seemnete idanevuse vähendamise. Nitraatide suure sisalduse tõttu väheneb puu-ja juurviljade säilivus ning nende toiteväärtus. Saasteainete sisaldust toidus vähendab pesemine, koorimine ja kuumtöötlemine, kuid aitab ka mitmekülgne toitumine. Kasutatud kirjandus Burke M. 2013. Methemoglobinemia. [WWW] http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/204178-overview (10.11.14) Bender I., Ess M., Matt D., Moor U., Tõnutare T., Luik A.. 2009. Quality of organic and conven tional carrots. Cieślik E. 1995. Czynniki kształtujące zawartość azotanów and azotynów w ziemniakach. Duchań B., Hady S. 1992. Trzy przypadki methemoglobinemii w prezebiegu zatrucia azotanami. Elias T. 2012. Köögiviljade seostuvad saasteained. WWW] http://saasteainedkviljades.edicy.co/et (13.11.14) Hord N., Tang Y., Bryan N. 2009. Food sources of nitrates and nitrites: the physiologic context for potential health benefits. Janicki K. 1991
2000). growth rate. This diet reduced μ-calpain Garber et al. (1996) reported that vitamin E activity and increased calpastatin activity, supplementation increased muscle alpha- indicating less muscle protein degradation in tocopherol levels, delaying metmyoglobin the muscles compared to muscles of control formation (beef) and lipid oxidation in a animals. In an effort to improve the nutri- dose-dependent manner. Boler et al. (2009) tional profile of pork, Janz et al. (2008) fed found that feeding natural sources of vitamin pigs a plant-based diet containing conjugated E to finishing pigs was more effective in linoleic acid, selenium, and vitamin E. The reducing lipid oxidation of pork during sub- dietary treatments had some effects on meat sequent storage and display than were artifi- quality, but the overall effects on appearance cial sources. Yang et al. (2002) found that and palatability were small
to the State or public interests. As mentioned, an exhaustive list of licenses and permits are stipulated by the law. It is not al- lowed to require a license or permit that is not specified by the law. At the same time, Georgian legislation allows that licenses issued by foreign countries may be recognized by the Georgian authorities and have the same legal effect as a permit/license issued by the Georgian bodies. However, such recognition is effective either by virtue of an interna- tional treaty obligation for Georgia or a statutory provision of the Georgian legislation explicitly authorizing such recognition. According to the Georgian legislation, there are two types of applicable licenses: the license of activity and the license of use. A License of Activity is the type of a license which grants a person the right to undertake an ac- tivity specified by the law (for instance - setting up a private security service). To obtain a license
trap us into later compliance through consistency pressures. Procedures designed to create commitment take various forms. Some are bluntly straightforward; others are among the most subtle compliance tactics we will encounter. On the blunt side, consider the approach of Jack Stanko, used-car sales manager for an Albuquerque auto dealership. While leading a session called "Used Car Merchandising" at a Na- tional Auto Dealers Association convention in San Francisco, he advised 100 sales- hungry dealers as follows: "Put 'em on paper. Get the customer's OK on paper. Get the money up front. Control 'em. Control the deal. Ask 'em if they would buy the car right now if the price is right. Pin 'em down" (Rubinstein, 1985). Obviously, Mr. Stanko-an expert in these matters-believes that the way to customer compliance is through their commitments, thereby to "control 'em" for profit.
the riches of her spirit with us at 3:00 p.m. tomorrow." In such a case, even though the sentence had been uttered, no one would ever actually have meant by it what it literally means.) Blackburn (1984: ch. 4) points out that, in the right circumstances, a given sentence may be uttered with practically any intention and certainly without the intention of displaying one's actual belief. (Blackburn broaches the alternative idea that a sentence S means P when it is either a conven- tional regularity or the consequence of a conventional regularity that one who utters S with assertive force "may be regarded as having displayed" that P, this regard-license being a social fact that obtains independently of any particular utterer's intentions. This is an interesting idea, and calls for much unpacking of "may," "be regarded," and "display," but it is not a Gricean idea, for it self-consciously severs sentence-meaning from speakers' communica- tive intentions.) Obstacle 4
Volum 1. Amsterdam: J AI An Imprint of Elsevier Science, 75-111. 61. oskuste treeningut. Bakalaureusetöö, TÜ pedagoogika osakond. 50. Ogilvy, C. M. (1994). Social skills training with children and adoles-cents: A review of the evidence on 62. Walker, H. M., Colvin, G., & Ramsey, E. (1995). effectiveness. Educa-tional Psychology, 74(1), 73-84. Antisocial behavior in schools: Strategies and best 51. Olweus, D. (1999). Sweden. In: P. K. Smith, Y. Morita, practices. Pacific Grove:Books/Cole Publishing Company. J. Junger-Tas, D. Olweus, R. Catalano, & P. Slee. 63. Wasserman, G. A., & Miller, L. S. (1999). The
TO PAY THE PRICE Determine the price you are going to have to pay to achieve your goal. Make a list of everything that you are going to have to do if you want to make your goal a reality. Are you going to have to start each day’s work a little earlier, work a little harder, and stay a little later? Write it down. Are you go- ing to have to upgrade your knowledge and skills, and take addi- tional courses? Again, write it down. Are you going to have to change jobs, change industries, or change careers in order to achieve every- thing that is possible for you? Write it down. The Law of Cause and Effect is the iron law of the universe. For everything that you want, there is a price that must be paid. This price must be paid in full and in advance. The Law of Sowing and Reaping is not the Law of Reaping and Sowing
Anti-hero is not the opposite of a Hero, but a specialized kind of Hero, one who 34 HERO may be an outlaw or a villain from the point of view of society, but with whom the audience is basically in sympathy. W e identify with these outsiders because we have all felt like outsiders at one time or another. Anti-Heroes may be of two types: I ) characters who behave much like conven tional Heroes, but are given a strong touch of cynicism or have a wounded quality, like Bogart's characters in The Big Sleep and Casablanca, or 2 ) tragic Heroes, central figures of a story who may not be likeable or admirable, whose actions we may even deplore, like Macbeth or Scarface or the Joan Crawford of Mommie Dearest. T h e wounded Anti-hero may be a heroic knight in tarnished armor, a loner who has rejected society or been rejected by it
An automo- bile cruise control, for instance, has to handle things like headwinds, uphill and downhill grades, and the decrease in horsepower caused by turning on the air conditioner. A proportional control system would have problems with these conditions, since the right amount of throttle to apply going uphill in a strong headwind is different from the amount needed under the opposite set of conditions. PID Control A control method that handles conditions like this is called PID (Propor- tional, Integral, Derivative). The basic concept behind PID control is to add another input to the system, that input being the history of what actually hap- pened when the control was applied. In the cruise control example, instead of just applying the throttle based on the amount of difference between the current speed and the desired speed (proportional control), the control system can look at how the car responded to the last throttle change. Did the
Ramachaudran, V. S. (Ed.). Encyclo- tures. In: Campbel, J. R., Tirri, K., pedia of human behaviour. Vol 4. New Ruohotie, P., Walberg, H. (Eds.). Cross- York: Academic Press, 71–88. cultural research: Basic issues, dilemmas Barfurth, M. A., Ritchie, K. C., and strategies. Research Cntre for Voca- Irving, J. A., Shore, B. M. (2009). tional Education, University of Tam- A metacognitve portrait of gifted lear- pere, 27–60. ners. In: Shavinina, L. V. (Ed.). Inter- Campbell, J. R., Wagner, H., Wal- national Handbook of Giftedness. Vol 1, berg, H. J. (2000). Academic compe- 397–417. titions and programs designed to chal- lenge the exceptionally talented. In:
Measuring Distance map, a wo rld physical m ap, an d 35 world the To m easure di stance most maps have a distan ce matic m aps. T he world political m ap shows the o 200 400 mi scale. You can learn more abo u t m easuring di s most u p to date na tional boundaries. On the 6 260 ' 400 km ' tan ce on pa ge 7. wo rld physical m ap yo u can see huge desert s, great moun tai n ran ges, a n d even th e sea ice Canada and Mexico that covers much of th e Arcti c. The th ematic Ca n ada and Mexico b oth h ave t h eir own