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American Journal of Agricultural EconomicsVolume 54, Issue 3 p. 524-525 Communication A Simulation Study of Population, Education, and Income Growth in Uganda: Comment Douglass G. Norvell, Douglass G. Norvell University of TampaSearch for more papers by this author Douglass G. Norvell, Douglass G. Norvell University of TampaSearch for more papers by this author First published: 01 August 1972 https://doi.org/10.2307/1239176AboutPDF ToolsRequest permissionExport citationAdd to favoritesTrack...
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The problem of this study was to determine whether or not technical education has grown and developed in Nigeria and to identify problems affecting its growth.
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Summary Palaeomagnetic results are presented for 205 sites and over 600 cores from Upper Tertiary to Recent lavas and intrusions in the Gulf of Guinea volcanic area of equatorial West Africa. The island of Annobon is built up of a suite of reversely magnetized lavas about 18.4 My in age which give a mean direction of D = 189-2, I = 11.2 (N = 7, a95 = 153). A younger phase of volcanism dated as 2.6My has produced lavas with a mean direction of magnetization of D = 337-1, I = -44.3 (N = 7, ag5...
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In 1970, 2383 Moroccan school children from twelve different areas, equally distributed by age (8-year-old and 12-year-old) and sex were examined. The examination procedure and the criteria employed were those described by WHO (1969). Variations were observed in the prevalence of dental caries among children in the twelve areas. Some, but not all, of these variations could be explained on the basis of variations in the fluoride content of the drinking water even though this was found to be...
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When 37 second- and third-year nursing students in a Nigerian hospital School of nursing identified stressful situations in academic, personal, social, and clinical areas, 36 reported stressful events concerned with their clinical experience. The greatest cause of stress was critical evaluation of their professional performance, followed by patient hostility toward them.
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The Fortunate Few: A Study of Secondary Schools and Students in the Ivory Coast. By Remi Clignet and Philip Foster. Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1966. Pp. xv + 242. $8.50. - Volume 42 Issue 3
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The author describes the set-up of educational system from primary to university level in his country.
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Journal Article Vincent M. Battle and Charles H. Lyons, editors. Essays in the History of African Education. (Center for Education in Africa, Institute of International Studies, Teachers College, Columbia University.) New York: Teachers College Press, Teachers College, Columbia University. 1970. Pp. ix, 123. $3.50 and Michael Anthony Samuels. Education in Angola, 1878–1914: A History of Culture Transfer and Administration. (Teachers College Studies in Education.) New York: Teachers College...
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Letter| June 01, 1972 A comparison of the focal mechanism and aftershock distribution of the Ceres, South Africa earthquake of September 29, 1969 R. W. E. Green; R. W. E. Green Bernard Price Institute of Geophysical Research University of the WitwatersrandJohannesburg, South Africa Search for other works by this author on: GSW Google Scholar A. McGarr A. McGarr Bernard Price Institute of Geophysical Research University of the WitwatersrandJohannesburg, South Africa Search for other works by...
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A RJE article on job prospects for African school leavers/graduates in a racially prejudiced Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe).
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The African student of medicine is often placed in a difficult situation as regards ethical systems, for he inherits a local system of ethics and has usually had a Western system superimposed upon him. Moreover he faces ethical problems different from those of his American or European counterpart—problems concerning organ transplantation or human experimentation are of less consequence than clashes between conflicting loyalties. From his many years of experience in Africa, Dr Stanley Browne,...