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ASX ANNOUNCEMENT 12 March 2018 Shaw and Partners Updates Cynata Research Coverage Melbourne, Australia; 12 March 2018: Australian stem cell and regenerative medicine company, Cynata Therapeutics Limited (ASX: CYP), announced today that leading investment and wealth management firm Shaw and Partners has published updated equity analyst coverage with a target price revision. The full report can be viewed on Cynata's website at www.cynata.com . Ends CONTACTS: Dr Ross Macdonald, CEO, Cynata Therapeutics, +61 (0)412 119343, [email protected] Daniel Paproth, Australia Media Contact, +61 (0)421 858 982, [email protected] Laura Bagby, U.S. Media Contact, 312-448-8098, [email protected] About Cynata Therapeutics (ASX: CYP) Cynata Therapeutics Limited (ASX: CYP) is an Australian clinical-stage stem cell and regenerative medicine company that is developing a therapeutic stem cell platform technology, Cymerus™, originating from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, a world leader in stem cell research. The proprietary Cymerus™ technology addresses a critical shortcoming in existing methods of production of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) for therapeutic use, which is the ability to achieve economic manufacture at commercial scale. Cymerus™ utilises induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) to produce a particular type of MSC precursor, called a mesenchymoangioblast (MCA). Cymerus™ provides a source of MSCs that is independent of donor limitations and an "off-the-shelf" stem cell platform for therapeutic product use, with a pharmaceutical product business model and economies of scale. This has the potential to create a new standard in the emergent arena of stem cell therapeutics, and provides both a unique differentiator and an important competitive position. Level 3, 62 Lygon Street, Carlton, Victoria 3053, Australia T: + 613 9824 5254 + 613 9822 7735 F: PO Box 7165, Hawthorn North, Victoria 3122 ABN- 98 104 037 372 E: [email protected]
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FOR INVITING TENDERS FOR EXECUTION OF THE CONTRACT WORK 1. Name and address of the Deptt.: Department of Physics. 2. Job description / Name of operation: Collection of soil samples, recording of experimental data, drying, grinding, sieving of soil samples, washing and cleaning of glasswares and plastic wares, etc. 3. Duration of contract: 01.06.2023 to 31.12.2023 4. Estimated cost 1,10,000/- 5. Earnest money 2200/- (2% of estimated cost) 6. Date of opening of tenders 01.06.2023 at 11:30 AM 7. Working Hours/manpower required University working hours The tender forms along with terms and conditions can be obtained from the O/o Department of Physics, CCS HAU, Hisar on cash payment of Rs. 118/- (100+18% GST) on any working day and will be opened on 01.06.2023 at 10:00 AM in the O/o Department of Physics, CCS HAU. TERMS & CONDITIONS OF THE TENDER 1. Tender will be received by the CCS HAU, Hisar upto 01.06.2023 at 10:00 AM and will be opened by the Committee on 01.06.2023 at 11:30 AM in the O/o Department of Physics, CCS HAU, Hisar in the presence of such tenderers’ or their agents who may like to be present. Tenders can be sent by post in a sealed envelope by due date or to be delivered in person by the tenderers or by their agent to the Prof. & Head, Deptt. of Physics. Tenders must be super subscribed on the envelop "Tender for above work with name and address of the quotation on the envelop. TENDER SHALL BE SUBMITTED IN DOUBLE ENVELOPE SYSTEM. FIRST ENVELOPE WILL BE SUBSCRIBED AS TECHNICAL BID AND SHALL CONTAIN EARNEST MONEY, FIRM REGISTRATION NO., PHONE NO., PAN NO., ESI NO., PF NO., LABOUR LICENCE NO., SERVICE TAX NO. AND OTHER RELATED INFORMATION IF AVAILABLE. THE SECOND ENVELOPE CONTAINING RATES SHALL BE SUBSCRIBED AS FINANCIAL BID. TECHNICAL BID SHALL BE OPENED FIRST. FINANCIAL BID SHALL BE OPENED IN CASE OF ONLY THOSE TENDERS WHO WILL QUALIFY TECHNICAL BID. THE TENDERER WHO DO NOT QUALIFY IN TECHNICAL BID, THEIR FINANCIAL BID SHALL NOT BE OPENED. BOTH TECHNICAL BID AND FINANCIAL BID SHALL BE PUT IN A BIGGER ENVELOPE. 2. Earnest money amounting to Rs. 2200/- must be accompanied with each tender in the shape of Demand Draft of any scheduled bank in favour of Prof. & Head, CCS HAU, Hisar payable at Hisar and each tender is to be sent under sealed cover. 3. Tenders not accompanied by earnest money in shape mentioned above shall not be considered and in case of the non-acceptance of the tender, the amount shall be refunded on the same day. 4. Conditional tenders are liable to be rejected. 5. The contractor shall be required to sign the contract agreement on the bond paper of Rs.15/- on the prescribed form within seven days of the intimation of the acceptance of the tender to him. Failure of the same, the earnest money shall be forfeited and may result into invalidation of contract. 6. The contractor will obtain a license for carrying out the assigned work. It will be absolutely essential if at any point of time the contractor is required to employ 20 or more employees for the job. It may be noted that want of license is culpable and punishable under law. 7. The contractor should not show at any point of time that the deptt. had any control and supervision over the working of employees of the contractor except in the matter of: a) That the wages paid to the workmen of the contractor are as per D.C. rates. b) That the quality of work done by the workmen of the contractor was as per requirement. c) That the discipline of the employees of the contractor must always remain in the charge of the contractor himself. Similarly, the leave to the workmen must be sanctioned by the contractor himself and not by the department or the representative of the deptt. d) That the deptt. shall not provide any advance to the employee of the contractor. It is the responsibility of the contractor himself to regulate it. The contractor should be required to maintain all type of record in respect of his employees. 8. The contractor will comply with the obligation of providing various amenities such as canteen, refreshment room, toilet etc. to the employees where the number of workmen exceeds twenty. 9. The agreement must disclose the names, parentage, and address of contractor and exact nature of the job. 10. The agreement will not at any point of time give any impression that it is a sham transaction or that it is being used as a tool to deprive the employees of their right. 11. The contractor will pay the minimum wages at least as provided under the Act. 12. The acceptance of the tenders will rest with Committee who is not bound to accept the lowest tender and reserves the authority to reject any or all the tenders without assigning any reason therefore. All tenders in which the conditions are not fulfilled will be rejected. 13. Income tax @ 2% will be deducted from the bill(s) at source. 14. The contractor will have to execute the job within the given time and no request for extending of time shall be entertained except in unforeseen circumstances. 15. Payment will be made after the completion of job satisfactorily on monthly basis. 16. The contractor shall be responsible for observance of the provisions of the Contract Labour (Regulation and Abolition) Act, 1970 and Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. The University shall not be responsible for it in any manner. 17. In case of any loss due to negligence of contractual workers the contractor shall be responsible to make good loss to the Committee failing which the amount of loss shall be recovered/adjusted from earnest money. 18. It will be sole responsibility of the contractor to compensate the labour on account of injury, loss of life or limb in accordance with the law in force for time to time. The University will in no way be responsible for such loss. 19. The contractor shall be required to provide material for sweeping etc if required. He will have to work as per the instructions given by the HOD. 20. It will also be the responsibility and liability of the contractor to adhere to the provisions of the ESI and Provident Fund Act and in case they are not followed properly, he himself will be responsible for it. 21. In case of breach of terms and conditions of the contract or any of them, the contract shall be cancelled and contractor black listed. 22. The University reserves the right of supervision. 23. In case of any dispute between the parties the same will be referred to the Arbitration of the Vice-Chancellor and his decision shall be final. The provisions of Indian Arbitration Act shall apply to these proceedings. 24. **THE SERVICE PROVIDER WILL BE BOUND TO ABIDE BY THE FOLLOWING PROVISIONS STRICTLY WITH RESPECT TO WORKERS.** A) WORKERS ARE PAID WAGES EVERY MONTH THROUGH A/C PAYEE CHEQUE. B) WORKERS ARE PAID AT LEAST MINIMUM WAGES AS PROVIDED UNDER MINIMUM WAGES ACT AND WORKING HOURS MAY BE FIXED FOR THEM. C) WAGES SLIP WILL BE ISSUED REGULARLY TO THE WORKERS BY THE SERVICE PROVIDER. D) WAGES @ D.C. RATES PREVAILING MUST BE ADHERED TO. 25. The contractor must obtain license from the Labour Department if required/applicable and submit to the authorities. 26. Service provider/Contractor will be liable to pay an appropriate fine as assessed if work is not completed/delayed. 27. The suitability and assessment for the number of persons vis-à-vis-men hours (full/part time) as may be required shall be decided by the service provider in consultation with the concerned department from time to time. 28. **THE RATES QUOTED BY THE SERVICE PROVIDER MUST INCLUDE DC RATES, ALL APPLICABLE TAXES AND HIS PROFIT. THE TDS WILL BE DEDUCTED AS PER RULES. AGENCY WILL BE LIABLE FOR OTHER LIABILITIES AS PER LABOUR LAWS/RULES.** --- Prof. & Head Department of Physics COBS&H, CCS HAU, Hisar Endst.No: Phy/23/399-450 Dated: 18.05.2023 1. All Deans/Directors/HODs, CCS HAU, Hisar 2. Divisional Employment Officer, Employment Exchange, Hisar. 3. Deputy Commissioner, Hisar. 4. President, Municipal Corporation, Hisar. 5. Notice Board, COBS&H, CCS HAU, Hisar. 6. Dy. Estate Officer, CCS HAU, Hisar. 7. Incharge, Computer Centre, CCS HAU, Hisar 8. President Labour Union, CCS HAU, Hisar.
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Material Safety Data Sheet Accel Intervention RTU 1. PRODUCT AND COMPANY IDENTIFICATION Product Name Accel Intervention RTU MSDS No. 000719 Manufacturer / Virox Technologies Inc., 2770 Coventry Rd., Oakville, ON, L6H 6R1, 905-813-0110 Supplier Emergency Contact Virox Technologies Inc., 1-800-387-7578 Information Use One Step Disinfectant Cleaner 2. HAZARDS IDENTIFICATION Emergency Overview The product contains no substances which at their given concentration are considered to be hazardous to health. Potential Health Effects Route of Exposure Skin contact; eye contact; ingestion; inhalation. Inhalation None known. Skin Contact None known. Eye Contact None known. Ingestion None known. 3. COMPOSITION/INFORMATION ON INGREDIENTS 4. FIRST AID MEASURES First Aid Procedures Inhalation No specific first aid measures are required. Skin Contact No specific first aid measures are required. Eye Contact Flush with cool water. Remove contact lenses, if applicable, and continue washing. Obtain medical attention if irritation develops or persists. Ingestion No specific first aid measures are required. 5. FIRE FIGHTING MEASURES Flammable Properties Not flammable by WHMIS/OSHA criteria. Suitable Extinguishing Treat for surrounding material. Media Specific Hazards None known. Arising from the Chemical Protective Equipment As in any fire, wear self-contained breathing apparatus pressure-demand, MSHA/NIOSH (approved or equivalent) and full protective gear. and Precautions for Firefighters MSDS Name: Accel Intervention RTU MSDS No.: 000719 Date of Preparation: May 15, 2014 Page 01 of 04 6. ACCIDENTAL RELEASE MEASURES Personal Precautions Use the Personal Protective Equipment recommended in Section 8 of this MSDS. Environmental Large spills or leaks (greater than 5 gallons): Prevent from entering sewers or waterways. Precautions Methods for Small spills or leaks: (< 5 gallons) can be flushed into sanitary sewage system in accordance with local regulations. Use water rinse for final cleanup. Containment and Clean-up 7. HANDLING AND STORAGE Handling Handle in accordance with good industrial hygiene and safety practice (See Section 8). FOR COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL USE ONLY. Storage Store in an area that is out of direct sunlight. Avoid storage at elevated temperatures. KEEP OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN. 8. EXPOSURE CONTROLS/PERSONAL PROTECTION Exposure Guideline Engineering Controls No specific ventilation requirements. Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) Eye/Face Protection Not normally required if product is used as directed. Skin Protection Not normally required if product is used as directed. Respiratory Protection Not normally required if product is used as directed. General Hygiene Handle in accordance with good industrial hygiene and safety practice. Considerations 9. PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES Physical State Liquid Appearance Clear colourless. Odour Characteristic Odour Threshold Not available Boiling Point Not available Freezing Point Not available Relative Density (water = 1) 1.01 - 1.02 at 20 ºC Solubility in Water Soluble pH 2.5 - 3.5 Vapour Pressure Not available Vapour Density (air = 1) Not available MSDS Name: Accel Intervention RTU MSDS No.: 000719 Date of Preparation: May 15, 2014 Page 02 of 04 Evaporation Rate Not available Flash Point > 93 ºC (200 ºF) Lower Flammable/Explosive Not available Limit Upper Flammable/Explosive Not available Limit Auto-ignition Temperature Not available Viscosity Water thin Coefficient of water/oil Distribution Not available % VOC 0.0% * *-Title 17, California Code of Regulations, Division 3, Chapter 1, Subchapter 8.5, Article 2, Consumer Productions, Sections 94508 10. STABILITY AND REACTIVITY Chemical Stability This product is stable. Conditions to Avoid Do not mix with any other cleaning or disinfecting product. Incompatible Do not mix with bleach or any other chemicals. Materials Hazardous None reasonably foreseeable. Decomposition Products 11. TOXICOLOGICAL INFORMATION Inhalation LC50 estimated to be > 2.59 mg/l. Oral LD50 estimated to be > 5000 mg/kg. Dermal LD50 estimated to be > 5050 mg/kg. Effects of Short-Term (Acute) Exposure Skin Irritation/Corrosion Non-irritating based on test data. Eye Irritation/Corrosion Non-irritating based on test data. Inhalation None known. Ingestion This product is non-toxic by OECD criteria. Oral LD50 estimated to be > 5000 mg/kg. Like any product not designed to be ingested, this product may cause stomach distress if ingested in large quantities. Effects of Long-Term (Chronic) Exposure Dermal Toxicity: Non-hazardous by WHIMIS criteria (Dermal LD50 estimated to be > 5050 mg/kg). Respiratory and/or Skin Sensitization Skin Sensitization: not a skin sensitizer. Respiratory Tract Sensitization: not a respiratory sensitizer. MSDS Name: Accel Intervention RTU MSDS No.: 000719 Date of Preparation: May 15, 2014 Page 03 of 04 Carcinogenicity Non hazardous by WHMIS criteria. Teratogenicity / Embryotoxicity Non hazardous by WHMIS criteria. Reproductive Toxicity Non hazardous by WHMIS criteria. Mutagenicity Non hazardous by WHMIS criteria. Toxicologically Synergistic Materials None known. 12. ECOLOGICAL INFORMATION General Comments This section is not required by WHMIS. 13. DISPOSAL CONSIDERATIONS Diluted product can be flushed to sanitary sewer. 14. TRANSPORT INFORMATION Shipping Information Not regulated under Canadian TDG Regulations. Other Transport Information Special Shipping Not applicable Information 15. REGULATORY INFORMATION Canada Domestic Substances List (DSL) / Non-Domestic Substances List (NDSL) All ingredients are listed on the DSL/NDSL. WHMIS exempt. DIN 02279746 16. OTHER INFORMATION HMIS Rating Health - 0 Flammability - 0 Physical Stability - 0 MSDS Prepared By Virox Technologies Inc. Phone No. (800) 387-7578 Date of Preparation May 15, 2014 Date of Expiry May 15, 2017 Disclaimer For an updated MSDS please contact the supplier/manufacturer listed on the first page of this document. Information contained herein with was obtained from sources considered technically accurate and reliable. While every efforts have been made to ensure full disclosure of product hazards, in some cases data is not available and is so stated. Since conditions of actual product use are beyond control of the supplier, it is assumed that users of the material have been fully trained according to the requirement of all applicable legislation and regulatory instruments. No warranty, expressed or implied, is made and manufacturer/supplier will not be liable for any losses, injuries or consequential damages which may result from the use of or reliance on any information contained in this document. The contents of this document have been prepared in accordance with the Canadian WHMIS (Controlled Products Regulations). MSDS Name: Accel Intervention RTU MSDS No.: 000719 Page 04 of 04 Date of Preparation: May 15, 2014
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Silicon is a natural element which makes up almost 90% of the earth’s crust and is commonly found as sand (silicate dioxide). Using our iNHiB Technology we make products that provide plants with bioactive silicon in the form of monosilicic acid. **HOW IT WORKS** Once absorbed, silicon travels around the plant and is deposited in cells. It then acts to strengthen the plant and enhance its natural defence properties. Silicon is deposited in the roots, leaves, stems and even fruit and grain. - **ACCUMULATION IN PALISADE CELLS** - **INCREASED NUMBER AND LENGTH OF LEAF HAIRS** - **INCREASED CUTICLE THICKNESS** - **ACCUMULATION IN UPPER AND LOWER CUTICLES** - **ACCUMULATION IN STOMATA AND XYLEM** **INCREASES DISEASE AND PEST RESISTANCE** Silicon strengthens the cell walls and allows plants to create a tough outer coating with extra leaf hairs. This makes it much harder for feeding pests to penetrate and also restricts the growth of fungal hyphae. Following cell absorption, deposited silicon becomes immobile. However, plants are able to redirect freshly absorbed silicon to areas of stress or attack as part of their natural defence system. Regular applications are therefore important. INCREASES RESISTANCE TO ABIOTIC STRESS With tougher internal structures, plants are more able to tolerate conditions such as extreme heat, cold, drought and strong winds, resulting in reduced levels of wilting and lodging across a wide range of crops. DROUGHT FROST SALINITY HIGH TEMPERATURE HEAVY METAL TOXICITY INCREASES YIELD AND GROWTH RATE With reduced stress, plants can focus their energy elsewhere. In studies, we observe increased levels of photosynthesis leading to larger fruits/increased grain fill and increased brix in some varieties. We also see the benefit of early varieties cropping even earlier. BALANCES UPTAKE OF OTHER ELEMENTS Silicon encourages the absorption of beneficial elements such as zinc, calcium and nitrogen. It also acts to regulate levels of phosphorus uptake and prevent toxicity from trace metals in the growing medium. Silicon can be applied at every crop growth stage and using a variety of application methods, including direct to soil, as a seed treatment, via fertigation and even as a foliar spray. Strengthen plants and reduce chemical input with a sustainable, natural plant protection choice. ORION www.orionft.com @OrionFutureTech facebook twitter instagram linkedin
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i. The discipline of employees at the School arising from misconduct or behavior that may have resulted in harm to students or others, or that constituted violations of law. ii. Any complaints filed against the School by any governmental agency. The School shall promptly notify the District of any of the following: i. Conditions that may cause it to vary from the terms of this Contract, applicable District requirements, federal, and/or state law; ii. Any circumstance requiring the closure of the School, including, but not limited to, a natural disaster, such as an earthquake, storm, flood or other weather related event, other extraordinary emergency, or destruction of or damage to the school facility; iii. The arrest of any members of the School Board or School employees for a crime punishable as a felony or any crime related to the misappropriation of funds or theft; iv. Misappropriation of funds; v. A default on any obligation, which shall include debts for which payments are past due by sixty (60) days or more; or vi. Any change in its corporate status with the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office or status as a §501(c)(3) corporation, if applicable. c. **Compliance.** The School shall comply with all applicable federal and state laws, local ordinances, and District policies applicable to charter schools, except to the extent that the School has obtained waivers from state law and District policies in accordance with Section 5.5 below. A list of some but not all, of the federal and state laws with which the School must comply are listed in Attachment 3. d. **Reports.** The School shall timely provide to the District any reports necessary and reasonably required for the District to meet its oversight and reporting obligations. Required reports include, but are not limited to, those listed below. Deadlines for the required reports and other documents are set forth in the District’s standard form data submission timeline, which the District will annually update and provide to the School. Failure to provide required reports identified on the data submission timeline within ten (10) days after the date due is a material violation of the Contract, and the District may take actions outlined in Section 3.6 of this Contract. i. **Accreditation.** The School shall provide the District all required documents identified on the District’s standard form data submission timeline, which includes but is not limited to: (1) a financial statement disclosing costs of administration, instruction, facilities, instructional materials, and other categories of expenditures, and revenues; (2) a description of the assessments used to measure student progress; (3) a summary of student assessment results, including evidence the School met, exceeded, or made reasonable progress toward meeting its objectives; (4) a description of the staffing of the School, summarizing the qualifications of staff members in accordance with the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (No Child Left Behind); (5) a description of the School’s educational program and services; (6) a description
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Porthmadog Minffordd Tan-y-Bwlch Blaenau Ff. Conwy Valley RAIL Blaenau Ff. Tan-y-Bwlch Minffordd Porthmadog NOTES Corridor Train incl. Buffet Car and Toilet indicates Event Rover 'Hunslet 125' ticket required. † 'Hunslet 125' Event Extra incl. Buffet Car and Toilet † 'Hunslet 125' Event Extra NO Buffet Car or Toilet Every effort will be made to ensure running as timetable, but the Festiniog Railway Company does not guarantee advertised services nor the advertised traction in the event of breakdown or other obstruction of service. NOTES Corridor Train incl. Buffet Car and Toilet indicates Event Rover 'Hunslet 125' ticket required. † Hunslet 125 Event Extra NO Buffet Car or Toilet | D D FFE | STINI | O G • F | FESTI | N IOG | R AILW | AY | | PA | SSEN | G ER T | R AINS | | | SUND | AY 24t | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | | | | | | | | | | | 1400 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 1645 | | | | | | | | | | | | | 1445 | | | | 1710 | | | 0840 | 0900 | 1005 | 1035 | 1055 | 1155 | 1215 | 1335 | 1355 | 1430 | | 1525 | 1550 | 1645 | | | | 0850 | 0910 | 1015 | 1045 | 1105 | 1205 | 1230 | 1345 | 1410 | 1435 | | 1540 | 1600 | 1655 | | | | 0920 | 0935 | 1040 | 1115 | | 1235 | 1305 | 1410 | 1445 | 1505 | | | 1630 | 1720 | | | | 0950 | | 1120 | 1150 | | 1310 | | 1445 | 1520 | | | | 1700 | 1755 | | | | | | 1145 | | | | | 1503 | | | | | 1730 | | | | | | | | 1132 | | | | | | | 1440 | | | | 1715 | | | | 1010 | | 1135 | | 1205 | | 1340 | | | 1505 | | 1555 | | 1740 | 1825 | | 0950 | 1045 | | 1205 | | 1235 | 1340 | 1410 | | | 1535 | 1555 | 1630 | | 1810 | 1855 | | 1015 | 1110 | 1130 | 1230 | | 1300 | 1410 | 1435 | 1500 | | 1600 | 1625 | 1655 | 1715 | 1835 | 1920 | | 1030 | 1125 | 1140 | 1245 | | 1315 | 1425 | 1450 | 1515 | | 1615 | 1640 | 1710 | 1730 | 1850 | 1935 | | | | | | 1245 | | | | | 1600 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 1630 | | | | | | | Porthmadog Minffordd Tan-y-Bwlch Blaenau Ff. Conwy Valley RAIL Blaenau Ff. Tan-y-Bwlch Minffordd Porthmadog Minffordd Tan-y-Bwlch Blaenau Ff. RAIL Blaenau Ff. Tan-y-Bwlch Minffordd NOTES Corridor Train incl. Buffet Car and Toilet indicates Event Rover 'Hunslet 125' ticket required. † 'Hunslet 125' Event Extra NO Buffet Car or Toilet
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Learning at Home: 7 Tips for Parents 2 Plan for Attention Span. The amount of time children can stay focused on one task varies by age and individual. If assignments are taking longer than expected, ask the teacher for advice. 1 Set Clear Expectations. Elementary students often need directions more than once. Try creating a visual "to do" list that they can mark off , and check in with them frequently throughout the day. 6 Keep Up Communication. Teachers and parents are important partners in distance learning. If there are any concerns or confusion, let your child's teacher know ASAP! 7 3 Take a Break! Elementary students take lots of breaks throughout the day. Do the same between assignments at home. It increases motivation and work quality! 4 Practice Mindfulness. When emotions run high, try some controlled breathing exercises. Then, encourage your child to share their feelings. What looks like disrespect or anger might be something else entirely. 5 Enjoy the Sunshine! When the weather is nice, take a trip outside. Just 5-10 minutes of sun exposure per day has positive eff ects on mood, sleep, and immune systems. Love Over Lessons The most important thing right now in your child's life is physical and emotional safety and security. If your child is struggling, put school work aside and spend some quality time as a family. 0506.JA.JW.ReaPri581L1138 fi zkes/Shutterstock Savvas.com Savvas.com
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Press Release May 23rd 2023 European Citizens' Initiative: Alliance of Science Organisations in Germany calls for science-based discussion on animal and non-animal approaches in research The 3Rs (Replace, Reduce, Refine) are the guiding principle of state-of-the-art life science research – Complementarity of research methods is indispensable for scientific progress – A hasty exit from using animals in research puts human and animal well-being at risk On 25 May 2023 the European Parliament´s ENVI Committee will hold a hearing on the European Citizens' Initiative (ECI) 'Save cruelty-free cosmetics – Commit to a Europe without animal testing'. The European Commission will adopt a formal response to the Initiative by 25 July 2023. Starting from specific claims on animal testing for cosmetics as well as for risk and safety assessment of chemicals, the ECI calls for a roadmap to phase-out the use of animals in research in general. The Alliance of Science Organisations in Germany calls upon European policy makers to integrate into the debate a thorough scientific assessment of the potential and limitations of animal and non-animal approaches and to keep available all tools required to further enable medical advancements. While non-animal methods are becoming increasingly powerful for specific applications, for many fields in research and testing suitable non-animal methods are currently not sufficiently advanced or not available at all. The use of animals is critical to understanding the function of complex biological systems and to safely and ethically conduct human clinical studies. Understanding body functions and diseases of humans and animals and continuously improving healthcare including the development of new treatments requires the combination of animal and non-animal studies 1 . As regulated by European legislation, animal experiments are allowed only if no alternative method is available for the respective research question. Our research organisations are committed to replacing, reducing and refining animal experiments whenever this is possible. The 3R principle is the ethical guideline for our research and we support innovation for the development of alternative approaches and the implementation and accessibility of non-animal methods. As has been emphasized in the formal response of the European Commission to the European Parliament´s resolution in September 2021 2 the guiding principles for an ethical use of animals for research and the "final goal of full replacement of procedures on live animals […] as soon as it is scientifically possible to do so" are enshrined in EU Directive 2010/63/EU. At the same time, the EC response highlights that "animal use in science is heterogeneous" and 1 This has also been one of the key results of a high-level Science in dialogue discussion "The future of Life Science research in Europe – how animal and non-animal approaches can contribute", jointly hosted by the Alliance of Science Organisations in Germany, the French National Alliance for Life Sciences and Health (AVIESAN), the Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development (ZonMw) and the Dutch Research Council (NWO) in October 2022. 2 European Parliament non-legislative resolution on plans and actions to accelerate a transition to innovation without the use of animals in research, regulatory testing and education, https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2021-0387_EN.html that "it is not possible to predict when scientifically valid methods will become available that can replace particular animal procedures". We emphasize that scientific progress, in particular at the frontier of knowledge, does not follow distinct management plans, milestones or deadlines. Any such assumption disregards basic principles of how research produces new knowledge and innovations. As has been showcased during the COVID-19 pandemic, essential therapeutic and diagnostic innovations build on knowledge that has been gained over decades of basic research making use of a rich set of complementary methods including animal research. Substantial progress has been made in the development of methods contributing to the reduction and replacement of animal procedures in the recent past. Non-animal methods such as cell culture methods, organoids and computer-based techniques, are increasingly used in research and testing. Fields of action to further promote the reduction of animal use include promoting the implementation and accessibility of non-animal methods for broader use, enhancing support and recognition of work to develop new 3Rs methods and techniques in the academic reward systems and giving greater credit to work on validating non-animal methods for use in safety and risk assessment. Europe has a very strict legislation making animal research possible only on highest ethical levels. In this framework animal-based research must be continued while, at the same time, fully exploiting and further advancing the potential of non-animal methods. A hasty exit from animal research would have considerable effects on health research, healthcare, and the health of European citizens at large. It would also make Europe highly dependent on other nations for the development of innovative medical treatments. The Alliance of Science Organisations in Germany underlines it would be irresponsible to impede medical advancements by banning methods that are still essential. *** The Alliance of Science Organisations in Germany is an association of the most important German research organisations. It regularly publishes statements on central issues of research policy. The German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina is a member of the Alliance and has taken the chair for 2023. Further members of the Alliance are the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD), the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation), the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft, the Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres, the German Rectors' Conference (HRK), the Leibniz Association, the Max Planck Society, and the German Science and Humanities Council (WR). Website www.allianz-der-wissenschaftsorganisationen.de Media Contact Nationale Akademie der Wissenschaften Leopoldina Tel: +49 (0)345/47239-800 Abteilung Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit [email protected] www.leopoldina.org Expert Contact Dr. Christoph Limbach Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) Tel. +49 (228) 885-2865 [email protected] www.dfg.de
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Naming of Extension to Muramats Road - East Arm - Hundred of Bagot CERTIFIED CORRECT: 18 March 2020 S2020/013
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NATIONAL COMPANY LAW TRIBUNAL MUMBAI BENCH, COURT-II 43. C.P.(IB) -1274(MB)/2022 CORAM: SHRI ANIL RAJ CHELLAN HON'BLE MEMBER (T) SHRI KULDIP KUMAR KAREER HON'BLE MEMBER (J) ORDER SHEET OF THE HEARING OF MUMBAI BENCH OF THE NATIONAL COMPANY LAW TRIBUNAL ON 02.02.2024 NAME OF THE PARTIES: - State Bank of India V/s Mr. Maganti Rajendra Prasad Section: 95(1) of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 ________________________________________________________________________ ORDER Adv. Ms. Megharanjani Chandu i/b Krishnamurthy & Co appeared for the Petitioner through VC. Adv. Ashish Pyasi a/w Adv. Anjali Shahi appeared for the Respondent/Personal Guarantor. Due to paucity of time the matter could not be taken up. List this matter on 19.03.2024. Sd/ANIL RAJ CHELLAN Member (Technical) JAGDISH Sd/KULDIP KUMAR KAREER Member (Judicial)
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LILLY HEAGLE Height 5'9" Bust 32" A Waist 26" Hips 36" Shoe 7.5 US Hair Brown Eyes Brown 811 SE Stark St. #300 Portland, OR 97214 [email protected] 503.860.0228
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Social Intelligence with Louise Anne Maurice Self Discovery: The Keys to Understanding the Self Take your responses from your Part 1 Self-Awareness Exercise to complete the Part 2 Self-Awareness Exercise . EXERCISE: What did you discover from your Trigger Tree? How did the people trigger you? What feelings were validated? When you felt triggered, what judgments did you make about the person's reputation? What critical words did you use to discredit their credibility? How did you blame them? What complaints did you have about them? Were your reactions mainly negative or positive? Do you see those qualities visible in your life? Do you get involved with similar people? Do you want to build upon this foundation or make changes?
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Applied Science Chemistry Summer Work Applied Science Chemistry Summer Work Please note that you may see slight differences between this paper and the original. Candidates answer on the Question paper. Supplied materials: Additional resources may be supplied with this paper. Other materials required: * Pencil * Ruler (cm/mm) Candidate forename Candidate surname Centre number Candidate number INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES * Write your name, centre number and candidate number in the boxes above. Please write clearly and in capital letters. * Use black ink. HB pencil may be used for graphs and diagrams only. * Answer all the questions, unless your teacher tells you otherwise. * Read each question carefully. Make sure you know what you have to do before starting your answer. * Where space is provided below the question, please write your answer there. * You may use additional paper, or a specific Answer sheet if one is provided, but you must clearly show your candidate number, centre number and question number(s). INFORMATION FOR CANDIDATES * The quality of written communication is assessed in questions marked with either a pencil or an asterisk. In History and Geography a Quality of extended response question is marked with an asterisk, while a pencil is used for questions in which Spelling, punctuation and grammar and the use of specialist terminology is assessed. * The number of marks is given in brackets [ ] at the end of each question or part question. * The total number of marks for this paper is 60. * The total number of marks may take into account some 'either/or' question choices. 1. Crude oil can be separated in the laboratory into fractions which have different boiling points. Look at the table. It shows possible relationships between: * boiling point * number of carbon atoms in the molecule * size of intermolecular forces. Which letter represents the correct relationship between the boiling point, number of carbon atoms and size of intermolecular forces? | | Boiling point | Number of carbon atoms in the molecule | |---|---|---| | A | high | more than 50 | | B | low | more than 50 | | C | high | less than 20 | | D | low | less than 20 | [1] Your answer 2. Which of these shows the balanced symbol equation for the reaction between potassium and chlorine to make potassium chloride? A. B. C. D. Your answer [1] 3(a). Look at the table. It shows information about some atoms and ions. | Particle | Atomic number | Mass number | Number of protons | Number of neutrons | Number of electrons | |---|---|---|---|---|---| | A | 11 | 23 | 11 | .............. | 11 | | B | 9 | 19 | 9 | 10 | 9 | Complete the table. [4] [2] [4] (b). Particle A is a metal atom, particle D is an ion. Explain why. (c). Particle C has the electronic structure 2.8.7. What does this tell you about the position of particle C in the Periodic Table? Explain your answer. 4. The diagrams show the structures of two forms of carbon. Graphite is a good conductor of electricity. Diamond does not conduct electricity. Use ideas about structure and bonding in diamond and graphite to explain these observations. [3] [2] Use ideas about structure and bonding in diamond and graphite to explain these observations. 5(a). Irenka reacts an element, X, with oxygen, O2. There is one product. It is the oxide of X i.e. X oxide. 4.86 g of X reacts with 3.20 g of oxygen to make 8.06 g of X oxide. i. Calculate the number of moles of X, oxygen and X oxide involved in the reaction. (The relative atomic mass of X is 24.3 and the relative formula mass of oxygen, O2, is 32.0 and of X oxide is 40.3.) Number of moles of X= ........................................................... Number of moles of O 2 = ........................................................... Number of moles of Xoxide = ........................................................... ii. Use your answers to write the balanced symbol equation for the reaction between X and oxygen to make X oxide. (b). Look at the equation. It shows the reaction between sodium hydroxide and dilute sulfuric acid. Calculate the mass of sodium hydroxide needed to make 30.0 g of sodium sulfate. Give your answer to three significant figures. Mass of sodium hydroxide = ........................................................... g 6. Zinc nitrate can be made by reacting zinc oxide with nitric acid, HNO3. Write a balanced symbol equation for this reaction. 7. Magnesium has an atomic number of 12. Calculate the mean mass of an atom of magnesium. Quote your answer to three significant figures. (Avogadro constant = 6.022 × 10 23 atoms per mole) Mean mass ........................................................... g 8(a). Look at the diagrams. They show the structures of two compounds. [3] [2] Sodium chloride has a melting point of 801 o C. Use the structure of sodium chloride to explain why. (b). Magnesium oxide has a similar structure to sodium chloride. Draw 'dot and cross' diagrams to show the ionic bonding in magnesium oxide. You should include the charges on the ions. The electronic structure of magnesium is 2.8.2. The electronic structure of oxygen is 2.6. 9(a). The Group 7 elements are known as the halogens. The halogens have similar chemical properties. Their physical properties vary with increasing atomic number. [2] [3] Look at the table of information about the halogens. | Halogen | Atomic symbol | Atomic number | Molecular formula | Atomic radius in pm | |---|---|---|---|---| | fluorine | F | 9 | F 2 | 64 | | chlorine | Cl | 17 | Cl 2 | 99 | | bromine | Br | 35 | Br 2 | 114 | | iodine | I | 53 | I 2 | 133 | | astatine | At | 85 | ................ | ................ | 10. i. Predict the molecular formula and atomic radius of astatine. Put your answers in the table. ii. Predict the reaction of bromine with sodium iodide solution. Put your answer in the table. iii. Explain your answer to (ii) in terms of the reactivity of the halogens. (b). All halogens react with alkali metals to make a salt. i. All halogens have similar chemical reactions. Explain why in terms of electronic structure. ii. Sodium reacts with bromine to make sodium bromide, NaBr. Construct the balanced symbol equation for this reaction. iii. What is the formula of the product of the reaction between astatine and potassium? Look at the displayed formula of a molecule of glycerol. [2] [1] [1] [1] [2] 11. Fluorine reacts with chlorine to make a compound called chlorine fluoride, ClF. l C F is a covalent compound. The electronic structure of chlorine is 2.8.7. The electronic structure of fluorine is 2.7. Draw a 'dot and cross' diagram to show the covalent bonding in chlorine fluoride. 12. Jed is testing iron(III) chloride and some unknown compounds. He does some tests. These are the tests that Jed does on solutions of the compounds: * adding sodium hydroxide solution * adding silver nitrate solution. Look at his results. | Compound | Adding sodium hydroxide solution | |---|---| | iron(III) chloride | brown solid made | | A | blue solid made | | B | green solid made | Iron(III) chloride, FeC?3, reacts with silver nitrate, AgNO3, to make silver chloride, AgC?, and iron(III) nitrate, Fe(NO3)3. Write a balanced symbol equation for this reaction. Identify the unknown compounds A and B and explain your answers. [1] The quality of written communication will be assessed in your answer to this question. 13. One scientist who helped to develop the Periodic Table was called Mendeleev. Write about how Mendeleev helped in the development of the Periodic Table. 14(a). Zinc, Zn, reacts with hydrochloric acid, HCl . Hydrogen gas, H2, and zinc chloride, ZnCl2, are made. Construct the balanced symbol equation for this reaction. [6] [2] (b). Fatimah and Sam investigate the reaction between acid and metals. They react dilute hydrochloric acid with zinc powder and with iron powder. Look at the apparatus they use. Every 10 seconds they measure the volume of gas in the gas syringe. Fatimah and Sam do three different experiments. * 50 cm 3 hydrochloric acid and 0.15 g of zinc * 50 cm 3 hydrochloric acid and 0.15 g of iron * 50 cm 3 hydrochloric acid and 0.075 g of iron mixed with 0.075 g of zinc. Look at the graph of the results for the first two experiments. i. Calculate the rate of reaction of iron during the first 30 seconds. [1] [1] [2] ii. Predict the total volume of hydrogen formed when the mixture of zinc and iron powder is used. ................................ cm 3 (c). Increasing the concentration of a reactant in solution will increase the rate of reaction. Use the reacting particle model to explain why. 15. Sodium hydrogencarbonate decomposes when it is heated. sodium hydrogencarbonate → sodium carbonate + carbon dioxide + water 2NaHCO 3 → Na 2 CO 3 + CO 2 + H 2 O The table shows the relative formula masses, Mr, of the substances in the equation. Zakia heats some sodium hydrogencarbonate. Look at the apparatus she uses. Zakia heats 1.000 g of solid sodium hydrogencarbonate. After heating for ten minutes the test tube contains 0.631 g of solid sodium carbonate. Zakia does the experiment again. This time she uses 2.500 g of solid sodium hydrogencarbonate. i. Show that the predicted mass of solid sodium carbonate that she should make is 1.578 g. [1] ii. Zakia actually makes 1.124 g of solid sodium carbonate. Calculate the percentage yield. Give your answer to three significant figures. percentage yield = ................................... % 16(a). i. Iron rusts in damp air. Rust is hydrated iron(III) oxide. Write the word equation for the rusting of iron. (b). This question is about the corrosion of metals. Look at the table. It shows how four metals corrode in different conditions. | Metal | | | |---|---|---| | | damp air? | damp acidic air? | | A | no | quickly | | B | slowly | quickly | | C | very slowly | very slowly | | D | very quickly | very quickly | Metal A is aluminium. Explain how you can tell from the information in the table. [1] END OF QUESTION paper
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Search Search Sitemap|Social Media|Link to our site Non Emergency Enquiries101 Home About Us My Neighbourhood News & Features Be Safe Recruitment Contact Us Features Archive Home Page › News & Features › Features Archive › 2011 › March › Driver seriously injured in collision Useful Links 2013 2012 2011 2010 Video & Audio Caught on camera Wanted Policing in action Brought to Justice Missing People Force Magazine Christmas Anti­Drink Drive Campaign 2012 Driver seriously injured in collision Police are appealing for witnesses to a road collision near Takeley in which a female driver was seriously injured. Officers were called to the B183 at Bush End at about 12.40pm on Monday, February 28, 2011 following reports of a collision involving a blue Mini Cooper, a grey Land Rover Discovery and a green Toyota Avensis. The driver of the Mini, a woman in her 40s from Sawbridgeworth, Hertfordshire, was taken by air ambulance to Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge where she is in a critical but stable condition. The B183 was closed until about 7.35pm while police carried out an initial investigation and the road cleared of damaged vehicles and debris. Anyone who saw what happened or has information about events leading to the collision should contact Pc Jamie Stirland at Dunmow Road Policing Unit on 0300 333 4444. Other pages on our site: Caught on camera Find Your Neighbourhood Enter a postcode to find out your neighbourhood information enter postcode | | | | © Essex Police 2013 Copyright & Privacy | Accessibility | A­Z | Browse Aloud | Follow us via social media | Linking to our site | Website Analytics
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What is Integrated Care? Definition The care that results from a practice team of primary care and behavioral health clinicians working together with patients and families using a systematic and cost-effective approach to provide patient-centered care for a defined population. This care may address mental health and substance abuse conditions, health behaviors (including their contribution to chronic medical illnesses), life stressors and crises, stress-related physical symptoms, and ineffective patterns of health care utilization.\(^1\) Who’s on the team? Integrated care teams are typically made up of the patient, a primary care provider (PCP), a behavioral health provider (BHP), and a psychiatrist in a consultative role, with the addition of other team members, such as community health workers, as designated under a specific model. The diagram to the right demonstrates the relationships of integrated care team members. How can integrated care differ for tribal communities? Tribal communities have unique resources, including traditional and cultural methods of healing, that should be considered and incorporated into the integrated care approach based on patient preference. In addition, there may be unique social issues affecting behavioral health within the context of tribal communities. Models that include processes for incorporating traditional healing practices and addressing social determinants of health offer a more robust and effective approach within tribal communities. This approach can be understood as four-way integration, as opposed to the two-way integration approach found in the definition above. The figure to the left illustrates the components of this four-way integration. \(^1\) Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. (2013). Lexicon for behavioral health and primary care integration: Concepts and definitions developed by expert consensus. https://integrationacademy.ahrq.gov/sites/default/files/2020-06/Lexicon.pdf What are common models of integrated care? The two most commonly used models of integrated care are the Collaborative Care Model (CoCM) and the Primary Care Behavioral Health (PCBH) model. The CoCM is a population health approach that adds a behavioral health provider and psychiatric consultant to the primary care team, treats specific behavioral health conditions (e.g., depression, anxiety, attention deficit disorder, substance use conditions), uses a registry to track patients over time, and applies measurement tools to treat patients according to defined targets (such as depression remission). The PCBH model is typically staffed by a behavioral health consultant (BHC) who works side by side with the PCP to address a wide array of problems in the primary care setting through the use of warm handoffs. The BHC may see patients in follow-up but tends to limit these visits to a maximum of six. The issues they address may include behavioral health concerns as well as physical health conditions. Below is a partial list of services that a BHC may offer. - Managing stress, anxiety, sadness, and more - Managing pain - Taking medication as prescribed - Managing medical conditions, such as diabetes and high blood pressure - Understanding one’s own relationship with substances - Improving exercise and healthy eating - Tobacco cessation - Managing insomnia How do I get started? Every clinic needs to evaluate the current patient behavioral health needs that are not being met, the willingness of the PCPs to help increase access to behavioral health services, the level of support from clinic leadership for integrating care, and the extent to which the care team has the capacity and willingness to implement an integrated care model. Integrated care can have remarkable results in tribal clinics and lead to significant benefits.
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Your Life, Your Work, Your World Transformation. Empowering you to make it happen JENNY IN ACTION Jenny has reached an audience of over 30,000 Countries performed in: UK, Switzerland, Spain, Brussels Average Talk Time: 45 minutes Years experience: 13 years Largest Talk: 5,000 people American Express invited Jenny to launch our Mentoring programme. Her name alone drew in the crowds to the event, with NO drop outs. The subsequent feedback from the event was phenomenally positive and we feel very fortunate to have met Jenny who could share her wealth of experience and knowledge with us. On a personal note, I wanted to say how inspiring I found her presentation and I have a copy of her book which I will enjoy reading! Nousheh Paris, Director Sales & Implementation at American Express JENNY’S SHOWREEL Looking for a speaker with positive energy and impact that you'll remember in a week or a month's time? We're all so busy that if we're going to take time out to watch someone speak, it needs to be worthwhile. Jenny regularly receives feedback like "One of the most inspirational speakers I have met," "Some of us forgot where we were, we were so enthralled," and "I have seen many speakers over the years and less than a handful has been able to capture an audience without anyone realising that time had passed. She was genuinely inspirational." Looking for an authentic, genuine speaker who puts you at ease? Jenny's open and genuine style makes you feel comfortable, so you feel like she is talking with you and not at you. She shares her wealth of knowledge and experience to help inspire, motivate and lift up others. Looking for refreshing perspectives, practical take-aways and inspiration - Your audience will walk away from a session with Jenny feeling uplifted, inspired and ready to put into practise what they've learnt, meaning that the learning continues after the day they hear Jenny speak. Looking for a thought leader with an incredible story to tell? Having built her business from scratch, Jenny brings with her a wealth of knowledge, experience and insight. She shares what she has learnt along the way and has a fascinating insight to share. She is passionate about advancing gender balance, creating inclusive workplaces and empowering people to be the best they can be. Looking for meaningful audience participation? Jenny believes that people get more from the experience if they can get involved. So she doesn't just talk at people, she always finds a way for them to take part, whether that's by giving them questions to consider, practical exercises to do or offering their opinions. “One of the most inspirational speakers I have met. Jenny was eloquent and modest she totally drew the listeners in. Some of us forgot where we were, we were so enthralled. Absolutely fantastic. Jenny was warm and friendly with an incredible story to tell and was extremely engaging - her determination to achieve was evident. She was passionate yet realistic. I have seen many speakers over the years and less than a handful has been able to capture an audience without anyone realising that time had passed. She was genuinely inspirational” Stella Fehmi, freelance consultant Jenny provides inspirational, engaging and pragmatic talks about: - **Unlocking Your Leadership Story** - discover how to craft and tell your story authentically and naturally to achieve results. - **The growing trend of Female Breadwinners, Evolution or Revolution** - Jenny guides budding, and existing female breadwinners to consider what being a breadwinner will mean for them now and in the future. - **How to become a Coaching Leader** - When time and money are scarce, how do you motivate your team to increase performance and productivity? A solution focused approach is a quick, effective and positive approach. - **#IamRemarkable** - #IamRemarkable is a Google initiative that strives to empower women and underrepresented groups to speak openly about their accomplishments in the workplace and beyond, breaking modesty norms and glass ceilings. - **The Key to Confidence, Overcoming Imposter Syndrome** - Jenny introduces the concept of imposter syndrome, helps you uncover what drives you, shows you how to identify, challenge and replace limiting beliefs and how to combat them and how to develop your confidence for career and life success. - **Assertive Communication – Who gets heard and Why** - learn assertive communication strategies and skills, how to handle and manage those communication glitches that are all too common for women, even when you are the expert and most senior in the room, learn secret tools to use so that when you speak, you are heard and how to leave a lasting impression so everyone will definitely know who you are. - **Playing to your strengths** - Wondering how to identify and optimise your key strengths? Raise your hand for opportunities? Toot your own horn? You’ll learn tools that reveal your hidden strengths, strategies to overcome your weaknesses and the key to making your strengths work for you. - **Reimagining your personal brand for the digital age** - you will seek out your uniqueness and your story, in order to soar with your strengths, tap into your values and define your brand for the digital age. - **How to Network with Precision & Purpose** - learn how to build your professional connections by increasing your network and influence. Covering what Networking is, why you should build your Network and how you Network with Precision and Purpose. - **Developing Unshakeable Confidence** - learn how to regain your confidence when it has taken a knock, how to increase your confidence levels to new heights and step out of your comfort zone. - **Inclusive Leadership** - We share the benefits of being an inclusive leader to you, your team and organisation. What might be getting in the way and 3 ways to be more inclusive at work so you can maximise the performance of all of your colleagues, become aware of your own biases and how to overcome them and learn how being an inclusive leader can impact your bottom line. See [https://www.jennygarrett.global/speaking/](https://www.jennygarrett.global/speaking/) for full details and watch a video of Jenny speaking about Playing to your Strengths: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8r_uuyyiBI](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8r_uuyyiBI). BOOK JENNY E: [email protected] T: 07946 063 120 W: WWW.JENNYGARRETT.GLOBAL Find out more JENNY GARRATT
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Lake Lorraine — lifestyle center — LAND FOR SALE PEDESTRIAN-ORIENTED PUD / MIXED-USE ZONING STEVE VAN BUSKIRK 605.366.0939 [email protected] VanBuskirk Companies 2571 S Westlake Dr, Ste 100, Sioux Falls, SD 57106 | o: 605 361 8211 | f: 605 361 8052 | w: VBCcommercial.com REAL ESTATE DEVELOPMENT | CONSTRUCTION | COMMERCIAL BROKERAGE | PROPERTY MANAGEMENT | ENGINEERING | ARCHITECTURE ABOUT LAKE LORRAINE Adjacent to I-29 and near the Empire Mall, Lake Lorraine has established itself as Sioux Fall’s premiere mixed-use development by offering diverse retail, new exciting hotels, inventive housing, lakeside dining, and Class A office. Our visitor experience surrounds the 33-acre lake with its meandering walk. Located in the heart of the region’s core retailing area, Lake Lorraine has delivered our region’s top desires – Homegoods, DSW and Dave and Buster’s, Hyatt Place and others. The master development plan has proven its flexibility and it will accommodate what comes next. **Shopping in a super-regional retail trade area** With ten million customer visits to the Sioux Falls’ trade area, Lake Lorraine was a natural expansion for national and local retailers. A destination shopping center supported by interstate visibility, high traffic counts, and an environment that focuses on planned spaces, creates a unique shopping experience. **Stay and Play** Recreation and consumer engagement are supported by Lake Lorraine’s own marketing Collaborative. The Collaborative organizes special events and sales to ignite the imagination of the market and increase visitor engagement. With the addition of Dave and Buster’s and Flow & Paddle, our preeminence as a destination is assured. Access via the heavily used bike trail system, recreationists can engage with the lake and its businesses. **Living Enhanced** Lake Lorraine is not only an experience, it’s a place to call home. People find comfort in the luxury townhomes overlooking the lake, Grand Living assisted living community and Sioux Falls’ newest hotel, Hyatt Place. **Not just a place to work, a place to innovate** Office on or near the lakes edge provide private patios and roof top relaxation. These visual connections to the lake walk transform the workplace culture. Breaktime now rejuvenates the employee after a casual walk around the lake. Employees are also able to dine, shop or just relax without leaving Lake Lorraine. **Lakeside Dining, is now available in Sioux Falls** Lake Lorraine offers a mix of American grill and international cuisine and atmosphere. Indoor and outdoor dining opportunities are a pillar of the Lake Lorraine vision. **A Community Vision** Our architecture is unique, the outdoor environment welcoming, the materials and design deliver An Adventure Every Day. 84% OF TOTAL LAND UNDER DEVELOPMENT 818K SQUARE FEET OF BUILT SPACES Join our VISION VanBuskirk Companies I-29 + W 26TH STREET SIOUX FALLS, SD 57106 DESIGNATED MARKET MAP PEDESTRIAN-ORIENTED PUD LAKE LORRAINE IS ONE OF FEW MIXED-USE DISTRICTS IN SIOUX FALLS Retail Office Hospitality Medical Condos LAKE LORRAINE SITE MAP P1-3........3.63 ACRES......$18.00 PSF P4...........0.96 ACRES ....$20.00 PSF P5...........1.35 ACRES ....$20.00 PSF P6-7........2.71 ACRES ....$25.00 PSF P16........1.64 ACRES ....$10.00 PSF P17........0.81 ACRES ....$15.00 PSF P25........1.06 ACRES ....$20.00 PSF P26........1.62 ACRES ....$25.00 PSF P27........1.17 ACRES ....CALL FOR $ VanBuskirk Companies PARCEL 1-3 3.63 ACRES AVAILABLE SUBDIVIDABLE $18.00 PSF Premium corner parcel along arterial street, Marion Road. Traffic count of 11,600 cars per day. Ideal location for a bank, restaurant drive-up or any neighborhood service business for the 80,000+ people living west of I-29. SITE OVERVIEW DIMENSIONS CONCEPTUAL LAYOUT INSPIRATIONAL IMAGE PARCEL 4-5 P5: 0.96 ACRES P6: 1.35 ACRES $20.00 PSF Lakeshore Boulevard frontage. Entrance and retail outlets. Traffic count of 8,800 cars per day. Ideal location for a retail mall or other multi-suite building. A quick food business to serve the development and beyond would also thrive at this location. SITE OVERVIEW COMING 2020! DIMENSIONS CONCEPTUAL LAYOUT INSPIRATIONAL IMAGE VanBuskirk Companies PARCEL 6-7 2.71 ACRES AVAILABLE SUBDIVIDABLE $25.00 PSF Lorraine Pl and Lakeshore Blvd frontage. Entrance and retail outlots. Traffic count of 8,800 cars per day. Ideal location for a retail mall or other multi-suite building. Retailers will enjoy prime placement in front of the Power Center. SITE OVERVIEW DIMENSIONS CONCEPTUAL LAYOUT INSPIRATIONAL IMAGE VanBuskirk Companies PARCEL 16-17 P16: 1.64 ACRES P17: 0.81 ACRES P16: $10.00 PSF P17: $15.00 PSF Marion Road frontage. Traffic count of 14,200 cars per day. Great view of the lake. Ideal location for a professional office or multi-tenant building. The sloped site ensures views of the lake. SITE OVERVIEW DIMENSIONS CONCEPTUAL LAYOUT INSPIRATIONAL IMAGE VanBuskirk Companies STEVE VAN BUSKIRK 605.366.0939 [email protected] PARCEL 25 1.06 ACRES $20.00 PSF One of three lake front parcels left. Located directly adjacent to the new Hyatt Place hotel. Ideal location for a full service restaurant with ample parking. Opportunity to attach to the Hyatt building. Adjacent to developer built plaza, this location will inspire customers to stop. SITE OVERVIEW DIMENSIONS CONCEPTUAL LAYOUT PLAZA DESIGN PARCEL 26 1.62 ACRES AVAILABLE $25.00 PSF One of three lake front parcels left. Traffic count of 6,200 cars per day. Ideal location for a multi-story, multi-use building of offices, condos and retail. Live and work combination can work here at Lake Lorraine with a vertical mixed-use building. Adjacent to the developer built plaza along the lake walk. SITE OVERVIEW DIMENSIONS CONCEPTUAL LAYOUT INSPIRATIONAL IMAGE VanBuskirk Companies PARCEL 27 1.17 ACRES AVAILABLE CALL BROKER FOR PRICE One of three lake front parcels left. Adjacent to a major national retailers plaza in the heart of the development. Traffic count of 6,200 cars per day. Ideal location for a lakeside restaurant. This is the premier location at the heart of Lake Lorraine SITE OVERVIEW AVAILABLE MIXED-USE LAND LOT 27 1.17 ACRES DIMENSIONS CONCEPTUAL LAYOUT P27 RESTAURANT 5,057 SF 60 PARKING (RE3) INSPIRATIONAL IMAGE CONTACT US LAND SALE Steve Van Buskirk 605.366.0939 LEASE SPACE Ryan Tysdal 605.376.0127 Autumn Kaufhold 605.351.5512 VBCcommercial.com
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MINUTES OF THE MEETING OF STAPLEHURST PARISH COUNCIL held at Staplehurst Village Centre on Monday 3 rd April 2017 at 7.20 p.m. PRESENT: Councillors Ashby, Buller, Burnham, Gosling, Lain-Rose, Manning, Perry, Riordan, Sharp, Spearink and Silkin who was in the Chair. Parish Clerk: Mr M J Westwood APOLOGIES: Councillors Claridge, Reardon, Smith and Whittle. COUNCILLOR DECLARATIONS regarding items on the Agenda:- Changes to the Register of Interests – Councillor Burnham declared a change to his register of interests which was not material to any agenda item. Interest in Items on the Agenda– none declared. Requests for Dispensation – none requested. APPROVAL OF FULL COUNCIL MINUTES Minute pages 1603-1606 of 20 th March 2017 were proposed for approval by Councillor Sharp, seconded by Councillor Ashby, APPROVED by Councillors, signed by Chairman Silkin and made available at http://staplehurstvillage.org.uk/minutes_of_the_last_meetings.aspx. Councillors Gosling and Riordan abstained. FINANCE REPORTS:- 1. Bell Lane Pond – Quotation for clearance of rubbish (for approval). Councillors reviewed the Clerk's report dated 30/03/17 and RESOLVED to accept the quotation of £140 from Page's Waste. 2. Distribution of Annual Report and Carnival & Fete Brochure – Update on Quotations by Third Party Distributors (Mins 1600 and 1603). Councillors reviewed the Deputy Clerk's report dated 03/04/17. Proposed by Councillor Lain-Rose, seconded by Councillor Ashby, Councillors RESOLVED to accept the quotation from Direct Letterbox Marketing to deliver four items to all households in the parish at a cost of £605 plus VAT. Councillor Buller abstained. 3. Kent Association of Local Councils – Membership Subscription 2017-18 (for approval). Proposed by Councillor Lain-Rose, seconded by Councillor Perry, Councillors RESOLVED to renew membership of the association at a cost of £1,250 plus VAT. CORRESPONDENCE & PARISH ISSUES for decision or noting: 1. Staplehurst Post Office Public Consultation – Invitation to comment on proposed move to new premises and branch modernisation (deadline 28/04/17) (for comment) www.postofficeviews.co.uk. With the agreement of Councillors this item was tak en e arli er than scheduled in the agenda due to public interest . After considerable discussion Councillors RESOLVED to comment to the Post Office on its proposal to move Staplehurst post office from the High Street to Station Road, their key points being: the priority is to retain a post office service in Staplehurst; proposed parking and access arrangements at the new premises need to be improved; reliance on bus services is unrealistic; proposed increase of housing in Staplehurst requires an enhanced service and a second or sub-post office should be considered; the Neighbourhood Plan's policies set out to protect the village heart but also to encourage regeneration of the station area. 2. Carnival & Fete 24/06/17 – Correspondence: invitation to book a stall (for decision). Proposed by Councillor Spearink, seconded by Councillor Lain-Rose, Councillors RESOLVED to book two stalls at a cost of £10 per stall. 3. Kent Association of Local Councils – Invitation to submit nominations for various roles on Maidstone Area Committee (for decision – submission deadline 31/05/17). Chairman Silkin asked Councillors to advise the Clerk if they wished to submit any nominations. 4. Maidstone Borough Local Plan Public Consultation – Invitation to comment on modifications (deadline 19/05/17) (for comment) http://www.maidstone.gov.uk/council/haveyour-say/current-consultations/march-2017-local-plan-modifications. Councillor Burnham proposed that the Neighbourhood Plan Review Group be asked to review the modifications, which was AGREED by Councillors. 5. NatWest Community Banker – Report of meeting 28/03/17 (for noting). Councillors NOTED the Clerk's report of the visit to the Parish Office by Ms Augusta Cook-Overy, newly appointed NatWest Community Banker. Chairman Silkin quoted from the Community Banker's role description that the role was 'to be the public face of the brand within the communities I operate, developing a strong presence maintaining the tradition of the bank being a pillar of a thriving community. It is important for us that we do not lose a presence in the community during and following the branch closures, ensuring that our customers still have a point of contact'. Councillor Sharp reported that NatWest had contacted the Village Centre about the possibility of the mobile branch using the premises on a Saturday. 6. Parish Surgery – (i) Report on parish surgeries held 25 March & 1 April (SL-R/AG). Subjects discussed were the proposed relocation of the Post Office and payment of Council Tax. (ii) Appointment of representatives for future surgeries: 22 nd April to be confirmed; 29 th April Councillor Buller. 7. Pullen Farm Solar Installation – Correspondence: request to Parish Council for a donation towards cost of consultant engaged by residents (for decision). Councillors observed that they had previously declined a similar request from a group engaged in opposing another solar farm appeal (Min1555), having taken advice from KALC and the Clerk at that time. Proposed by Chairman Silkin, seconded by Councillor Burnham, Councillors RESOLVED to decline the request. Councillor Perry abstained. 8. Remembrance Day Parade – Correspondence: request to Parish Council to assume responsibility for organisation (for decision). Councillors NOTED the letter dated 28/03/17 from representatives of Staplehurst Scouts, Guides, Royal British Legion and All Saints Church and that following the disbanding of the Royal British Legion Staplehurst branch these parties were asking the Parish Council to take responsibility for planning and organising the Remembrance Day parade. Proposed by Chairman Silkin, seconded by Councillor Spearink, Councillors RESOLVED to provide administrative and organisational assistance to facilitate the holding of the parade. 9. South Eastern Rail Franchise Public Consultation – Invitation to comment on service improvement options and priorities to help inform the award of the new franchise (deadline 23/05/17) (for comment) https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/future-ofsouth-eastern-rail-services. Councillor Burnham said he would be attending the public information event in Maidstone on 11 th April and would report back. PARISH COUNCIL REPORTS (from Committee/Groups/Office on specific issues or as regular update) 1. Clerk's Report – the Clerk reported: a Facebook training session for Councillors was scheduled for 24 th April; the Parish Office was heavily engaged in year-end work; he was reviewing documentation relating to the Men's Shed and the Parish Council's use of the library; he had been handling completion arrangements the transfer of Wimpey Field to the Parish Council; invitations had been sent to potential stallholders about the Annual Parish Meeting and the NatWest Community Banker had confirmed attendance; the Parish Office had been receiving many comments and enquiries about the proposed relocation of the Post Office. 2. Written Reports on Committee, Group and Project activities - for decision or noting a) Annual Parish Meeting 2017 – Update on arrangements (Min 1601, 1603-4). Councillors NOTED the status of the draft agenda and responses from potential stallholders – to be reviewed at the next meeting. b) Communications Group – Proposed Terms of Reference (Min 1604) (for approval). Councillors reviewed the Clerk's previously circulated comments on the proposed terms of reference. Councillor Perry said he substantially agreed with the comments and advocated that appropriate modifications be made to the terms of reference. Councillors AGREED that the modifications be made and asked Councillor Lain-Rose to produce a revised document for review by the Communications Group. c) Community Clean-Up – (i) Report of Clean-Up Day 18/03/17 (for noting). Councillors NOTED Councillor Buller's report published at http://www.staplehurstvillage.org.uk/others.aspx and thanked Councillors Buller and Burnham, the Clerk, the Youth Club and Staplehurst WI for their organisation of a most enjoyable and productive community event. (ii) Proposal for donations to supporting organisations (for decision): proposed by Chairman Silkin, seconded by Councillor Gosling, Councillors RESOLVED to make donations of £50 each to Staplehurst Youth Club and Staplehurst WI in recognition of their contributions to the event. 3. Oral Reports from Committee/Groups/Councillors – for information only a) Bell Lane Pond - Councillor Spearink reported that he had been given some additional silver birch saplings. b) Footpath KM312 – Councillor Spearink reported that a tree surgeon engaged by Carillion had inspected the path and adjoining land owned by the company between Bell Lane pond and The Bartons. Although outside his remit the tree surgeon will recommend investigation of drainage issues in the ditches alongside the path. c) Wimpey Field – Councillor Spearink reported that transfer to the Parish Council of the land known as Wimpey Field had been completed and the grant from Taylor Wimpey had been paid. He said that the contractor would start work on the previously agreed path and clearance work (Min 1554) and that the Community Payback team had almost completed the lifting of branches. Councillors thanked Councillor Spearink for all his work on the project. d) Village Centre – Councillor Sharp reported that a Community Payback team had started work in the Village Centre grounds. e) The Parade/SPAR Building Works – Councillor Lain-Rose reported that scaffolding would remain in place for a few more weeks. REPORTS FROM OTHER COUNCILS, AGENCIES AND ORGANISATIONS for noting:- 1. Borough Councillor's Oral Report – Councillor Perry commented: the planning application for development of land south of Marden Road would go before MBC Planning Committee on 27/04/17; Parisfield S106 money needed to be spent by November 2017 – Councillor Burnham commented that the Surrenden Field Group would bring forward three quotes for drainage that would use up the remaining balance; there had been a traffic accident at Hawkenbury Bridge on 01/04/17 and he had written to Helen Grant MP and County Councillor Hotson about installation of traffic lights there; he and Borough Councillor Brice had met representatives of Arriva and discussed problems with the reliability of new hybrid buses; they also discussed availability of real-time service information, which was currently available via the Arriva app but Councillor Perry said he would like to investigate the provision of displays at bus shelters. 2. Kent Association of Local Councils – Minutes of Maidstone Area Committee meeting 22/03/17. NOTED by Councillors and published at http://www.staplehurstvillage.org.uk/kent_association_of_local_councils.aspx. REPORTS FROM LOCAL COMMUNITY GROUPS (written reports for noting):- 1. Headcorn Aerodrome Consultative Committee – Note of meeting 14/03/17. Councillor Perry’s report was NOTED by Councillors and published at http://www.staplehurstvillage.org.uk/headcorn_aerodrome.aspx . URGENT MATTERS (at Chairman’s discretion, information only items for noting or for decision at a future meeting) No items were raised. Chairman.................................................................... PUBLIC FORUM: Before the meeting three residents voiced objections to the Post Office's proposal to relocate the Post Office from High Street to Station Road. Two residents asked the Parish Council to consider favourably the request to take on organisation of the Remembrance Day parade. After the meeting two residents made further comment about the Post Office relocation, one resident observed that new speed limit signs were in place on the A229 south of the village and one resident thanked councillors for taking on the organisation of the Remembrance Day parade.
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Join our team Morecambe FC Community Sports is looking for an energetic and capable individual to join our team as the Office Administrator for our charity The role is extremely varied and the successful candidate will contribute to all aspects of the team's administration functions by providing the highest levels of support for the team and customer service to the wider club and stakeholders. Benefits: Successful applicants will receive full Morecambe FC kit 28 days holiday including bank holidays Tickets for matches CPD opportunities Your birthday off Are You Eligible: To be considered for this role, candidates must have: - * A minimum of 2 years' experience of working as an office administrator * Exceptional use of Microsoft Office applications * A minimum of 3 GCSE's grade 5 or above in Maths and English or equivalent experience * Full UK driving licence and access to a vehicle * To be able to work evenings, weekends, including match days, and bank holidays to meet the needs of the charity A job description and person specification can be found following this link. How To Apply: If you are eligible and are interested in applying, please complete the application form and email it to Stuart Glover - [email protected] Closing date for applications – 9 th December 2022 Interviews to take place - 19 th December 2022 Equality Statement Morecambe FC Community Sports is an equal opportunities employer. We welcome applications from all candidates regardless of age, race, disability, gender reassignment, pregnancy and maternity, sexual orientation, marriage and civil partnership, sex and religion or belief. Safeguarding Statement Morecambe FC Community Sports is fully committed to safeguarding children and adults at risk across our Club. As such, we adhere to safe recruitment processes and this role requires a satisfactory enhanced disclosure via the Disclosure & Barring Service.
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Pru A guide to tax on your UK investment bond Investment Bonds offered by Prudential now, or in the past, are normally set up as single premium life assurance policies. This means they have a different tax treatment from other types of investments. Regular premiums may also be paid into certain Investment Bonds. How is my investment taxed? Prudential pays tax on income and capital gains made within its funds. HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) sees payment of this tax as equivalent to you having paid Capital Gains Tax and Basic Rate Income Tax, so you have no personal liability to Capital Gains Tax or Basic Rate Income Tax on the gain from your Bond. However, you can't reclaim tax Prudential has paid. A liability to Income Tax above the basic rate may arise if a chargeable event occurs and a chargeable event gain or "profit", arises; * in the event of death, or * on certain assignments (transfer of legal ownership of all or part of your Bond) for money or money's worth, or * on maturity of your Bond (this does not apply to Bonds written as whole of life policies which remain in force until full and final cashing in or there is a death of a life assured giving rise to benefits, or * on fully cashing in your Bond or any individual policy/ segment within the Bond; or * if you withdraw more than 5% per policy year of the amount that you have paid into your Bond. This 5% withdrawal allowance is cumulative, and any unused part can be carried forward to future years, subject to the total cumulative 5% allowance amount not exceeding 100% of the amount you have paid into your Bond. Note that the basic personal allowance is restricted for those with 'adjusted net income' (ANI) exceeding £100,000. In addition the amount of Personal Savings 'Allowance' (PSA) depends on ANI. The high income child benefit tax charge impacts those with ANI over £50,000. A chargeable event gain on a bond is included within ANI. What happens when a chargeable event occurs? When a chargeable event occurs, you will be sent details of any chargeable event gain arising for you to notify HMRC of the gain. Prudential may also send details of the chargeable event gain direct to HMRC. As Basic Rate Income Tax is treated as already paid, the maximum rate of Income Tax that may become payable is the difference between the Higher Rate (and the Additional Rate, where applicable) of Income Tax and the Basic Rate of Income Tax. When a chargeable event arises, it is then necessary to calculate if a gain has arisen. Chargeable event gains on UK bonds are not liable to basic rate tax. Where a tax liability can arise On withdrawals * A part surrender will trigger a chargeable event gain if it exceeds a certain limit. Part surrenders of up to 5% of accumulated premiums can be taken without any immediate tax charge. Withdrawals are tax deferred and not tax free. Where there has been a part surrender, a calculation must be made at the end of the 'insurance year' (the policy anniversary) to see whether a gain has arisen and if so its amount. * Where regular premiums have been paid, the 5% allowance is applied separately to the premiums (including any single premium) paid in each year. * For bonds sold after 1 January 2013 the adviser charges, such as Ongoing Charge and Ad hoc Charge, are treated as withdrawals. On death and terminal illness A chargeable event will happen on the death of the life assured (second death under a joint life second death Bond; first death under a joint life first death Bond). In this situation, the tax treatment is the same as if the Bond had been finally cashed in immediately before death. Any gain is calculated on the surrender value immediately before death rather than the total amount that is actually paid on the death claim. Terminal illness claims (where life expectancy is no more than 12 months) under Prudential Investment Bond or Flexible Investment Plan do not give rise to a chargeable event. Please refer to your policy terms and conditions to confirm that Terminal Illness applies to your Bond. Tax liability on final cashing in Any tax liability on final cashing in is based on the gain or "profit" (if any) that the Bond has made. This profit is defined as: * the amount you receive when you cash in your Bond plus all previous withdrawals; less * the total amount you have paid in plus any excesses over the accumulated 5% allowances. In the case of a payout triggered by death, the calculation will be surrender value immediately before death plus all previous withdrawals less the total amount you have paid in plus any excesses over the accumulated 5% allowances. Tax liability on withdrawals * A part surrender will trigger a chargeable event gain if it exceeds a certain limit. Part surrenders of up to 5% of accumulated premiums can be taken without any immediate tax charge. Withdrawals are tax deferred and not tax free. Where there has been a part surrender, a calculation must be made at the end of the 'insurance year' (the policy anniversary) to see whether a gain has arisen and if so its amount. * Where regular premiums have been paid, the 5% allowance is applied separately to the premiums (including any single premium) paid in each year. * For bonds sold after 1 January 2013 the adviser charges, such as Ongoing Charge and Ad hoc Charge, are treated as withdrawals, which case time apportionment reduction (TAR) will apply. You'll find more information about TAR in the Glossary, on page 6. Partial withdrawals Large withdrawals from your Bond can result in an excessive and unnaturally high tax liability. This is because the excess over 5%, the "chargeable event gain", is always used for the tax calculation, irrespective of any profit or loss on the Bond. Tax liability on part surrenders Where there has been a part surrender, a calculation must be done at the end of the policy year to see whether a gain has arisen and if so its amount. For example, a policy taken out on 3 June 2017 will have a policy year ending on 2 June 2018. The second policy year will begin on 3 June 2018 and end on 2 June 2019 (and so on). You should be aware that even in circumstances where the value of your policy or Bond has reduced, if you have taken a part surrender, a tax liability could arise. So how do we work out if there's any gain which may give rise to an income tax liability. At the end of policy year two we'll send you a Chargeable Event Certificate. This will show the £10,000 you've taken out. At the end of policy year two, the part surrender of £10,000 has exceeded the cumulative 5% allowance of £1,000 x 2 meaning that a chargeable event gain of £8,000 arises. Income tax may be payable on this depending on your circumstances. Part surrenders of up to 5% of premium(s) paid can be taken without any immediate tax charge. Withdrawals are tax deferred and not tax free unless by the time the deferred charge is triggered, your circumstances have changed so that no tax is payable. In this example that would be £20,000 x 5% = £1,000. That's £1,000 each policy year. And if you don't take it out in one policy year, you can carry it forward. This is just an example designed to represent a typical situation and does not relate to any particular individual. You should not consider this as financial advice or a recommendation of a particular course of action. You should consider your own circumstances fully and may wish to consult a financial adviser to help you make a decision. Here's the example again with just the figures. £20,000 x 5% = £1,000 – your annual 5% allowance. £10,000 taken out in the second policy year 2 x £1,000 = £2,000 – the cumulative 5% allowance at the end of the second policy year £10,000 – £2,000 = £8,000 – the chargeable event gain you might have to pay tax on. How an unusually high tax liability may be avoided To help counter such excessive and unusual gains, Prudential issues Single Premium Bonds as a series of identical policies. This allows for the full cashing in of one or more policies, rather than a large partial withdrawal spread across the whole Bond. What reliefs are available? Deficiency relief There's no relief under the chargeable event regime for an investment loss on a bond. Also, a loss on one bond cannot be set against a gain on another. However, 'deficiency relief' may be available to you when a bond comes to an end. It's given as a tax reduction from your income tax liability for the year, but unless your income is liable at higher rate or dividend upper rate (not additional rate) on some income, there will be no tax reduction and deficiency relief will be of no benefit. Entitlement arises as follows: * the calculation of the gain on the final chargeable event shows a negative amount * one or more gains arose on 'excess events' in earlier tax years on which the same individual was liable, and * the individual is the chargeable person (i.e. would have been liable had the calculation shown a gain) The amount of deficiency relief will be the lesser of the deficit calculated in the final chargeable event calculation, and the total of gains on previous 'excess events' which formed part of the total income of the same individual who is now benefiting from the relief. Top Slicing relief Top slicing relief may reduce the tax payable on a bond gain. It does not reduce the gain. It is most commonly available where you are liable to tax at a lower rate were it not for the inclusion of the chargeable event gain in your income for the year. HMRC have a process for calculating top slicing relief. Calculate the total taxable income for the year and identify how much of the gain falls within the starting rate for savings, personal savings allowance nil rate, basic, higher or additional rate bands as appropriate. Any gift aid payments must be disregarded both in this computation and in the remaining steps below. 0 0 0 Calculate the total tax due on the gain across all tax bands. Deduct basic rate tax treated as paid* to find the individual's liability for the tax year. Calculate the annual equivalent of the gain. The annual equivalent is calculated by dividing the gain by N (see below). Calculate the individual's liability to tax on the annual equivalent. In the Budget of 11 March 2020 it was announced that the personal allowance is recalculated where appropriate. The amount of the savings starting rate and personal savings allowance used in the top slicing relief calculation are set by virtue of the taxpayer's adjusted net income for the tax year. They are not adjusted to calculate the notional tax due on the 'sliced gain'. Deduct basic rate tax treated as paid* on the annual equivalent and multiply the result by N. This gives the individual's relieved liability. 0 Deduct the individual's relieved liability at step 4 from the individual's liability at step 2 to give the amount of top slicing relief due. 0 *Basic rate tax is also deducted for offshore bonds for the purposes of the top slicing calculation Calculating 'N' 'N' is the number of complete years ending with the date of the chargeable event and starting with the later of either the commencement or last excess event* * unless policyholder has a period of non-residence in Entitlements – what you should be aware of Your entitlement to Basic Personal Allowances, Working Tax Credit and Child Tax Credit may be affected whenever you incur a chargeable event gain; for example you cash in some or all of the policies in the Bond or take proceeds in excess of the accumulated 5% allowances. For those with 'adjusted net income' in excess of £100,000, then it should be noted that total bond gains are included within this figure meaning that entitlement to the personal allowance can be affected. Note also that total bond gains are included when assessing entitlement to the personal savings allowance and whether there is any liability to a child benefit tax charge as again this is based on adjusted net income. The amount of Child Tax Credit and/or Working Tax Credit to which you are entitled also depends on your income. Any gain from your Bond or withdrawal in excess of the accumulated 5% allowances will be added to your income (without top slicing) for this purpose and could reduce or eliminate any Tax Credit that you would otherwise be entitled to. Adviser Charges (only applicable to bonds sold after 1 January 2013) Set-up adviser charges This charge is taken from the initial payment you make before the contract is set up. The original premium is therefore your payment less the set-up adviser charge. Set-up adviser charges are not seen as withdrawals and do not form part of the 5% p.a. cumulative withdrawal allowance. Ongoing adviser charges Ongoing adviser charges facilitated by the provider, come out of the product. They are withdrawals and form part of the 5% withdrawal allowance. Care is needed when withdrawals are taken from the product where ongoing adviser charges are also being paid from that product. The ongoing adviser charges from the product reduce the amount you can take without exceeding the cumulative 5%. If it is exceeded, a chargeable event arises, resulting in a potential income tax liability on the excess. Taxation of bonds is a particularly complex topic and as such, we would recommend you speak to your financial adviser. Glossary Chargeable Event If a chargeable event arises, it is then necessary to calculate if a gain has arisen on that event. If so, then tax may be due, but remember that chargeable event gains on UK bonds are not liable to basic rate tax. The main chargeable events were explained on page one. Chargeable Event Certificate A chargeable event certificate is issued on the occurrence of a chargeable event. Deficiency Relief A special relief called 'deficiency relief' may be available to individuals only when a policy or contract comes to an end. There is no relief under the chargeable event regime in any circumstances for an investment loss sustained on a policy or contract. Neither can a loss on one policy be set against a gain on another. For more information on entitlement to, and calculation of, deficiency relief, please refer to HMRC. Offshore Bonds An Offshore Bond is a single premium insurance policy written outside the UK. It also confers certain tax advantages on the assets contained within it. Single Premium Life Assurance Bonds Single premium investment bonds are investments packaged as life assurance, primarily designed for investment but with an insurance over-ride (often 101% of the investment value). Top Slicing Relief Top slicing relief is generally available where the taxpayer would be liable to tax at a lower rate were it not for the inclusion of the chargeable event gain in their income for the year. When the chargeable event gain does not move a taxpayer into a higher tax rate, there may be still be some top slicing relief available due to the effect of the personal savings allowance nil rate and the starting rate for savings. Time Apportionment Relief (TAR) For those UK residents who have not been UK resident throughout the period the policy/Bond has been held, then TAR may apply. Under TAR, the chargeable gain on the policy is reduced for tax purposes if the beneficial owner was not UK resident throughout. For example if the beneficial owner was non-UK resident for the whole period then the chargeable gain would be nil. This is a complex area and professional advcice may be necessary Important information This leaflet describes the taxation treatment of UK investment bonds. Offshore bonds may be treated differently by HMRC for tax purposes. I Also, the tax treatment described may not apply if your Bond is held in trust, depending on the nature of the trust. We suggest that you consult your legal adviser if you are concerned about this. A tax return guide (explaining how to use information contained within a chargeable event certificate, in your tax return), and a help sheet about life assurance policy gains, are available from HMRC if required. For selfassessment purposes a chargeable event certificate must be retained for at least six years. For more information on Chargeable Events please speak to your Financial Adviser. You may be charged for any advice provided. The information in this document is based on our understanding of current taxation, legislation and HM Revenue & Customs practice, all of which are liable to change without notice. The impact of taxation (and any tax reliefs) depends on your circumstances. pru.co.uk
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UVA School of Medicine – 'Next Generation' Curriculum Class of 2016 Pre-Clerkship Curriculum, 2012-2014 1.10 RR. U C M ONDAY YSTEM S | Week 0 | Aug 2-3 ‘12 | |---|---| | Week 1 | Aug 6, ‘12 | | Week 2 | Aug 13 | | Week 3 | Aug 20 | | Week 4 | Aug 27 | | Week 5 | Sept 3 | | Week 6 | Sept 10 | | Week 7 | Sept 17 | | Week 8 | Sept 24 | | Week 9 | Oct 1 | | Week 10 | Oct 8 | | Week 11 | Oct 15 | | Week 12 | Oct 22 | | Week 13 | Oct 29 | | Week 14 | Nov 5 | | Week 15 | Nov 12 | | Week 16 | Nov 19 | | Week 17 | Nov 26 | | Week 18 | Dec 3 | | Week 19 | Dec 10 | | Week 20 | Dec 17 | | Week 21 | Dec 24 | | Week 22 | Dec 31 | | Week 23 | Jan 7, 2013 | | Week 24 | Jan 14 | | Week 25 | Jan 21 | | Week 26 | Jan 28 | | Week 27 | Feb 4 | | Week 28 | Feb 11 | | Week 29 | Feb 18 | | Week 30 | Feb 25 | | Week 31 | Mar 4 | | Week 32 | Mar 11 | | Week 33 | Mar 18 | | Week 34 | Mar 25 | | Week 35 | Apr 1 | | Week 36 | Apr 8 | | Week 37 | Apr 15 | | Week 38 | Apr 22 | | Week 39 | Apr 29 | | Week 40 | May 6 | | Week 41 | May 13 | Week 42 May 20 | Week 43 | | May 27 | | | |---|---|---|---|---| | Week 44 | | Jun 3 | | | | Week 45 | | Jun 10 | | | | Week 46 | | Jun 17 | | | | Week 47 | | Jun 24 | | | | Week 48 | | Jul 1 | | | | Week 49 | | Jul 8 | | | | Week 50 | | Jul 15 | | | | Week 51 | | Jul 22 | | | | Week 52 | | Jul 29 | | | | Week 53 0 | | Aug 5 | | | | Week 54 1 | | Aug 12 | | | | Week 55 2 | | Aug 19 | | | | Week 56 3 | | Aug 26 | | | | Week 57 4 | | Sept 2 | | | | Week 58 5 | | Sept 9 | | | | Week 59 6 | | Sept 16 | | | | Week 60 7 | | Sept 23 | | | | Week 61 8 | | Sept 30 | | | | Week 62 9 | | Oct 7 | | | | Week 63 10 | | Oct 14 | | | | Week 64 11 | | Oct 21 | | | | Week 65 12 | | Oct 28 | | | | Week 66 13 | | Nov 4 | | | | Week 67 14 | | Nov 11 | | | | Week 68 15 | | Nov 18 | | | | Week 69 16 | | Nov 25 | | | | Week 70 17 | | Dec 2 | | | | Week 71 18 | | Dec 9 | | | | Week 72 19 | | Dec 16 | | | | Week 73 20 | | Dec 23 | | | | Week 74 21 | | Dec 30 | | | | Week 75 22 | | Jan 6, 2014 | | | | Week 76 23 | | Jan 13 | | | | Week 77 24 | | Jan 20 | | | | Week 78 25 | | Jan 27 | | | | Week 79 26 | | Feb 3 | | | | Week 80 27 | | Feb 10 | | | | Week 81 28 | | Feb 17 | | | | Week 82 29 | | Feb 24 | | | | | Week 83 30 | | Mar 3 | Start of Clerkships | MBB
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100+ Service Ideas for Religious Education The following service ideas were submitted by participants in Joe Paprocki's Webinar, "Teaching During a Year of Faith" on Tuesday, August 28, 2012 As always, incorporate reflection before and after service experiences to help young people recognize how they are encountering the presence of Jesus in those they serve. - Food drive for local food pantry - Clothing drive - Collect items needed for St Vincent de Paul society - Soup kitchen experience - Collecting supplies for Arbor House - unwed mother and child home - Landscaping day with Habitat for Humanity - Operation Rice Bowl: Catholic Relief Services - My first graders make sandwiches for the church soup kitchen - Project Gabriel - we collect new baby items for a pregnancy assistance center - Assist with yearly senior luncheon - Bring in school supplies for children who cannot afford them - Yard cleaning for elderly neighbors of church - Playing bingo at a local nursing home - Serve at parish Lenten fish fry - Pennies for patients - Project Linus - making blankets (no sew ones)! - Care packages for college students before finals - Township clean-up - Pen pal with sister parish in Ghana - Volunteer at local homeless shelter - Work at the parish fish fries as bus boy/girls - Volunteer at PADS - Making rosaries - Thanksgiving food baskets - Christmas gift giving - Prison ministry cards 100+ Service Ideas for Religious Education - Valentines for veterans - Learn to knit to make scarves for children this winter - Caring tree - Bake sales - Serving the homeless at urban ministries - Collection for local animal shelter - Lunch bags for the homeless - Gift wrapping with family service - Mission collections every week - Vacation bible camp - Crop walk - Trick or treat for Unicef - Backpack drive - Compassion packs to keep in the car and give to homeless people on the side of the road - Soles for Souls - Serve turkey dinners - Partner with a school in Africa and send them supplies - Contribute to a local shelter for unwed mothers - Pro life activities - baby bottles filled with coins food pantry cereal mission activity - Peer tutoring - Hospital visitation - We take 4th graders to St Joseph's diner to help serve food to the poor - Making fleece blankets for the rural local hospital to give to children who have surgery - Older students read to the younger students - Write to service men and women who are serving our country - Pop tabs from soda cans go to Ronald McDonald house They recycle them for $$ - Help with our Reconciliation reception, Confirmation reception - Babysit during catechist meetings - House homeless families - Arrange flowers in church 100+ Service Ideas for Religious Education - Peanut butter and jelly gang They make sandwiches for the homeless - Provide free babysitting for our young parents to have "date nights" - Help out at parish farmers market - Help with Knights of Columbus pancake breakfasts - Help with parish fall festival - Help run a water stop at a marathon - We visit a local nursing home do crafts with the residents and bring cookies to share with them - Collect toiletries - Bring food items to make trail mix and bag up trail mix for homeless shelter - Confirmation students tutor our first communion students - Senior citizen picnic each summer - Help residents attend bi-monthly mass at home for the elderly - Help with Seniors' tea - Learn how to finger knit, sell their pieces and use the money to buy items of food for the poor - We have a sharing parish and try to respond to their needs Also various food drives etc - Make posters of support for inmates during the kairos retreat - Collecting socks for homeless - Cookies for hospice - We support teachers and children in Haiti with a parish we are twinned - Cards for the sick - We have the kids do an individual service project and a classroom service project which is decided by the class - During Christmas we visit a poor family to clean and decorate with Christmas tree etc - Flower sale doughnut sale and cleaning up our neighborhood - Blanket Sunday - Lent heifer project - Baby shower for Mary (items go to Seton Home for pregnant girls) - Our parish has a 3 mile walk for United Ministries - We will give a breakfast on 11/11 (Veterans' Day) for local veterans - Pius Promise - help single mothers with their children while they go to school 100+ Service Ideas for Religious Education - Snack bags for battered women's services - Help in church clean up - Adopt orphan from orphanage in Haiti - Make tray favors for local hospital - package dried meals to be sent to help feed the hungry in Haiti and all over the world - Write to the Franciscan sisters who are homebound - Older students work as classroom aides - Good Friday food fast for hunger for junior high students - Collection for Mission Childhood Association - Bring in recycling items to convert into money for our missions - Prayer partners with elderly - We go into the nursing and assisted living homes and have manicure days! The ladies love this! - Not for Sale (stop human trafficking) - Making cards and placemats for prisoners - Working with kids with cancer - Walk for life - Letters to seminarians - Volunteering at a blind retreat - Baby shower for pregnancy center - Summer service trips for teens to help poor/elderly with home repairs etc - Missions (Propagation of the Faith) - Sewing pillow cases for children with cancer - Decorating pumpkins for residents in the nursing home - Christmas caroling for shut-ins - Hosting an appreciation for the religious in the area - Become pen pals with the religious
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CALL FOR PAPERS Extended Paper Submission Deadline: April 12, 2016 The 2016 (12th) International Conference on Data Mining (DMIN) www.dmin-2016.com as part of The 2016 World Congress in Computer Science, Computer Engineering, and Applied Computing July 25-28, 2016, Monte Carlo Resort, Las Vegas, USA WORLDCOMP'16 http://www.world-academy-of-science.org/ You are invited to submit a paper for consideration. All accepted papers will be published in printed conference books/proceedings (each with a unique international ISBN number) and will also be made available online. The proceedings will be indexed in science citation databases that track citation frequency/data. In addition, like prior years, extended versions of selected papers (about 40%) will appear in journals and edited research books; publishers include, Springer, Elsevier, BMC, and others). See the web link below for a small subset of such publications: (some of these books and journal special issues have already received the top 25% downloads in their respective fields and/or identified as "Highly Accessed" by publishers and/or science citation index trackers.) http://www.worldacademyofscience.org/worldcomp15/ws/books_journals.html The Congress is composed of a number of tracks (joint-conferences, tutorials, sessions, workshops, poster and panel discussions); all will be held simultaneously, same location and dates: July 25-28, 2016. The complete list of joint conferences can be found at http://www.world-academy-ofscience.org/. DMIN is part of the Congress. IMPORTANT DATES (with extended submission/notification dates): April 12, 2016: Submission of full papers (max 7 pages) April 23, 2016: Notification of acceptance (+/- two days) May 10, 2016: Final papers + Copyright + Registration July 25-28, 2016: The 2016 World Congress in Computer Science, Computer Engineering, and Applied Computing (including DMIN and all the other affiliated federated conferences). SCOPE: Submitted papers should be related to Data Mining, Data Science, Machine Learning and similar topics. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following: * Data Mining/Machine Learning Tasks * Time series forecasting * Regression/Classification * Segmentation/Clustering/Association * Explorative and visual data mining * Deviation and outlier detection * Web mining * Temporal and spatial data mining * Mining text and semi-structured data * Multimedia mining (audio/video) * * Others Mining "big data" * Data Mining Algorithms * Fuzzy logic and rough sets * Artificial neural networks * Decision trees/rule learners * Evolutionary computation/meta heuristics * Support vector machines * Statistical methods * Case based reasoning * Collaborative filtering * Link and sequence analysis * Others * Ensembles/committee approaches * Data Mining Integration * Distributed and grid based data mining * Mining large scale data/big data * Data and knowledge representation * Integration of prior/domain knowledge * Data warehousing and OLAP integration * Metadata and ontologies * Legal and social aspects of data mining * Agent technologies for data mining * Data Mining Process * Data cleaning and preparation * Feature selection and transformation * Sampling and rebalancing * Attribute discretisation and encoding * Missing value imputation * Induction principles * Model selection/assessment and comparison * Model interpretation * Others * Data Mining Applications * Medicine Data Mining * Bioinformatics * Business/Corporate/Industrial Data Mining * Direct Marketing * Credit Scoring * Database Marketing * Military Data Mining * Engineering Mining * Security Data Mining * Data Mining in Logistics * Social Science Mining * Others We particularly encourage submissions of industrial applications and case studies from practitioners. These will not be evaluated using solely theoretical research criteria, but will take general interest and presentation into consideration. * Data Mining Software * All aspects and modules * Alternative and additional examples of possible topics include: * Data Mining for Business Intelligence * * Big Data Emerging technologies in data mining * Computational performance issues in data mining * Advanced prediction modelling using data mining * Data mining in usability * Data mining and national security * Data analysis * Data mining tools * Data preparation techniques (selection, transformation, and preprocessing) * Clustering algorithms used in data mining * Information extraction methodologies * Genetic algorithms and categorization techniques used in data mining * Microarray design and analysis * Data and information integration * Privacy-preserving data mining * Statistical methods used in data mining * Active data mining * Multidimensional data * Automatic data cleaning * Case studies and prototypes * Data visualization * Knowledge Discovery in Databases (KDD) * Theory and practice - knowledge representation and discovery * Uncertainty management * Data engineering * Data reduction methods * Content mining * Information retrieval * Indexing schemes * Metadata use and management * Multimedia information systems * Multidimensional query languages and query optimization * Search engine query processing * Applications (examples: data mining in education, marketing, finance and financial services, business applications, medicine, bioinformatics, biological sciences, science and technology, industry and government, ...) * Pattern mining SUBMISSION OF PAPERS FOR EVALUATION: Prospective authors are invited to submit their papers by uploading them to the DMIN evaluation web site via http://www.dmin-2016.com/submission.htm. Submissions must be uploaded by the due date (see IMPORTANT DATES) and must be in pdf format (7 pages for Regular Research Papers; 4 pages for Short Research Papers; 2 pages for Extended Abstract/Poster Papers - the number of pages include all figures, tables, and references). For typesetting etc. please have a look at http://www.dmin-2016.com/submission.htm. Later, the authors of accepted papers will be asked to upload their final paper on a different system organized by Worldcomp. Papers must not have been previously published or currently submitted for publication elsewhere. The first page of the paper should include the followings: - Title of the paper - Name, affiliation, postal address, and email address of each author (identify the name of the Contact Author) - Abstract (between 100 and 120 words) - A maximum of 5 topical keywords that would best represent the work described in the paper - While submitting, choose your paper type as "Regular Research Paper", "Short Research Paper", or "Extended Abstract/Poster Paper". - The actual text of the paper can start from the first page (space permitting). Type of Submissions/Papers: - Full/Regular Research Papers (maximum of 7 pages): Regular Research Papers should provide detail original research contributions. They must report new research results that represent a contribution to the field; sufficient details and support for the results and conclusions should also be provided. The work presented in regular papers are expected to be at a stage of maturity that with some additional work can be published as journal papers. - Short Research Papers (maximum of 4 pages): Short Research Papers report on ongoing research projects. They should provide overall research methodologies with some results. The work presented in short papers are expected to be at a stage of maturity that with some additional work can be published as regular papers. - Extended Abstract/Poster Papers (maximum of 2 pages): Poster papers report on ongoing research projects that are still In their infancy (i.e., at very early stages). Such papers tend to provide research methodologies without yet concrete results. Special Sessions: The following special sessions will be hosted by DMIN'16: 1) Real-World Data Mining & Data Science Applications, Challenges, and Perspectives 2) Data Science and Data Services 3) eMaintenance and Industrial Big Data For details and specific CfPs, see the link http://dmin-2016.com/special_sessions.htm - - - Authors are to conform to the common CODE OF ETHICS FOR AUTHORS (The document for the Code of Ethics is available on the submission web site.) Each paper will be peer-reviewed by at least two experts in the field for originality, significance, clarity, impact, and soundness. In cases of contradictory recommendations, a member of the conference program committee would be charged to make the final decision (accept/reject); often, this would involve seeking help from additional referees. Papers whose authors include a member of the conference program committee will be evaluated using the double-blinded review process. (Essay/philosophical papers will not be refereed but may be considered for discussion/panels). The proceedings will be published in printed conference books (ISBN) and will also be made available online. The printed proceedings/books will be available for distribution on site at the conference. The proceedings will be indexed in science citation databases that track citation frequency/data for each published paper. The proceedings/books of this congress have been evaluated and approved for inclusion into major science citation index databases. In addition, all proceedings are approved for inclusion into EBSCO ( www.ebsco.com ), one of the largest subject index systems. ACM Digital Library is also including the titles into its database http://dl.acm.org/browse_by.cfm?by=title&pub=PUB4201&type=all&CFID=742684741&CFTOKEN=4 1356293 as well as ProQuest indexing database and others. In addition to the above, Worldcomp has arranged two new book series (multiple books in each series); one with Elsevier publishers (Emerging Trends in Computer Science and Applied Computing) and another with Springer publishers (Transactions of Computational Science and Computational Intelligence). After the conference (the process may take 12 to 18 months), a significant number of authors of accepted papers of our congress, will be given the opportunity to submit the extended version of their papers for publication consideration in these books. We anticipate having between 10 and 15 books a year in each of these book series projects. Each book in each series will be subject to Elsevier and Springer science indexing products (whichincludes: Scopus, www.info.scopus.com; SCI Compendex, Engineering Village, www.ei.org; EMBASE, www.info.embase.com; and others). For a recent and a very small subset of the books (and journal special issues) that have been published based on the extended versions of many of the congress papers, see the link below: http://www.worldacademyofscience.org/worldcomp15/ws/books_journals.html PUBLICATION IN JOURNAL AND EDITED BOOK VOLUME Selected high quality papers accepted and presented at the conference will be invited for an extended publication in the special issue of the International Journal of Service Science, Management, Engineering and Technology (indexed by JournalTOC, INSPEC, DBLP, Cabell's, Ulrich's, and others) and an edited book by Springer TUTORIALS, INVITED TALKS DMIN' 16 will host the following tutorials/invited talks 1) Peter Geczy Invited Talk: Data Science: Where Academia Meets Commerce 2) Gary M. Weiss Invited Talk: Mining Smartphone and Smartwatch Sensor Data: Activity Recognition, Biometrics, and Beyond 3) Diego Galar Tutorial: Industrial Big Data: The door to prescriptive analytics + Planned: Ulf Johansson - Prediction with confidence For details and specific CfPs, see the link http://dmin-2016.com/tutorials.htm CO-SPONSORS: Please have a look at the DMIN website and the WORLDCOMP website. MEMBERS OF PROGRAM AND ORGANIZING COMMITTEES: Please have a look at the DMIN website and the WORLDCOMP website. The 2016 Program Committee for individual conferences are currently being compiled. Many who have already joined the committees are renowned leaders, scholars, researchers, scientists and practitioners of the highest ranks; many are directors of research labs., fellows of various societies, heads/ chairs of departments, program directors of research funding agencies, as well as deans and provosts. Program Committee members are expected to have established a strong and documented research track record. Those interested in joining the Program Committee should email [email protected] the following information for consideration: Name, affiliation and position, complete mailing address, email address, a one-page biography that includes research expertise & the name of the conference(s) offering to help with. GENERAL INFORMATION: The Congress will be composed of research presentations, keynote lectures, invited presentations, tutorials, panel discussions, and poster presentations. To get an overview on keynote/tutorial/panel speakers in recent past, please have a look at the Congress website. The Congress is among the top five largest annual gathering of researchers in computer science, computer engineering and applied computing. We anticipate to have attendees from about 85 countries and territories. To get a feeling about the conferences' atmosphere, see some delegates photos available at: 2015 Congress: http://worldcomp.phanfare.com/6981287 2014 Congress: http://worldcomp.phanfare.com/6626396 Last 10 years: http://worldcomp.phanfare.com/ An important mission of The Congress is "Providing a unique platform for a diverse community of constituents composed of scholars, researchers, developers, educators, and practitioners. The Congress makes concerted effort to reach out to participants affiliated with diverse entities (such as: universities, institutions, corporations, government agencies, and research centers/labs) from all over the world. The congress also attempts to connect participants from institutions that have teaching as their main mission with those who are affiliated with institutions that have research as their main mission. The congress uses a quota system to achieve its institution and geography diversity objectives." One main goal of the congress is to assemble a spectrum of affiliated research conferences, workshops, and symposiums into a coordinated research meeting held in a common place at a common time. This model facilitates communication among researchers in different fields of computer science, computer engineering, and applied computing. The Congress also encourages multi-disciplinary and inter-disciplinary research initiatives; i.e., facilitating increased opportunities for cross-fertilization across sub-disciplines. MEASURABLE SCIENTIFIC IMPACT OF CONGRESS: As of January 5, 2016, papers published in the conference proceedings that have been held as part of this congress, have received 28,380 citations (includes 3,346 self-citations). Citation data is obtained from Microsoft Academic Search. The citation data does not even include more than 17,000 other citations to papers in conferences whose first offerings were initiated by this congress (such as: FUSION, ICWS, ICMLA, and others). MISCELLANEOUS: The information that appears in this announcement is correct as of March 23, 2016. CONTACT: Inquiries should be sent to: [email protected]
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Kering (KER-FR) Data suggests stagnating interest in Gucci and increasing interest in Balenciaga and Alexander McQueen www.tickertags.com Mark W. Bachman Head of Ticker Tags 646.802.6290 [email protected] Daria Woods Analyst 646.802.6286 [email protected] Balenciaga and Alexander McQueen are showing positive momentum, while flagship brands of Gucci and Saint Laurent appear to be idling. Gucci and Saint Laurent have been leading brands for Kering, but Balenciaga and Alexander McQueen are becoming increasingly important to the company. The Gucci brand accounts for the majority of Kering's Total Houses segment. * Mention frequency related to Gucci was marginally down Y/Y in FQ2. We are concerned that the popularity of this brand may have peaked. We will be monitoring Gucci in the future to determine whether this becomes a more significant downward trend. * Mention frequency related to Saint Laurent was marginally up Y/Y in FQ2. While the trend is mildly positive, we are concerned by the apparently slowing rate of change. We believe it is key for this brand to monitor whether momentum has shifted to a downward trend. * Mention frequency of ["balenciaga"] was up 183% Y/Y in FQ2. This suggests increased consumer interest in the brand. * Mention frequency of ["alexander mcqueen"] was up 56% Y/Y in FQ2. This increase was partially due to rumors that Meghan Markle might wear the designer for her wedding to Prince Harry. We believe consumer interest in Alexander McQueen, not related to Meghan Markle, is increasing. BACKGROUND * In 2018 FQ1, Western Europe, North America, and Japan respectively accounted for 32%, 18%, and 9% of Total Houses Revenue. * In 2018 FQ1, Gucci, Saint Laurent, and Other Houses respectively accounted for 62%, 14%, and 15% of Total Houses Revenue. * In 2018 FQ1, Balenciaga and Alexander McQueen were called out as driving Other Houses Revenue. DATA SUGGESTS MARGINALLY DECREASED CONSUMER INTEREST IN GUCCI Mention frequency of ["gucci" –"gucci gang"] was down 12% Y/Y in FQ2 (Figure 1). We believe this may suggest that Gucci's brand popularity may have peaked. However, we believe it is too early to tell if consumer interest in Gucci has begun a declining trend (Figure 2). Worldwide, US, UK, France, Germany, Italy, and Japan online searches for [gucci] were all up double digits Y/Y, but at a slower rate of growth compared to the past three quarters (Figure 3). The Q/Q search data is demonstrating a mild downward trend. We believe it is noteworthy to highlight the slowing Y/Y and declining Q/Q search trends for Gucci. When coupled with the Twitter data, we are concerned that consumer interest in this brand may be waning. Source: TickerTags Source: TickerTags FIGURE 3: ONLINE SEARCHES FOR [gucci] BY COUNTRY Source: Google Trends DATA SUGGESTS MARGINALLY INCREASED CONSUMER INTEREST IN SAINT LAURENT Combined mention frequency of ["saint laurent"] and ["ysl"] was marginally up 10% Y/Y in FQ2 (Figure 4). We believe this may indicate a slowed rate of growth in consumer interest in the brand. Worldwide, US, UK, France, Germany, Italy, and Japan combined online searches for ["saint laurent"] and ["ysl"] were flat to marginally up Y/Y; however, searches in each country were down Q/Q (Figure 5). We will be monitoring these tags in the future to determine whether this becomes a significant downward trend. Source: TickerTags FIGURE 5: COMBINED ONLINE SEARCHES FOR [saint laurent] AND [ysl] BY COUNTRY Source: Google Trends DATA SUGGESTS INCREASED INTEREST IN BALENCIAGA Mention frequency of ["balenciaga"] was up 183% Y/Y in FQ2 (Figure 6). This suggests significantly increased interest in the brand. Worldwide, US, France, Germany, Italy, and Japan searches for [balenciaga] were up triple digits Y/Y in FQ2 (Figure 7). While Kering does not currently break out Balenciaga revenue, we believe that Balenciaga is an increasingly important brand in Kering's portfolio. Source: TickerTags FIGURE 7: ONLINE SEARCHES FOR [balenciaga] BY COUNTRY Source: Google Trends DATA SUGGESTS INCREASED INTEREST IN ALEXANDER MCQUEEN Mention frequency of ["alexander mcqueen"] was up 56% Y/Y in FQ2 (Figure 8). Worldwide, UK, France, Germany, and Italy online searches for [alexander mcqueen] were up triple digits Y/Y (Figure 9). US online searches were up double digits Y/Y. While this increase was partially due to rumors that Meghan Markle would wear Alexander McQueen to wed Prince Harry, we believe overall interest in the brand increased outside royal wedding rumors. Source: TickerTags FIGURE 9: ONLINE SEARCH DATA FOR [alexander mcqueen] BY COUNTRY Source: Google Trends TICKERTAGS ANALYSTS Follow us on: Mark W. Bachman Head of TickerTags 646.802.6290 [email protected] Laura Casey Analyst 646.802.6289 [email protected] Jacob Allen Analyst 646.802.6288 [email protected] Daria Woods Analyst 646.802.6286 [email protected] ABOUT TICKERTAGS TickerTags maps the digital ecosystem and recognize insights in everyday conversation. With approximately 1 million tags mapped to nearly 3,000 public and private companies, TickerTags maps and monitors the multitude of tangible and intangible business drivers that move and influence companies and markets. Structuring alternative data for the investment industry is often a laborious, resource-intensive and time-consuming exercise. As a leading word mention frequency investment tool, TickerTags converts conversation activity into investment insight that is useful for investment analysis. www.tickertags.com ABOUT M SCIENCE M Science is a data-driven research and analytics firm, uncovering new insights for leading financial institutions and corporations. Founded in 2002, M Science is revolutionizing research, discovering new data sets and pioneering methodologies to provide actionable intelligence. Our research teams have decades of expertise working with massive amounts of unstructured data in near real-time to discern critical insights that help clients make more informed decisions. We combine the best of finance, data and technology to create a truly unique value proposition for both financial services firms and top corporations. www.mscience.com REFERENCES On May 31, 2018, M Science LLC acquired substantially all of the business of TickerTags, Inc. Prior to this date, reports were prepared and distributed by TickerTags, Inc. Mention frequency is derived from the total number of tag mentions divided by the number of total mentions. This is represented as tag mentions per 100 million total mentions. If total mentions fail to meet 100 million mentions in a period, then the data is scaled. Data reflects English language messages excluding messages suspected to be spam and messages deemed NSFW. Organic mentions reflect tag mentions excluding retweets and tweets containing hyperlinks. As a minimum barometer of reliability, the volume of estimated quarterly tag mentions on Twitter (different from normalized tag frequency) should be no less than 1000. Tags with quarterly mention volume less than 1000 should be viewed with caution. Estimated Twitter mention volume is deduced by applying a 10x multiplier on the tag's volume of mentions originating from Twitter's Decahose. Twitter's Decahose comprises approximately 50 million tweets daily. The context of 300 representative Tweets for comparable periods has been reviewed and has been found to be contextually similar. Ian Byrne Analyst 646.802.6287 [email protected]
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10:20 ANDERSON VALLEY WINEGROWERS ASSOCIATION BOARD AGENDA Wednesday, November 9th, 9:00am-11:00 am Zoom * Sponsorship renewals & new partnerships * AVWA Membership Drive * Transition to Zoho * 2023 signups for Winter White Wine Festival, Pinot Noir Festival * March 2023 Coast Trade Event, PR Committee * 2022 Harvest Tidrick weekend recap - group would like to move the event to Saturday and remove passport items. Discussion to move event into regional harvest weekends in November. Courtney concerned about the weather and shift of event to indoors. Courtney to draft a budget of non-passport event. Financial Report – Cris Carter (20 min) - see Cris report in consent agenda Checking & Savings remained the same; checking down $8K A/R $106K; expect some member attrition Sponsorships A/R in budget would be helpful to see; Courtney hasn't updated contracts so PJ hasn’t invoiced Cris will transition out of the BOD; signing authority will need to be transferred to Sarah & new Treasurer. Who will want to sign checks? PJ could be authorized as a signer and she is a notary so has insurance. Checks and balances are important because of regional fraud. 10:40 Committee Updates (10 min): * Vineyard– Norm Kobler (5 min) - Pruning contest has sponsors and set for 1/20. Baccus will donate pruning sheers, determining judges - hoping Bob will join, Vineyard Committee will host the Pinot Noir Fest, Coast Trade Tuesday vineyard member event * Environmental– Doug Stewart (5 min) - fantastic Land Symposium; filled the room and inspiring. Great content and a great event about sustainability in the Valley. Re: FFF and the intention of trying to get all members certified is of concern because some members have other certifications. Other certifications are exceeding the expectations of FFF. FFF will do most of the paperwork for the property owner if the property provides the information. Address/promote at Coast Trade Vineyard Tuesday. 10:45 Other Business (15 min) * Fish Friendly Farming certification for AVWA Membership * AV Skatepark community initiative * December 8th General Membership Meeting & Social, 5:00pm-8:00pm at Scharffenberger Cellars o BOD Election o Recruitment opportunity for committees o In 2024 Handley has requested to host the winter general meeting; this was the tradition of past before Scharffenberger hosted in 2021 o December 8 th AV Community Tasting, 2:30pm-4:30pm at Scharffenberger, hosted by Tonnelerie Tremeaux * Next BOD meeting 11/29 to prepare for General Meeting * Exec BOD Check-In: Tuesday, December 6 th , 3:00-4:00pm via Zoom * July General Meeting - Sarah may be unable to attend; move up a week or back a week? 11:00 Adjourn
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ATTENDANCE POLICY FOR PARENTS Most children at Lily Lane have excellent attendance. Evidence shows that a poor attendance and punctuality impact not only on a child's learning but also their friendships in school and their well-being. Every child should be attending school every day, on time. There may be occasional times when your child is unwell. Please contact the school office in the morning to provide a reason for absence. If no contact is received, we will initiate our 'First Day calling' procedures or we may make a home visit as part of safe guarding procedures. Arrival at school Getting to school on time Every child is expected to be at school by 9.00 am. The register will be taken promptly at this time in order for lessons to start immediately. The doors will have closed shortly after 9.00 am and you and your child are required to go to reception to provide a reason for lateness. Once the register is closed the morning session will not be authorised for children who are very late. Very occasionally things happen to delay us. It is always better to arrive late than not at al. if this happens to you please ring in a s soon as possible to inform the office so that children can be registered for dinner. If your child is late twice in one week, or five times in a half term, you will receive a letter. If this continues you will be asked to attend a meeting in school. Persistent lateness or late lateness can lead to further action including court action being taken. Medical Absence & illness Routine medical appointments should be made outside of school hours. If it is unavoidable to have an appointment in school time it is important that your child attends school before and after the appointment, if possible. If your child is missing school frequently and/or through prolonged absence medical evidence will be needed. Please provide an appointment card to reception for absence to be authorised within the register. Leave of Absence during Term Time: The government has made the decision that there is NO ENTITLEMENT for parents to take their children on holiday during term time – ALL HOLIDAYS TAKEN IN TERM TIME WILL BE MARKED AS UNAUTHORISED (unless in exceptional circumstance) At Lily Lane Primary School Leave of Absence cannot be authorised unless there are 'exceptional circumstances.' This can only be authorised by the Head Teacher. We will always listen to the reasons and your request, each request should be received in writing at least a month before and will be looked at individually and a decision to authorise the absences or not will be made and based on the information given. If you do not formally request a leave of absence and your child does not attend school, this absence will be marked as unauthorised and you may be at risk of being issued a penalty notice fine or referred to the local authority to consider a prosecution. Penalty Notices & Prosecutions If your child has poor attendance at school, or your child does not attend school for an unauthorised leave of absence and you do not engage with us, you may be at risk of a penalty notice fine or a referral being submitted for prosecution. A penalty notice is an early deterrent this is intended to prevent more extended periods of unauthorised absence developing. Penalty notices incur a fine of £120, which is reduced to £60 if paid within 21 days of the notice being served.
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Farnham Guide Price £750,000 (Freehold) A very well presented 4 bedroom, detached family home with a contemporary feel, located in a favoured South Farnham location. EPC D This spacious family home has been updated by the current owners over the past 5 years to include a new kitchen and bathroom, oak flooring fitted to many of the ground floor areas and double glazing replaced. There is a sitting room with open fireplace and this room, together with the dining room overlook the rear garden. The family room/study to the front provides additional space and the kitchen is complemented by a separate utility room. The four bedrooms are all doubles, each with storage cupboards, and the master benefits from an en-suite with under floor heating. The family bathroom has been refitted and the property has gas central heating. The gardens lie to the front, side and rear and provide a good deal of seclusion. * Entrance Hall with understairs storage cupboard, oak flooring and coats cupboard. * Cloakroom with low level w.c. and wash basin with storage below. * Sitting Room - Again with oak flooring, open fireplace, opening to the dining room and double doors to the garden. * Dining Room with matching oak flooring. * Family Room/Study which overlooks the front of the property with a bay window and storage with sliding doors. * Kitchen with white high gloss units and oak work surfaces. Integrated appliances include an oven, microwave, dishwasher and gas hob with extractor over. There is a breakfast bar and door to garden. Step down to Utility Room with space and plumbing for washing machine and tumble dryer, door to garage. Stairs to First Floor * Landing with airing cupboard. * Bedroom 1 overlooking the rear garden with large walk-in wardrobe. *En-Suite Shower Room with under floor heating, walk-in shower, wash basin with drawer under, low level w.c. and heated towel rail. * Bedroom 2 - A further double, rear aspect room with wardrobes * Bedroom 3 - Another double room. * Bedroom 4 - A further double with wardrobes. * Family Bathroom with part tiled walls, tiled flooring, shaped bath with shower over, wash basin with storage below, low level w.c. Detached house with a contemporary feel G 4 Bedrooms (master en-suite with under floor heating) G 3 Reception rooms G Kitchen and separate utility room G Double Garage G Oak flooring to many ground floor areas G Replaced double glazing G South Farnham location G Directions The property is located in a popular South Farnham road less than 2 miles from Farnham town centre and within a walk of both St Peters School and Weydon School. The town offers a good variety of shops, bars, bistros and restaurants together with a main line station (Waterloo 55 minutes). The A31 providing access to the A331, A3 and M3 is within easy reach and the area is surrounded by many miles of countryside for walking, riding and cycling. IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PURCHASERS: We endeavour to make our sales particulars accurate and reliable, however, they do not constitute or form part of an offer or any contract and none is to be relied upon as statements of representation or fact. The services, systems and appliances listed in this specification have not been tested by us and no guarantees as to their operating ability or efficiency are given. All measurements have been taken as guide to prospective buyers only, and are not precise. If you require clarification or further information on any points, please contact us, especially if you are travelling some distance to view. [email protected] www.curchods.com
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Scandia Riders Saddle Club WSCA Two Game Show Buckle Series Dead Broke Saddle Club Arena 5676 170th St. North, Hugo, MN 55038 Saturday, June 22, 2019 -- 8:00 am Saturday, August 17, 2019 -- 8:00 am WSCA Approved Judge: Allan Spidahl ENTRY FEES: $4.00 per event/per rider and a $5.00 Office Charge per Horse/Rider Combination SidePot Barrels $10.00 SidePot Poles $10.00 SidePot Keyhole $10.00 ♦ Class 20 will not start before 11:00 AM ♦ | | Event | Age Group | |---|--------------------------------------------|-----------------| | 1 | Pet Pony Poles | 48" & Under | | 2 | Pony Poles | 54" & Under | | 3 | Pee Wee Poles | 10 & Under | | 4 | Pet Pony Keyhole | 48" & Under | | 5 | Pony Keyhole | 54" & Under | | 6 | Pee Wee Keyhole | 10 & Under | | 7 | Pet Pony Barrels | 48" & Under | | 8 | Pony Barrels | 54" & Under | | 9 | Pee Wee Barrels | 10 & Under | |10 | Pet Pony Jump Figure 8 | 48" & Under | |11 | Pony Jumping Figure 8 | 54" & Under | |12 | Pee Wee Jumping Figure 8 | 10 & Under | |13 | Pet Pony One Barrel Pennant | 48" & Under | |14 | Pony One Barrel Pennant | 54" & Under | |15 | Pee Wee One Barrel Pennant | 10 & Under | |16 | Pet Pony Speed Dash | 48" & Under | |17 | Pony Speed Dash | 54" & Under | |18 | Pee Wee Speed Dash | 10 & Under | |19 | Egg and Spoon | 10 & Under | |20 | Egg and Spoon | 17 & Under | |21 | Egg and Spoon | 18 & Over | |22 | Pole Weaving | 11-13 | |23 | Pole Weaving | 14-17 | |24 | Pole Weaving | 18-34 | |25 | Pole Weaving | 35-49 | |26 | Pole Weaving | 50 & Over | |27 | Pole Weaving ++ | Novice | |28 | Keyhole | 11-13 | |29 | Keyhole | 14-17 | |30 | Keyhole | 18-34 | |31 | Keyhole | 35-49 | |32 | Keyhole | 50 & Over | |33 | Keyhole ++ | Novice | |34 | Barrels | 11-13 | |35 | Barrels | 14-17 | |36 | Barrels | 18-34 | |37 | Barrels | 35-49 | |38 | Barrels | 50 & Over | |39 | Barrels ++ | Novice | |40 | Jumping Figure 8 | 11-13 | |41 | Jumping Figure 8 | 14-17 | |42 | Jumping Figure 8 | 18-34 | |43 | Jumping Figure 8 | 35-49 | |44 | Jumping Figure 8 | 50 & Over | |45 | Jumping Figure 8 ++ | Novice | |46 | One Barrel Pennant | 11-13 | |47 | One Barrel Pennant | 14-17 | |48 | One Barrel Pennant | 18-34 | |49 | One Barrel Pennant | 35-49 | |50 | One Barrel Pennant | 50 & Over | |51 | One Barrel Pennant ++ | Novice | |52 | Speed Dash | 11-13 | |53 | Speed Dash | 14-17 | |54 | Speed Dash | 18-34 | |55 | Speed Dash | 35-49 | |56 | Speed Dash | 50 & Over | |57 | Speed Dash ++ | Novice | |58 | Ribbon Race ** | Open | |59 | 4-in-a-Line ** | Open | |60 | Rescue Race ** | Open | ** These classes do not count for High Point or towards Buckle Series High Point. ++ Novice Classes are non-qualifying for WSCA Champ Show. You must select Novice or your Age Group in any category - you may not cross enter, except for those events that do not have a Novice option. You may ride as a Novice if: 1. You have not ridden in more than 10 WSCA game shows prior to this year and 2. You have never shown in games at the WSCA. All Awards based on Horse/Rider Combination - There will be 1st-6th place ribbons for each class at both shows, plus 9 High Point & Reserve Ribbon Horse Sashes - 8 Buckles will be awarded to the Two Show Series High Point winners in all age categories (except Novice) after the show on Saturday, August 17th (In case of a tie, most 1st places will win.) FOOD VENDOR WILL BE ON SITE Rain or Shine – No Refunds --WSCA RULES APPLY-- -- HORSE WATER AVAILABLE -- -- NEGATIVE COGGINS REQUIRED -- -- NO DOGS ALLOWED -- For more information contact: Gayle Bergstrom 651-785-6236 or Laura Kemmis 651-341-0601
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Automotive Technology General Motors Associate in Science MassBay courses are offered days, evenings, weekends, and online. View the complete list of online courses at https://mbccweb.massbay.edu/online/ Check current course availability at www.massbay.edu/courses DIVISION OF AUTOMOTIVE TECHNOLOGY The General Motors Automotive Service Education Program (ASEP) is designed to provide the technical competence and professional level training of the incoming dealership technicians. The ASEP program involves academics as well as automotive lecture/ laboratory instruction focusing on General Motors (GM) products at the MassBay Automotive Technology Center. Students are also required to work at a GM dealership as part of the cooperative education phase of their training. The General Motors ASEP Program is a collaborative effort between MassBay Community College and General Motors. The College retains academic and administrative responsibility for the program and is certified by the National Automotive Technicians Education Foundation (NATEF) in all eight performance areas. Upon completion, the Associate in Science Degree in Automotive Technology with a concentration in General Motors is awarded. ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS Minimum eligibility for Admission to this program includes: * Completion of placement tests. * Valid driver's license (May be subject to dealership review of driving record and drug testing). PROGRAM FOOTNOTES Competency in mathematics is a MassBay graduation requirement. Prior to graduation, students must demonstrate competency at 100-level math. This may be accomplished by an appropriate placement test score or completion of any 100-level mathematics course or higher, except mathematics courses with a MAC prefix. COURSE COURSE TITLE CREDITS Semester 1
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The door opened, and a young woman stepped inside. She was wearing a polka-dot dress and had a basket in her hand. She smiled at the man who was sitting on the floor, and he looked up at her with a smile.
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THE HALL OF RECORDS The Hall of Records of Maryland was built as a part of the tercentenary celebration of the landing of the *Ark* and the *Dove*. It is located in Annapolis on the corner of College Avenue and St. John’s Street. It is controlled and supervised by the Hall of Records Commission which was created by Chapter 18, Acts of 1935, and which is composed ex-officio of the Governor, the Comptroller of the Treasury, the Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals, the Presidents of the St. John’s College, the Maryland Historical Society, the Board of the Peabody Institute, and the Johns Hopkins University. The present members of the Hall of Records Commission are Governor Herbert R. O’Conor, the Honorable J. Millard Tawes, Jr., Judge Ogle Marbury, Chairman, Mr. Stringfellow Barr, Senator George L. Radcliffe, Dr. J. Hall Pleasants, and Dr. Isaiah Bowman. Every state, county, city, town, or other public official in Maryland is *authorized* to deposit in the Hall of Records, any original papers, official books, records, documents, files, newspapers, printed books, or portraits not in use. He is *required* to deposit all records in his custody created before the date of the adoption of the Federal Constitution by Maryland, April 28, 1788. The Hall of Records will furnish for a small fee photostat, typewritten or microfilm copies of any documents in its custody. All the materials at the Hall of Records are available for use by the public in the Search room of the Hall of Records subject to such regulations for their safekeeping as have been adopted by the Hall of Records Commission. Inquiries received by mail will be answered if the research required is confined to the use of our extensive indexes; however, no family lines will be traced, nor will any record be evaluated for genealogical purposes.
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Starters White Onion & Thyme Soup, Chestnuts (V) or Ham Hock & Parsley Ballotine, Apple, Walnut or Smoked Salmon, Dill Oil, Capers, Lemon or Panko and Coconut Crusted King Prawns, Sweet Chilli Mayonnaise Main Course Sea Bream, Oyster Mushrooms, Confit Potatoes, Red Wine & Port Reduction or Braised Ox Cheek, Red Wine Sauce, Smoked Mashed Potatoes or Roast Turkey, Pigs in Blankets, Sage and Onion Stuffing, Dauphinoise Potatoes, Madeira Sauce or Dauphinoise & Caramelised Onion Pithivier, Snowdonia Cheddar & Chive Velouté (V) All served with Sprouts, Chantenay Carrots and Parsnip Puree Dessert Christmas Pudding, Marmalade Ice Cream, Rum Anglaise or Chocolate & Amaretto Torte, Vanilla Ice Cream or Pannacotta, Mandarin Sorbet, Orange Caramel or Hafod cheddar, Perl Wen, Perl Las, Apple Chutney £37.50 for three courses £28.50 for two courses Please note – For a minimum of 10 people. A full pre order is required at least 7 days prior to your dinner. Full payment is required when the pre order is submitted. I Gychwyn Cawl Winwns Gwyn a Teim, Cnau Castan (Ll) neu Ballontine Ham Hoc a Persli, Afal, Cnau Ffrengig neu Eog Mwg, Olew Dil, Capers a Lemwn neu Corgimychiaid Brenin Panko a Choconyt, Mayonnaise Chilli Melys Prif gwrs Merfog y Môr, Madarch Wystrys, Tatw Confit, Lleihad Gwin Coch a Port neu Boch Ychen Brwysiedig, Saws Gwin Coch, Tatws Stwmp Mwg neu Twrci Rhost, Moch mewn Blancedi, Stwffin Winwns & Saets, Tatws Dauphinoise, Saws Madeira neu Pithivier Dauphinoise a Winwns wedi'i Garameleiddio, Velouté Caws Cheddar Snowdonia a Sifys (Ll) Pob un wedi ei weini gydag Ysgewyll, Moron Chantenay a Piwri Pannas Pwdin Pwdin Nadolig, Hufen Iâ Marmaled, Crème Anglaise Rỳm neu Torte Siocled ac Amaretto, Hufen Iâ Fanila neu Pannacotta, Sorbet Manadrin, Caramel Oren neu Perl Las, Perl Wen, Cheddar Hafod, Siytni Afal £37.50 am dri gwrs £28.50 am ddau gwrs Noder - Ar gyfer lleiafswm o 10 person. Mae angen archeb lawn o leiaf 7 diwrnod cyn eich cinio. Mae angen talu'n llawn pan gyflwynir yr archeb ymlaen llaw.
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0>;9,79/26,9? 8<-42:10/ -? ,<;1792;? 6@" %(&* .<;;,.3! :,;<9/,?! 67=05-09 )! &$$+ # 3,9;23, %(! %+'% STATE ELECTION COMMISSION, ORISSA TOSHALI PLAZA, B-2, 1ST FLOOR, SATYANAGAR, BHUBANESWAR-751 007 NOTIFICATION The 7th November 2009 No. 4918-SEC.—Whereas the Sub-Collectors of different districts have submitted the proposal for by-election to the office of Sarpanch/Ward Member due to death/resignation/noconfidence motion/disqualification of the concerned Sarpanch/Ward Member as mentioned in the statement appended to this order; Now, therefore, the State Election Commission in exercise of powers conferred under Article 243-K of Constitution of India, read with Section 16 of O.G.P. Act, 1964 and Rule 85 (1) of O.G.P.E. Rules, 1965 hereby appoints the following dates and time for the by-election to be held in respect of the offices of Sarpanch and Ward Member as per the statement appended herewith :— The model code of conduct issued by the Commission will remain in force in the concerned Panchayat /Ward from the 7th November 2009. STATEMENT OF BY-ELECTION TO THE OFFICE OF WARD MEMBER/SARPANCH TO BE HELD ON 17-12-2009 (1) (2) Ganjam (3) Purusottampur (4) Bhatakumarada (5) Ward No. 3 4 By order and in the name of State Election Commission, Orissa G. SAHU Special Secretary
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IOWA CENTRAL FUEL TESTING LABORATORY DISCLAIMER AND Terms and Conditions of Business with Iowa Central Fuel Testing Laboratory Here you will find our terms and conditions and general disclaimers of laboratory reports and general business policies that you may obtain as a customer/client. REPORTS AND ALL CERTIFICATES OF THE IOWA CENTRAL FUEL TESTING LABORATORY ARE ISSUED SUBJECT TO THE FOLLOWING TERMS, CONDITIONS & DISCLAIMERS: Note that the Iowa Central Fuel Testing Laboratory will be referred to as "The Company". 1. Reports are issued free of any alterations or additions. The Company does not accept any liability whatsoever for the tampering or any unlawful alteration of documents sent via any electronic transmission media. 2. Reports/certificates or any attachments shall NOT be reproduced, except IN FULL, without the prior written consent of the Company. Reports/certificates and any attachments by the Company will be e-mailed in pdf format to the customer/client. 3. Reports relate ONLY to the samples tested and are issued in good faith. 4. Tests outsourced are clearly identified as outsourced in reports and will only be outsourced with the written approval of the client/customer. Services are only outsourced to competent organizations as approved by the Company. 5. Every reasonable care is taken to ensure that the reports are accurate. Regarding the conclusions and/or opinions drawn from the results of these tests or investigations, the Company does not accept responsibility for any matters arising or consequences from the further use of these reports and/or certificates by third parties. 6. While every effort is taken by the Company and its employees to ensure that results/reports are timely presented to clients, the Company does not guarantee turnaround times nor is it responsible for any late delivery of services/goods because of circumstances beyond its control. In no event will the Company be liable Initials _______ for damages of any kind, including without limitation, direct, incidental or consequential damages (including, but not limited to, damages for lost profits, business interruption and loss programs or information) arising out of the use of or inability to use the Company's testing results and/or because of a delay in the Company providing test results, or in the test results or claims attributable to errors, omissions or other inaccuracies in the interpretations thereof. The maximum monetary amount that the Company would be liable for is reimbursement for the cost of the test and testing services received by customer/client. 7. The customer/client agrees to indemnify, defend and hold the Company harmless from and against all losses, expenses, damages and costs, including reasonable attorney fees arising out of or relating to any misuse by the customer/client of the content and/or services provided by the Company. 8. Any possible infringement of any patent rights of formulations or processes or any other patent rights is the sole responsibility and liability of the client/customer. 9. If the Company or its employees or agents are required to give expert evidence in any litigation arising from the reports, then the client will be charged for such services at the prevailing rate of the Company. 10. All services rendered by the Company are treated as strictly confidential. 11. All quotes given are valid for 30 days only, unless otherwise stated. 12. Any samples which remain after testing, will be retained for a period of SIXTY DAYS only, and any documents arising from the service rendered will be retained for a period of TWO (2) years, unless otherwise agreed to by and between the client/customer and the Company in writing. 13. A legal contract between the customer/client and the Company will be deemed to have been constituted upon the receipt by the customer/client of goods/services/reports. 14. The Company will not disclose information or test results to anyone other than the client/customer without the client/customer's written authorization and consent. 15. In the event of that, if any, of these terms or conditions are found to be invalid, unlawful, or unenforceable, such terms will be severable from the remaining terms, which will continue to be valid and enforceable. Initials _______ 16. Any legal costs and reasonable attorney fees incurred by the Company in enforcing any aspect of this agreement including legal or reasonable attorney fees will be the sole responsibility of the customer/client and will be payable by the customer/client to the Company on demand. 17. By submitting an order to the Company, the customer/client agrees to the terms and conditions of the Iowa Central Fuel Testing Laboratory Disclaimer and Terms and Conditions of Business with Iowa Central Fuel Testing Laboratory. I agree to the terms and conditions of the Iowa Central Fuel Testing Laboratory Disclaimer and Terms and Conditions of Business with Iowa Central Fuel Testing Laboratory. ____________________________________________ Business Name ____________________________________________ Signature of Business Representative ____________________________________________ Printed Name ___________________ Date
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ARPN Journal of Engineering and Applied Sciences ©2006-2010 Asian Research Publishing Network (ARPN). All rights reserved. www.arpnjournals.com APPLICATION OF BJT AS A BIDIRECTIONAL SWITCH FOR LOW VOLTAGE CIRCUIT PROTECTION G. R. Padmini 1 , M. Satyam 2 , K. Lalkishore 3 and P. A. Govindacharyulu 1 1 ECE, Vasavi College of Engineering, Hyderabad, India International Institute of Information Technology, Gatchibowli, Hyderabad, India 2 3 ECE, Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University, Hyderabad, India E-Mail: [email protected] ABSTRACT In this paper the function of an all electronic circuit breaker has been demonstrated. Till recently the alternatives to electromechanical and magnetic circuit breakers are very few. Solid state devices are reliable and have high life time. This circuit breaker is demonstrated with BJT as a bidirectional switch. The operation of the bidirectional switch is analyzed for different operating conditions to determine the limitations of this design. Bidirectional switches with TRIAC, IGBT are commercially available however circuit breaker with BJT as a bidirectional switch is a new approach for low voltage circuit protection. Keywords: electronic circuit breaker, BJT, bidirectional switch, sense resistor, base control voltage, on resistance, circuit simulation. INTRODUCTION Circuit breakers protect electrical circuitry from damage due to an over current condition, such as a relatively high level short circuit or fault condition. Circuit breakers act as protecting switches capable of connecting and allowing currents to flow through loads under normal circuit conditions and disconnecting the load under specified abnormal conditions such as a short circuit. Electronic Circuit Breakers generally use electromechanical switches. The conventional circuit breaker is connected in series with the supply so the response time of the circuit breakers is a very important performance parameter [1]. Since this switch has to work with AC rather than DC the conduction characteristics of the switch must be the same in both the directions. One can think off semiconductor devices that results bidirectional and symmetrical characteristics. The circuit breaker designed with Solid state technology has free from arcing and switch bounce. [2-5] Solid State Circuit Breakers have reduced switching surges and high reliability. Many types of power devices like IGBTs, BJTs and MOSFETs are available with different specifications. Most of the electronic circuit breakers are designed with IGBTs for fast acting and low losses [6-10]. However, the IGBT still requires large drive current. But the choice of technology for a power switch is not always clear cut. Whilst MOSFETs have become the default choice for many designers, bipolar transistors have many useful attributes which can be used beneficially in certain applications. Understanding the technological and parametric differences between MOSFETs and bipolar transistors is key to making the right choice for a given application. Higher voltage MOSFETs also suffer from the high resistance of the lightly doped drain region, and according to theory on-resistance typically increases with breakdown voltage according to the relationship RDS (on) ∝ BV 2.6 Over the same period bipolar transistors have developed too and given appropriate drive conditions have matched or bettered MOSFETs in terms of die area specific on-state resistance. By careful optimization of process and chip layout, voltage biasing and current flow is evenly distributed across the chip area, leading to better silicon utilization. Furthermore, when a bipolar transistor is operated as a saturated switch the collector base junction becomes forward biased and results in minority carrier injection into the resistive collector region as the collectoremitter voltage collapses to its VCE (sat) value. The lowest attainable on-state voltage or conduction loss is governed by the collector-emitter saturation voltage VCE (sat). The MOSFET and BJT is certainly the device of choice for device breakdown voltages below 250V. However, choosing between BJTs and MOSFET s is very application-specific and cost, size, speed and thermal requirements should all be considered [6]. BJTs are very much suitable for low voltage applications. This circuit results a fast turn off time in the range of few micro seconds as opposed to milliseconds for a mechanical circuit breaker. The present work progresses an all electronic circuit breaker based on BJTs especially suited for low voltage application switch. WORKING OF CIRCUIT BREAKER An all electronic Circuit Breaker has been designed to connect a load and an ac voltage supply. This circuit basically requires a bidirectional switch that allows ac voltage, a sense resistor and a decision making circuit connected in series with the load. The bidirectional switch is needed to connect the source to the load both for the positive and negative half cycles of the input voltage under normal conditions. The bidirectional switching is performed by two BJTs. A sense resistor connected between the two transistors determines the voltage that has to be applied to the comparator and is used to determine the output of the decision making circuit which further disconnects the power supply from load when a fault 22 ARPN Journal of Engineering and Applied Sciences ©2006-2010 Asian Research Publishing Network (ARPN). All rights reserved. www.arpnjournals.com occurs. The control signal from the output of the decision making circuit controls the base drive of the bidirectional switch. When the circuit works normally the BJT is in saturation mode and so the load is connected with the source. Under any faulty condition the output of the decision making circuit goes low then base voltage drives the BJT to cutoff region. Therefore the load has to be now disconnected from the source. The output of the comparator is connected back to the base of the two transistors. Figure-1 shows the block diagram of proposed solid state ac circuit breaker. In order to fully evaluate the performance of this switch, the operation of the device will be discussed for various conditions. Figure-1. Block diagram of the circuit breaker. BiDirectional Switch Control , Decision making Circuit Load AC input Voltage control signal DESIGN AND APPLICATION The electronic circuit breakers specifications include rated ac voltage, rated dc voltage, continuous current rating, and rated breaking capacity (Icn). In this design the input power supplied to the load is controlled by the bidirectional switch. It is required to turn off the switch when a fault is identified or the input voltage exceeds beyond the rated value to safeguard the load. Under normal conditions the switch connects the input ac voltage to the load. Otherwise the switch completely disconnects the load from input. The voltage drop across the small sense resistor is sampled and applied to the comparator and the output of comparator controls the base of the BJT. Operational amplifier is used as comparator. In this circuit the comparator and the latch is powered from the same power supply. The required power supply to the operational amplifier is derived either from a separate battery or from the ac input it self. In the second case an isolation Transformer and a rectifier with a filter is needed. The comparator compares the voltage drop across the sense resistor with a reference voltage. Since the comparator compares the dc voltages the sense voltage is connected to the comparator through a diode and RC network. The output of the comparator is given to a bistable latch. The output of this latch is high as long as the comparator output is high and provides the required base bias to the transistor. Under normal condition the comparator output is high so the base gets the required biasing voltage and the ac input is coupled to the load. When a fault occurs the high voltage across the sense resistor crosses the threshold voltage therefore the comparator output is low and the latch now goes to a low output state thus switching OFF the transistor. This turn off switching time must be shorter than the rise time of the circuit. The BJT switching time is determined by its impedance and capacitances. Therefore, for fast switching, lower driving source impedance is required. Figure-2. Circuit breaker with BJTs. 23 ARPN Journal of Engineering and Applied Sciences ©2006-2010 Asian Research Publishing Network (ARPN). All rights reserved. www.arpnjournals.com Figure-2 is the proposed circuit breaker. The decision making circuit is a comparator that senses the voltage drop across the sense resistor decides the strength of the control signal. It gives a high voltage under no fault condition that keeps on the switch and the ac power is connected to the load with out any disturbance. Where as when a fault occurs the output of the decision making circuit goes low so that bjt turns off and disconnects the load from the power supply. These results are shown in Figures 3 and 4. The first response is the output across the load and comparator under normal conditions. The load voltage is equal to the input voltage and comparator gives the high dc voltage. This voltage is applied to the bistable latch in order to retain the voltage. The second Figure shows the response of the circuit under faulty condition. The voltage across the load goes low and comparator output goes in the opposite direction. Bidirectional operation is not possible with a single transistor. This is because the emitter and collector doping and active areas are different. This leads to the design of a symmetrical bjt with equal doping on emitter and collector side. Another requirement is the emitter and collector areas are also equal. The symmetrical vertical or lateral bjt serves this purpose. RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS This circuit has been simulated with Multisim and verified experimentally using simple BC177 and BC847. These two transistors have almost equal beta. The latch circuit is not shown in this diagram. When the latch is connected to the output of the comparator the output from the latch is connected to the base of the transistors. Since two transistors are used two opposite voltages are needed. Multisim is simulation software that models the behavior of a circuit contain analog and digital devices. It runs both basic and advanced analysis. Basic simulation examples are DC operating point, DC sweep, AC sweep, Noise analysis and Fourier analysis and Mante Carlo, sensitivity are the advanced analyses [11]. CONCLUSIONS This circuit is a simple ac circuit breaker for low voltage analog circuit applications. A simple BJT bidirectional switching operation is demonstrated. The response time in microseconds indicates that a short circuit can be detected very fast to prevent damage is an improvement. 24 VOL. 5, NO. 8, AUGUST 2010 ISSN 1819-6608 ARPN Journal of Engineering and Applied Sciences ©2006-2010 Asian Research Publishing Network (ARPN). All rights reserved. www.arpnjournals.com REFERENCES [1] R. R. Boudreaux, R. M. Nelms. 1996. A Comparison of MOSFETs, IGBTs, MCTs for Solid State Circuit Breakers. In: Proceedings of 11 th Annual Conference on Applied Power Electronics Conference and Exposition, "APEC 96". 1(March): 3-7. [2] Pusorn W. Srisongkram. 2007. Low cost AC circuit breaker. Power Electronics and Drive Systems. [3] Mitja Koprivsek. 2003. Low voltage fuses and circuit breakers, comparison of operation in conduction of high short-circuit currents. Kotnik's days, Radenci. [4] C.W. Brice, R. A. Dougal and J. L. Hudgins. 1996. Review of Technologies for current Limiting Low Voltage Circuit Breakers. IEEE Transactions on Industrial Applications. September/October. [5] Itoh J.-i. Nagayoshi, K.-i. Nagaoka Univ. of Technol., Nagaoka. A New AC Bidirectional Switch with Regenerative Snubber to Realize a Simple Series Connection for High Power AC/AC Direct Converters. Power Electronics Specialists Conference, 2007 PESE, IEEE. [6] Ne Siemaszko, D. Barrade, P. De Novaes, Y. R. Rufer A. 2007. New self-switching mechanisms for active bidirectional switches. Presented at: EPE 2007. 12 th European Conference on Power Electronics and Applications, Aalborg, Denemark. pp. 2-5. [7] Byskosh R. E. 1991. Thesis on Solid State MOSFET based protective Devices for AC circuits. [8] Ben Damsky, Vitaly Gelman. A Solid State Current Limiter. [9] L. Klingbeil w kalkner, Ch Heinrich. 2001. A Fast acting Solid State Circuit Breaker Using State of Art Power Electronic Devices. EPE Graz. [10]Chao Liu, Aiguo Patrick Hu, Jinfeng Gao. A Soft Switched Electronic Circuit Breaker. [11]Multisim Online Manual. 25
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Department #82 - Division of Transportation Fund 23 - Matching Fund $0` McHenry County Government Fiscal Year 2009-2010 Expenditures Board Approved Expenditure Budget
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