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Hawk's Eye -- October 18, 1995, Roger Williams University Oct 1995

Hawk's Eye -- October 18, 1995, Roger Williams University

The Hawk's Eye

No abstract provided.


Sexual Psychopath Legislation: Is There Anywhere To Go But Backwards?, Andrew Horwitz Oct 1995

Sexual Psychopath Legislation: Is There Anywhere To Go But Backwards?, Andrew Horwitz

Law Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Commencement Program, 1995, Roger Williams University May 1995

Commencement Program, 1995, Roger Williams University

Commencement Programs

Program for Commencement Exercises, including the date, location, and a list of graduates and their degrees. Program also includes other details, such as the names of speakers and honorary degree recipients, awards, and traditions.


Hawks' Eye -- May 4, 1995, Roger Williams University May 1995

Hawks' Eye -- May 4, 1995, Roger Williams University

The Hawk's Eye

No abstract provided.


The Bridge, Spring 1995, Roger Williams University Alumni Association May 1995

The Bridge, Spring 1995, Roger Williams University Alumni Association

Alumni Newsletters and Magazines

No abstract provided.


Hawks' Eye -- February 23, 1995, Roger Williams University Feb 1995

Hawks' Eye -- February 23, 1995, Roger Williams University

The Hawk's Eye

No abstract provided.


Crossings, 1995, Roger Williams University Jan 1995

Crossings, 1995, Roger Williams University

Roger Williams University Yearbooks

No abstract provided.


Flow And Feeding By Swimming Scyphomedusae, John H. Costello, Sean Colin Jan 1995

Flow And Feeding By Swimming Scyphomedusae, John H. Costello, Sean Colin

Arts & Sciences Faculty Publications

The mechanical basis of prey capture by scyphomedusae has been largely ignored, despite the importance of these predators in a variety of planktonic ecosystems. Interactions between swimming, fluid motions, and prey capture were examined during 1991–1992 for a species from the three scyphozoan orders having planktonic medusae: Rhizostomeae, Stomolophus meleagris Agassiz, 1862; Coronatae, Linuche unguiculata (Schwartz, 1788); and Semaeostomeae, Cyanea capillata (Linnaeus, 1758). All three species used flow created during bell pulsation to capture prey, but the type of flow used for prey capture and the capture surface morphology were different for each species. The mechanics of capture by these …