from the known proofs. 1. Introduction The celebrated hook-length formula gives an elegant product expression for the number of standard Young tableaux (all definitions are given in Section 2): λ jλj! f = Q : u2[λ] h(u) The formula also gives dimensions of irreducible representations of the symmetric group, and is a fun- damental result in algebraic combinatorics. The formula was discovered by Frame, Robinson and Thrall in [4] based on earlier results of Young [31], Frobenius [6] and Thrall [30]. Since then, it has been reproved, generalized and extended in several different ways, and applied in a number of fields ranging from algebraic geometry to probability, and from group theory to the analysis of algorithms. In an important development, Greene, Nijenhuis and Wilf introduced the hook walk, which proves a recursive version of the hook-length formula by a combination of a probabilistic and a short induction ar- gument [9], see also [10]. -
Care of the Patient with Acute Ischemic Stroke
Stroke AHA SCIENTIFIC STATEMENT Care of the Patient With Acute Ischemic Stroke (Posthyperacute and Prehospital Discharge): Update to 2009 Comprehensive Nursing Care Scientific Statement A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association Endorsed by the American Association of Neuroscience Nurses Theresa L. Green, PhD, RN, FAHA, Chair; Norma D. McNair, PhD, RN, FAHA, Vice Chair; Janice L. Hinkle, PhD, RN, FAHA; Sandy Middleton, PhD, RN, FAHA; Elaine T. Miller, PhD, RN, FAHA; Stacy Perrin, PhD, RN; Martha Power, MSN, APRN, FAHA; Andrew M. Southerland, MD, MSc, FAHA; Debbie V. Summers, MSN, RN, AHCNS-BC, FAHA; on behalf of the American Heart Association Stroke Nursing Committee of the Council on Cardiovascular and Stroke Nursing and the Stroke Council ABSTRACT: In 2009, the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association published a comprehensive scientific statement detailing the nursing care of the patient with an acute ischemic stroke through all phases of hospitalization. The purpose of this statement is to provide an update to the 2009 document by summarizing and incorporating current best practice evidence relevant to the provision of nursing and interprofessional care to patients with ischemic stroke and their Downloaded from http://ahajournals.org by on March 12, 2021 families during the acute (posthyperacute phase) inpatient admission phase of recovery. Many of the nursing care elements are informed by nurse-led research to embed best practices in the provision and standard of care for patients with stroke. The writing group comprised members of the Stroke Nursing Committee of the Council on Cardiovascular and Stroke Nursing and the Stroke Council. A literature review was undertaken to examine the best practices in the care of the patient with acute ischemic stroke. -
Adobe Type 1 Font Format Adobe Systems Incorporated
Type 1 Specifications 6/21/90 final front.legal.doc Adobe Type 1 Font Format Adobe Systems Incorporated Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc. Reading, Massachusetts • Menlo Park, California • New York Don Mills, Ontario • Wokingham, England • Amsterdam Bonn • Sydney • Singapore • Tokyo • Madrid • San Juan Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Adobe type 1 font format / Adobe Systems Incorporated. p. cm Includes index ISBN 0-201-57044-0 1. PostScript (Computer program language) 2. Adobe Type 1 font (Computer program) I. Adobe Systems. QA76.73.P67A36 1990 686.2’2544536—dc20 90-42516 Copyright © 1990 Adobe Systems Incorporated. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of Adobe Systems Incorporated and Addison-Wesley, Inc. Printed in the United States of America. Published simultaneously in Canada. The information in this book is furnished for informational use only, is subject to change without notice, and should not be construed as a commitment by Adobe Systems Incorporated. Adobe Systems Incorporated assumes no responsibility or liability for any errors or inaccuracies that may appear in this book. The software described in this book is furnished under license and may only be used or copied in accordance with the terms of such license. Please remember that existing font software programs that you may desire to access as a result of information described in this book may be protected under copyright law. The unauthorized use or modification of any existing font software program could be a violation of the rights of the author. -
Type & Typography
Type & Typography by Walton Mendelson 2017 One-Off Press Copyright © 2009-2017 Walton Mendelson All rights reserved. [email protected] All images in this book are copyrighted by their respective authors. PhotoShop, Illustrator, and Acrobat are registered trademarks of Adobe. CreateSpace is a registered trademark of Amazon. All trademarks, these and any others mentioned in the text are the property of their respective owners. This book and One- Off Press are independent of any product, vendor, company, or person mentioned in this book. No product, company, or person mentioned or quoted in this book has in any way, either explicitly or implicitly endorsed, authorized or sponsored this book. The opinions expressed are the author’s. Type & Typography Type is the lifeblood of books. While there is no reason that you can’t format your book without any knowledge of type, typography—the art, craft, and technique of composing and printing with type—lets you transform your manuscript into a professional looking book. As with writing, every book has its own issues that you have to discover as you design and format it. These pages cannot answer every question, but they can show you how to assess the problems and understand the tools you have to get things right. “Typography is what language looks like,” Ellen Lupton. Homage to Hermann Zapf 3 4 Type and Typography Type styles and Letter Spacing: The parts of a glyph have names, the most important distinctions are between serif/sans serif, and roman/italic. Normal letter spacing is subtly adjusted to avoid typographical problems, such as widows and rivers; open, touching, or expanded are most often used in display matter. -
TOAST Classification
35 Classification of Subtype of Acute Ischemic Stroke Definitions for Use in a Multicenter Clinical Trial Harold P. Adams Jr., MD; Birgitte H. Bendixen, PhD, MD; L. Jaap Kappelle, MD; Jose Biller, MD; Betsy B. Love, MD; David Lee Gordon, MD; E. Eugene Marsh III, MD; and the TOAST Investigators Background and Purpose: The etiology of ischemic stroke affects prognosis, outcome, and management. Trials of therapies for patients with acute stroke should include measurements of responses as influenced Downloaded from by subtype of ischemic stroke. A system for categorization of subtypes of ischemic stroke mainly based on etiology has been developed for the Trial of Org 10172 in Acute Stroke Treatment (TOAST). Methods: A classification of subtypes was prepared using clinical features and the results of ancillary diagnostic studies. "Possible" and "probable" diagnoses can be made based on the physician's certainty of diagnosis. The usefulness and interrater agreement of the classification were tested by two neurologists who had not participated in the writing of the criteria. The neurologists independently used the TOAST http://stroke.ahajournals.org/ classification system in their bedside evaluation of 20 patients, first based only on clinical features and then after reviewing the results of diagnostic tests. Results: The TOAST classification denotes five subtypes of ischemic stroke: 1) large-artery atheroscle- rosis, 2) cardioembolism, 3) small-vessel occlusion, 4) stroke of other determined etiology, and 5) stroke of undetermined etiology. Using this rating system, interphysician agreement was very high. The two physicians disagreed in only one patient. They were both able to reach a specific etiologic diagnosis in 11 patients, whereas the cause of stroke was not determined in nine. -
1 Symbols (2286)
1 Symbols (2286) USV Symbol Macro(s) Description 0009 \textHT <control> 000A \textLF <control> 000D \textCR <control> 0022 ” \textquotedbl QUOTATION MARK 0023 # \texthash NUMBER SIGN \textnumbersign 0024 $ \textdollar DOLLAR SIGN 0025 % \textpercent PERCENT SIGN 0026 & \textampersand AMPERSAND 0027 ’ \textquotesingle APOSTROPHE 0028 ( \textparenleft LEFT PARENTHESIS 0029 ) \textparenright RIGHT PARENTHESIS 002A * \textasteriskcentered ASTERISK 002B + \textMVPlus PLUS SIGN 002C , \textMVComma COMMA 002D - \textMVMinus HYPHEN-MINUS 002E . \textMVPeriod FULL STOP 002F / \textMVDivision SOLIDUS 0030 0 \textMVZero DIGIT ZERO 0031 1 \textMVOne DIGIT ONE 0032 2 \textMVTwo DIGIT TWO 0033 3 \textMVThree DIGIT THREE 0034 4 \textMVFour DIGIT FOUR 0035 5 \textMVFive DIGIT FIVE 0036 6 \textMVSix DIGIT SIX 0037 7 \textMVSeven DIGIT SEVEN 0038 8 \textMVEight DIGIT EIGHT 0039 9 \textMVNine DIGIT NINE 003C < \textless LESS-THAN SIGN 003D = \textequals EQUALS SIGN 003E > \textgreater GREATER-THAN SIGN 0040 @ \textMVAt COMMERCIAL AT 005C \ \textbackslash REVERSE SOLIDUS 005E ^ \textasciicircum CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT 005F _ \textunderscore LOW LINE 0060 ‘ \textasciigrave GRAVE ACCENT 0067 g \textg LATIN SMALL LETTER G 007B { \textbraceleft LEFT CURLY BRACKET 007C | \textbar VERTICAL LINE 007D } \textbraceright RIGHT CURLY BRACKET 007E ~ \textasciitilde TILDE 00A0 \nobreakspace NO-BREAK SPACE 00A1 ¡ \textexclamdown INVERTED EXCLAMATION MARK 00A2 ¢ \textcent CENT SIGN 00A3 £ \textsterling POUND SIGN 00A4 ¤ \textcurrency CURRENCY SIGN 00A5 ¥ \textyen YEN SIGN 00A6 -
CDC:LJ W :TJS:Kelyon 5-16-4726 2014200737 Scott H. Frewing, Esq
U.S. Department of Justice Tax Division Washington, D.C. 20530 CDC:LJ W :TJS:KELyon 5-16-4726 2014200737 June 25, 2015 Scott H. Frewing, Esq. Baker & McKenzie LLP 660 Hansen Way Palo Alto, CA 94304-1044 Re: Privatbank Von Graffenried AG DOJ Swiss Bank AG Program - Category 2 Non-Prosecution Agreement Dear Mr. Frewing: Privatbank Von Graffenried AG submitted a Letter of Intent on December 23, 2013, to participate in Category 2 of the Department of Justice's Program for Non-Prosecution Agreements or Non-Target Letters for Swiss Banks, as announced on August 29, 2013 (hereafter "Swiss Bank Program"). This Non-Prosecution Agreement ("Agreement") is entered into based on the representations of Privatbank Von Graffenried AG in its Letter of Intent and information provided by Privatbank Von Graffenried AG pursuant to the terms of the Swiss Bank Program. The Swiss Bank Program is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety in this Agreement. 1 Any violation by Privatbank Von Graffenried AG of the Swiss Bank Program will constitute a breach of this Agreement. On the understandings specified below, the Department of Justice will not prosecute Privatbank Von Graffenried AG for any tax-related offenses under Titles 18 or 26, United States Code, or for any monetary transaction offenses under Title 31, United States Code, Sections 5314 and 5322, in connection with undeclared U.S. Related Accounts held by Privatbank Von Graffenried AG during the Applicable Period (the "conduct"). Privatbank Von Graffenried AG admits, accepts, and acknowledges responsibility for the conduct set forth in the Statement of Facts attached hereto as Exhibit A and agrees not to make any public statement contradicting the Statement of Facts.