Academic literature on the topic 'Koch Foundation'

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Journal articles on the topic "Koch Foundation"

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White, Elissa Queyquep. "Marian Chace Foundation Lecture 2019: Introduction to Nana Koch." American Journal of Dance Therapy 42, no. 2 (May 6, 2020): 311–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10465-020-09327-6.

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Dayal, Subah. "Book review: Ebba Koch, ed., in collaboration with Ali Anooshahr, The Mughal Empire from Jahangir to Shah Jahan: Art, Architecture, Politics, Law and Literature." Indian Economic & Social History Review 59, no. 4 (October 2022): 535–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00194646221131631.

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Beets, S. Douglas. "The Charles Koch Foundation and Contracted Universities: Evidence from Disclosed Agreements." Journal of Academic Ethics 17, no. 3 (July 11, 2019): 219–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10805-019-09333-5.

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Beigie, Darin. "Computer-Generated Fractal Art." Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School 10, no. 6 (February 2005): 262–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.5951/mtms.10.6.0262.

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Computer Software Can be a Powerful tool in both the study and creation of fractals. The Snowflake Fractal Generator (Shodor Education Foundation, www.shodor.org) is an appealing example of software that allows students to make fractals similar to the classic Koch snowflake (see fig. 1).
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Urazova, O. I. "Russian-German Competence Center on the Problem of Infectious Diseases as a new structural division of the Siberian State Medical University." Bulletin of Siberian Medicine 8, no. 3 (June 28, 2009): 89–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.20538/1682-0363-2009-3-89-94.

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The article contains information about Koch-Metchnikov Siberian Competence Centre which deals with the problem of infectious diseases. It is a new structural division of Siberian State Medical University which was founded in 2008 on the initiative of the university administration together with a German social institution — Koch—Metchnikov Forum. The article describes backgrounds of the foundation of Siberian Competence Centre, its main aims, tasks, the most perspective areas of Russian-German cooperation in the sphere of fundamental and practical medicine, results of the joint scientific-educational activity as well as outcomes of implementation of the program of experience and knowledge exchange in the network of professional trainings, international conferences and seminars.
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Baquero, Fernando. "GENERAL MICROBIOLOGY, BIOLOGY, AND ONE HEALTH." Romanian Archives of Microbiology and Immunology 81, no. 4 (December 30, 2022): 255–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.54044/rami.2022.04.01.

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The fundamental advances in microbiology after the seminal contributions of Louis Pasteur, Robert Koch, Ilya Metchnikoff, or Martinus Beijerinck have provided the ground not only for Microbiology as a science, but for Biology at large. In all these contributions, Microbiology was conceived as an epistemological continuum encompassing biochemistry, physiology, taxonomy, pathogenicity, and the natural functions of microbes as indispensable basic elements, primary producers, maintaining the existence of the whole Biosphere. The concept of General Microbiology was developed to assemble all these aspects; in words from Cornelius van Niel, belonging to the late school of Beijerink in Delft, a unified, coherent science of General Microbiology could provide a foundation for unifying life sciences, so that Microbiology should be conceived as a general science of life.
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Augustin, Jean-Christophe. "Contribution de Louis Pasteur à la sécurité microbiologique des aliments/Louis Pasteur's contribution to the microbiological safety of food." Notes Académiques de l'Académie d'agriculture de France / Academic Notes of the French Academy of Agriculture 15, no. 4 (June 30, 2023): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.58630/pubac.not.889895.

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We should thank Louis Pasteur for the essential concepts of medical microbiology, but some 30 years before he achieved the status of benefactor of humanity with the vaccination-treatment of rabies, one of the two pionneers of bacteriology (with the German Robert Koch) published his first observations on fermentations. His famous publication on lactic acid fermentation in 1857 established the concepts of the microbial ecology of food. This work on ferments and their activities led to modern biotechnology, but the ideas contained therein also laid the scientific foundation for food preservation techniques to ensure food quality and safety. Key ecological factors such as acidity, temperature and microbial competition were identified, as well as fundamental characteristics such as biological variability and the predictability of the evolution of microbial ecosystems
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Zhu, Tong, Bin Wei, Yue Wang, and Suqin Shang. "Glutathione S-Transferase Genes Involved in Response to Short-Term Heat Stress in Tetranychus urticae (Koch)." Antioxidants 13, no. 4 (April 8, 2024): 442. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antiox13040442.

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Tetranychus urticae, a globally ubiquitous mite, poses a significant threat to agriculture. Elevated temperatures exacerbate the growth, development, and reproduction of T. urticae, leading to substantial crop damage. In this study, we employed comparative transcriptomic approaches with whole-genome information of T. urticae to identify six Glutathione S-transferase genes (GSTs) implicated in heat stress response. Through comprehensive bioinformatics analyses, we elucidated the tertiary structure and active sites of the corresponding proteins, providing a thorough characterization of these GST genes. Furthermore, we investigated the expression patterns of these six GST genes under short-term heat shock conditions. Our findings unveiled the involvement of T. urticae GST genes in combating oxidative stress induced by heat, underscoring their role in antioxidant defense mechanisms. This study contributes valuable insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying the response of T. urticae to heat stress, laying a foundation for the development of strategies aimed at mitigating its impact in high-temperature environments.
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Da Silva, Luciene Helena, and Maria Margarete Fernandes De Sousa. "Reference and Multimodality: analysis of the construction of reference in advertisements for vehicles." Signum: Estudos da Linguagem 22, no. 1 (July 4, 2019): 159. http://dx.doi.org/10.5433/2237-4876.2019v22n1p159.

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The objective of this article is to analyze the construction of the referent “vehicle” in advertisements, proposing an interface between Referencing and Multimodality. For this, it follows the sociocognitive-discursive approach of Referencing (CAVALCANTE, 2011, 2012, 2015; KOCH, 2004, 2015) and uses, as a foundation on Multimodality, the Kress and van Leeuwen’s (2006) Grammar of Visual Design (GVD). It analyzes, through the compositional metafunction, formed by the subcategories value of information, salience and framing, the referential construction in four advertisements for vehicles. Considering the analyzes carried out, it concludes that the categories salience and framing occur in a complementary way in the construction of the Referent, becoming, in a way, redundant, because what is arranged in the image as a disconnected element and therefore functioning independently, coincides with what is evidenced, placed in a prominent position, most of the time, centralized in the image. Specifically, regarding the analyzed discursive genre, it concludes that the referent “vehicle” is the nucleus of visual information, confirmed by the deletion effect suffered by the elements in the background. The results obtained indicate that the visual composition maintains a direct relation with the construction of the Referent.
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Rix, Michael G., Robert J. Raven, Barbara Y. Main, Sophie E. Harrison, Andrew D. Austin, Steven J. B. Cooper, and Mark S. Harvey. "The Australasian spiny trapdoor spiders of the family Idiopidae (Mygalomorphae : Arbanitinae): a relimitation and revision at the generic level." Invertebrate Systematics 31, no. 5 (2017): 566. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/is16065.

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The Australasian spiny trapdoor spiders of the family Idiopidae (subfamily Arbanitinae) are revised at the generic level, using a multi-locus molecular phylogenetic foundation and comprehensive sampling of all known lineages. We propose a new family- and genus-group classification for the monophyletic Australasian fauna, and recognise 10 genera in four tribes. The Arbanitini Simon includes Arbanitis L. Koch, 1874 (61 species), Blakistonia Hogg, 1902 (one species) and Cantuaria Hogg, 1902 (43 species). The Aganippini Simon includes Bungulla Rix, Main, Raven & Harvey, gen. nov. (two species), Eucanippe Rix, Main, Raven & Harvey, gen. nov. (one species), Eucyrtops Pocock, 1897 (two species), Gaius Rainbow, 1914 (one species) and Idiosoma Ausserer, 1871 (14 species). The Cataxiini Rainbow and Euoplini Rainbow include just Cataxia Rainbow, 1914 (11 species) and Euoplos Rainbow, 1914 (12 species), respectively. Two distinctive new genera of Aganippini are described from Western Australia, and several previously valid genera are recognised as junior synonyms of existing genus-group names, including Misgolas Karsch, 1878 (= Arbanitis; new synonymy), Aganippe O. P.-Cambridge, 1877 (= Idiosoma; new synonymy) and Anidiops Pocock, 1897 (= Idiosoma; new synonymy). Gaius stat. rev. is further removed from synonymy of Anidiops. Other previously hypothesised generic synonyms are supported by both morphology and molecular phylogenetic data from 12 genes, including the synonymy of Neohomogona Main, 1985 and Homogona Rainbow, 1914 with Cataxia, and the synonymy of Albaniana Rainbow & Pulleine, 1918, Armadalia Rainbow & Pulleine, 1918, Bancroftiana Rainbow & Pulleine, 1918 and Tambouriniana Rainbow & Pulleine, 1918 with Euoplos. At the species level, the identifications of Eucy. latior (O. P.-Cambridge, 1877) and I. manstridgei (Pocock, 1897) are clarified, and three new species are described: Bungulla bertmaini Rix, Main, Raven & Harvey, sp. nov., Eucanippe bifida Rix, Main, Raven & Harvey, sp. nov. and Idiosoma galeosomoides Rix, Main, Raven & Harvey, sp. nov., the latter remarkable for its phragmotic abdominal morphology. The Tasmanian species Mygale annulipes C. L. Koch, 1842 is here transferred to the genus Stanwellia Rainbow & Pulleine, 1918 (family Nemesiidae), comb. nov., Arbanitis mestoni Hickman, 1928 is transferred to Cantuaria, comb. nov. and Idiosoma hirsutum Main, 1952 is synonymised with I. sigillatum (O. P.-Cambridge, 1870), new synonymy. In addition to the morphological synopses and an illustrated key to genera, molecular diagnoses are presented for all nominal taxa, along with live habitus and burrow images to assist in field identification. The Australasian idiopid fauna is highly diverse, with numerous new species known from all genera. As a result, this study provides a taxonomic and nomenclatural foundation for future species-level analyses, and a single reference point for the monographic documentation of a remarkable fauna. http://zoobank.org/?lsid=urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BACE065D-1EF9-40C6-9134-AADC9235FAD8
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Books on the topic "Koch Foundation"

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Rosebraugh, Craig, Patrick Gambuti, Jeremy Chilvers, and Marianna Yarovskaya. Greedy lying bastards. [Los Angeles, California]: 1 Earth Productions, 2013.

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Manuscripts, drawings and printed books from the Frederick R. Koch Foundation: Thursday, June 7, 1990 ... Christie's, 502 Park Avenue at 59th Street, New York, New York 10022. New York, New York: Christie, Manson & Woods International Inc., 1990.

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Peter Koch Printer: A Descriptive Bibliography [1974¿2016] an Illustrated Catalogue Published in Three Volumes. Stanford University Libraries, 2017.

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Fisher, James L., and James V. Koch. Born, Not Made. Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798400620843.

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Books, magazine articles, and educational programs on entrepreneurship are all based on the idea that anyone can be an entrepreneur—that entrepreneurs are made, not born. Well, maybe not. In a study of 234 CEOs funded by the Kauffman Foundation, James L. Fisher and James V. Koch came up with a surprising conclusion: Some individuals are simply more naturally fitted to become entrepreneurs than others. They are pre-wired. Because of heredity, some people are much more likely to become successful entrepreneurs or pursue entrepreneurial strategies within a corporate setting profitably. By recognizing that, this book will significantly improve corporate selection processes, strengthen entrepreneurship programs, and boost the confidence of aspiring entrepreneurs through invaluable insights. Among other things, Fisher and Koch show that true entrepreneurs not only see the world differently—they act differently. Compared with corporate managers, for example, they are more confident, more decisive, more likely to upset the apple cart, and more energetic. They love to compete but are notable for the partnerships they are able to fashion with friend and foe alike. Such conclusions are remarkable. Why? Because they are based on the only empirical comparison study yet conducted on entrepreneurship. The insights are not based on personal opinion or case studies but on valid and reliable personality indicators. Because the book shows that certain kinds of people will find it much easier to found successful companies than others, it has many practical applications. It will help organizations fit the right people into jobs requiring an entrepreneurial bent. It will challenge corporations to hire entrepreneurial CEOs who will transform businesses rather than maintain the status quo. And it will speak directly to entrepreneurs and those contemplating starting a business, who will learn if they have the right stuff to start and sustain a business. In short, this book provides insights into the entrepreneurial soul that can change the fortunes of individuals and companies for the better.
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Wallis, Budge E. A., and Wahle Sergius. Life of Rabban Hormizd: And the Foundation of His Monastery at Al-Kosh. Gorgias Press, LLC, 2012.

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Guymer, Sheila. Eloquent Performance. Edited by Danuta Mirka. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199841578.013.0023.

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This chapter explores how skilled performers use topical analysis in their interpretative decision-making, presenting material from lesson-interviews conducted with fortepianists Robert Levin and Bart van Oort. Drawing on treatises by Türk, Quantz, Kirnberger, Koch, and Leopold Mozart, it examines some historical foundations of Leonard Ratner’s topics, their connections with eighteenth-century concepts of musical character and expression, and topics’ limitations as tools in the process of analysis and interpretation. The chapter takes the Allegro movements of Mozart’s Sonata K. 333 as two case studies. It concludes that awareness of topical references in this repertoire aids performers in systematically identifying and executing contrasts, enabling more expressive and communicative performance. It suggests that a sensitive understanding of historically informed performance practices benefits topic theorists, as analyses may be undermined by anachronistic assumptions about how the music sounds in performance.
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Book chapters on the topic "Koch Foundation"

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Fangerau, Heiner. "Nature and Culture in Health and Disease: Historical Strategies in Medical Diagnostics for Navigating Between Critical Dichotomies." In Philosophy and Medicine, 29–49. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-62241-0_3.

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AbstractTheories of medical diagnosis have been debated since at least the early eighteenth century. They were closely linked to different understandings of health and disease. In general, naturalistic and ontological understandings were confronted with nominalistic and constructivist interpretations of signs and symptoms. The foundations of today’s understanding of diagnosis were laid in the nineteenth century, which brought new ideas about the differentiation of individual diseases. The article reconstructs this development of concepts of medical diagnosis and discussions about the production of diagnostic signs. It then presents two approaches from the 1920s that attempted to reconcile nominalism and essentialism. The focus is on the approaches of the physicians Richard Koch and Francis Crookshank. Their concepts are compared and linked to Hans Vaihinger’s As-If philosophy, which was very prominent at the beginning of the twentieth century. The paper argues that Koch, in particular, sought to give an intentional and relational orientation to the idea of diagnosis, seeing nature and culture in diagnosis not as opposites but as interrelated elements, and that Koch’s and Vaihinger’s approaches still offer much insight into contemporary thinking about the theory of diagnosis.
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Yamaguchi, M., Y. Kimura, H. Takahagi, and M. Okada. "Press-in piling applications: Seawall pile foundation work." In Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Press-in Engineering 2021, Kochi, Japan, 464–72. London: CRC Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003215226-52.

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Takeda, K. "Case study of oval shaped foundation using the Gyropress Method under overhead restrictions." In Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Press-in Engineering 2021, Kochi, Japan, 437–44. London: CRC Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003215226-49.

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Guo, W. T., Y. Honda, X. Xiong, T. Matsumoto, and Y. Ishihara. "Behaviour of three types of model pile foundation under vertical and horizontal loading." In Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Press-in Engineering 2021, Kochi, Japan, 142–50. London: CRC Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003215226-15.

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Cerfontaine, B., M. J. Brown, M. Ciantia, M. Huisman, and M. Ottolini. "Discrete element modelling of silent piling group installation for offshore wind turbine foundations." In Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Press-in Engineering 2021, Kochi, Japan, 227–36. London: CRC Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003215226-25.

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Kurokawa, T., Y. Tani, M. Nagata, A. Jugdernamjil, and N. Yasufuku. "A study on analysis of horizontal resistance of screw coupled foundation with vertical and battered piles in cohesionless soil." In Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Press-in Engineering 2021, Kochi, Japan, 172–82. London: CRC Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003215226-19.

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Backer, Larry Catá, and Nabih Haddad. "Philanthropy and the Character of the Public Research University." In Facilitating Higher Education Growth through Fundraising and Philanthropy, 28–58. IGI Global, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-9664-8.ch002.

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Educational scholars have examined the relationship of philanthropy and its contributions to the public university. Yet, there has been little discussion of the influence of philanthropy on the governance space of the public research university, and specifically as conditional philanthropy may affect academic integrity and shared governance. In this chapter, we consider these larger issues in the context of a study of a recent case. Drawing on public records, interviews, and university documents, the chapter examines conditional donation of The Charles G. Koch Foundation (CKF) to the Florida State University (FSU). We suggest that the Koch Foundation gift appears to illustrate a new model of governance based philanthropy. It has done so by tying donations to control or influence of the internal governing mechanics of an academic unit of a public university. This model has generated controversy. Though there was substantial faculty and student backlash, the model appears to be evidence of a new philanthropic relationship between the public university and substantial donors, one in which donors may change the nature of traditional shared governance relationships within the university. We maintain that instances of such “new” strategic philanthropy require greater focus on and sensitivity to shared governance and faculty input as a way to ensure accountability, especially to preserve the integrity of the academic enterprise and its public mission where donors seek to leverage philanthropy into choices relating to faculty hires, courses and programs traditionally at the center of faculty prerogatives in shared governance.
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Sapp, Jan. "Creatures Void of Form." In The New Foundations of Evolution, 45–56. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195388497.003.0004.

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Abstract Microorganisms had been studied predominantly from a medical perspective in the nineteenth century. The concept of germs as agents of killer diseases against which one could take action was the wonder of the 1880s and 1890s (table 4.1). The demonstration that invisible organisms were inducers of putrefaction and fermentation is also one of the earmarks of modern biology. Life does not result from decayed organic matter’it is its cause. This was the conclusion of the debates and experiments over spontaneous generation, brought to a head in the early 1860s. Led by Louis Pasteur (1822’1895) and Robert Koch (1843’1910), new methods were developed for detecting the fearful enemies and for learning how they were transported, how they multiplied, and how they could be arrested. Public health laboratories expanded and multiplied as pathologists developed vaccines, antitoxins, and antisera. In 1888, the Pasteur Institute was founded, and an international network of 40 other Pasteur institutes was subsequently established. In 1891, the German government furnished Koch with a research institute. That same year, the British Institute for Preventive Medicine was founded in London, which in 1903 changed its name to the Lister Institute to honor its champion, Joseph Lister (1827’1912).
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Damrosch, David. "Origins." In Comparing the Literatures, 12–49. Princeton University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691134994.003.0002.

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This chapter explains how the history of comparative literature is a history of archives, such as of libraries and collections that are either preserved or lost and studied or forgotten. It mentions the first library that was established by the Tang Dynasty monk Xuanzang when he returned from his epochal journey to the western regions in order to collect Buddhist manuscripts. It also talks about the foundations of comparative literature that were established by the comparative philology that began in Renaissance Italy and spread to many parts of Enlightenment Europe. The chapter looks at Max Koch who wrote about comparative literary history and how it gained a sure footing with the inclusion of Oriental material. It also analyzes non-Eurocentric comparatism that draws on philological traditions from China and Japan to the Arab world.
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MacLean, Nancy. "The Koch Network’s Long Game and Its Implications for Progressive Organizing." In Labor in the Time of Trump, 19–33. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501746598.003.0002.

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This chapter takes a long view of the emergence of libertarian ideology and the development of the Far Right. It argues that it is these ideas, promoted through a deep, broad, densely connected network of right-wing think tanks, foundations, and sponsored academics, that have driven an ideological agenda. In this way, these parties weaponized these ideas and deployed a series of policy initiatives at the state level. The chapter argues that the right knew early on that voters would reject their policy agenda, which would benefit only a minority of citizens. Consequently, right-wing activists pushed a stealth campaign of incremental changes that obscured the true motives of their radical agenda. Their goal, as the chapter suggests, was to turn America back to the way it looked in 1900—a nation without workers' rights, without public regulation, run by business-dominated government institutions free of democratic accountability.
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Conference papers on the topic "Koch Foundation"

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Chien, Wen-Tien Chang, Liwei Lin, Yi-Chung Lo, and Chia-Ou Chang. "Fabrication of 109.5° Micro V-Grooves Using a Two-Step Anisotropic Etching Technique." In ASME 1998 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece1998-1269.

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Abstract Design and fabrication of 109.5° V-grooves based on two-step anisotropic etching techniques are demonstrated and reported. This new process can expose planes other than the commonly used {111} surfaces to form new geometrical shapes. V-grooves of 109.5° are demonstrated by etching and exposing {112} planes on (100) wafers with anisotropic KOH etchants. Theoretical foundations are analyzed with experimental verifications. This new class of two-step etching process extends the capability of MEMS manufacturing to make new geometrical shapes and may have potential applications for device fabrications that requires non-conventional contours.
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Reports on the topic "Koch Foundation"

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Sutipatanasomboon, Arpaporn. Petri Dishes with Agar: How to Make Agar Plates. ConductScience, June 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55157/cs20220627.

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Petri dishes and agar form the foundation of the culture plate technique pioneered by Robert Koch, facilitating the cultivation and study of microorganisms. Agar, derived from red seaweed, solidifies into a transparent medium for microbial growth. Agar plates are classified as nonselective, allowing general growth, and selective, inhibiting specific microbes. Petri dishes, with a dish and lid, provide containers for agar, supporting microbial growth. This technique has revolutionized microbiological research, enabling advances in fields like bacteriology, mycology, infectious diseases, and biotechnology.
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