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Effectiveness Of A Postpartum Breastfeeding Protocol For Avoiding Pregnancy Data, Mary Schneider, Richard Fehring, Thomas Paul Bouchard
Effectiveness Of A Postpartum Breastfeeding Protocol For Avoiding Pregnancy Data, Mary Schneider, Richard Fehring, Thomas Paul Bouchard
Randomized Comparison of Two Internet-Supported Methods of Natural Family Planning
The uses of cervical mucus and basal body temperature as indicators of return to fertility postpartum have resulted in high unintended pregnancy rates. In 2013, a study found that when women used urine hormone signs in a postpartum/breastfeeding protocol this resulted in fewer pregnancies. To improve the original protocol's effectiveness, three revisions were made: (1) women were to increase the number of days tested with the Clearblue Fertility Monitor, (2) an optional second luteinizing hormone test could be done in the evening, and (3) instructions were given to manage the beginning of the fertile window for the first six cycles …
"Evidence That The Woman's Ovarian Cycle Is Driven By An Internal Circamonthly Timing System" Data, Mary Schneider
"Evidence That The Woman's Ovarian Cycle Is Driven By An Internal Circamonthly Timing System" Data, Mary Schneider
Randomized Comparison of Two Internet-Supported Methods of Natural Family Planning
No abstract provided.
[Data Set] Reversible Proton-Coupled Reduction Of An Iron Nitrosyl Porphyrin Within [Dbu-H]+-Based Protic Ionic Liquid Nanodomains, Michael D. Ryan
[Data Set] Reversible Proton-Coupled Reduction Of An Iron Nitrosyl Porphyrin Within [Dbu-H]+-Based Protic Ionic Liquid Nanodomains, Michael D. Ryan
Chemistry Research Data
Data for the related article in Inorganic Chemistry.
Reversible Proton-Coupled Reduction of an Iron Nitrosyl Porphyrin within [DBU–H]+-Based Protic Ionic Liquid Nanodomains | Inorganic Chemistry (acs.org)
Aurelia S. Plath Shorthand Transcription Table From Smith College Mortimer Rare Book Collection, Catherine Rankovic
Aurelia S. Plath Shorthand Transcription Table From Smith College Mortimer Rare Book Collection, Catherine Rankovic
Aurelia Plath Shorthand Transcriptions
The Smith College Aurelia S. Plath shorthand data set includes the date and type of the artifact (such as a letter or manuscript), where on the artifact to locate the shorthand, the instrument used to write it, the box and folder holding the artifact in the Smith College Libraries’ Mortimer Rare Book Collection, contextual information, and transcriptions from Gregg shorthand into English. Unlike translations from spoken languages, transcriptions from Gregg shorthand are word-for-word. Catherine Rankovic is grateful to Smith College’s Karen V. Kukil and the library staff for their help and guidance.
The shorthand in the Sylvia Plath Collection at …
Aurelia S. Plath’S Shorthand Annotations In Sylvia Plath’S Personal Library At The Lilly Library, Indiana University, Catherine Rankovic
Aurelia S. Plath’S Shorthand Annotations In Sylvia Plath’S Personal Library At The Lilly Library, Indiana University, Catherine Rankovic
Aurelia Plath Shorthand Transcriptions
Sylvia Plath’s personal library of approximately 150 books is housed at the Lilly Library, Indiana University at Bloomington, U.S.A., under the library catalog listing “Sylvia Plath Papers, Material in the Printed Collection.”
Among these books once owned by poet Sylvia Plath (1932-1963) are six books annotated in Gregg shorthand by her mother, Mrs. Aurelia Schober Plath (1906-1994). Scattered throughout these six books are a total of 30 Gregg shorthand annotations. These annotations are cataloged and transcribed in the accompanying Transcription Table.
Aurelia S. Plath Shorthand Transcription Table From Correspondence In The Lilly Library Plath Archive Plath Mss.Ii, Catherine Rankovic
Aurelia S. Plath Shorthand Transcription Table From Correspondence In The Lilly Library Plath Archive Plath Mss.Ii, Catherine Rankovic
Aurelia Plath Shorthand Transcriptions
The Plath mss. II correspondence file spans the years 1938 to 1977, and the majority of Mrs. Plath’s annotations are in plainly readable longhand. The first Gregg shorthand annotation appears on a 1948 letter Sylvia Plath wrote to her mother from summer camp. Plath scholar Catherine Rankovic found and transcribed a total of 159 shorthand annotations throughout the Plath mss. II correspondence and transcribed the annotations into the accompanying Transcription Table.