993 resultados para Fixed full-arch prosthesis
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Annual Convocation proceedings for the year 1986. The title varies slightly and convocation is held at different cities or towns in Canada. One hundred and twenty-eighth annual convocation.
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Annual Convocation proceedings for the year 1987. The title varies slightly and convocation is held at different cities or towns in Canada. One hundred and twenty-ninth annual convocation.
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Annual Convocation proceedings for the year 1988. The title varies slightly and convocation is held at different cities or towns in Canada. One hundred and thirtieth annual convocation.
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Annual Convocation proceedings for the year 1989. The title varies slightly and convocation is held at different cities or towns in Canada. One hundred and thirty-first annual convocation.
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Annual Convocation proceedings for the year 1990. The title varies slightly and convocation is held at different cities or towns in Canada. One hundred and thirty-second annual convocation.
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Annual Convocation proceedings for the year 1991. The title varies slightly and convocation is held at different cities or towns in Canada. One hundred and thirty-second annual convocation.
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Annual Convocation proceedings for the year 1992. The title varies slightly and convocation is held at different cities or towns in Canada. One hundred and thirty-fourth annual convocation.
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Annual Convocation proceedings for the year 1968. The title varies slightly and convocation is held at different cities or towns in Canada. One-hundred and tenth annual convocation.
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From American Society of Civil Engineers.
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From American Society of Civil Engineers.
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An article written by Dorothy Rungeling about her experience flying a helicopter for the first time. She is instructed by Bert Ratliff of the Bell Helicopter Corp. in a Bell G2 Trooper.
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Black and white photograph, 24 cm x 16 cm, of Margaret Julia Woodruff Band. This is a full length photograph in which she is wearing a lace dress. The photo was taken by Dudley Hoyt of New York.
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Graduate students’ development as researchers is a key objective in higher education. Research assistantships provide distinctive spaces where graduate students can be nurtured and shaped as novice researchers as they develop theoretical and methodological knowledge. However, few scholars have investigated graduate student research assistants’ experiences and the ways these experiences are influenced by institutional regulations, informal practices, and social relations. The purpose of this case-within-a-case study was to explore the research assistantship experiences of full-time and part-time doctoral students in Education at an Ontario university. I present separate subcases for full-time and part-time students, and an overarching case of research assistantships in one program at a specific period of time. The main question was how do institutional regulations, informal practices, and social relations influence full-time and part-time doctoral students’ access to and experiences within research assistantships. My objective was to draw from interviews and documents to acquire a thorough understanding of the organizational characteristics of research assistantships (i.e., structures of access, distribution, and coordination of participation) to explore the ways institutional regulations, informal practices, and social relations promote, prevent, or limit full-time and part-time students’ legitimate peripheral participation in research assistantships. Although I devoted particular attention to the ways students’ full-time and part-time status shaped their decisions, relationships, and experiences, I was conscious that other factors such as gender, age, and cultural background may have also influenced doctoral research assistant experiences.
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Receipt (copy) for the amount received from Burton and Bro. for the sum of $944.00 paid in full for stumpage on berths 192 and 198. It is signed by S.D. Woodruff, May 24, 1878.
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Unsigned letter to John Williams stating that before the return of the final estimate, the arch of the bridge must be completed, Sept. 19, 1857