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Mizzou weekly, volume 33, number 21 (February 23, 2012)
(University of Missouri--Columbia. University Affairs. Publications and Alumni Communication., 2012)
Mizzou weekly, volume 21, number 26 (March 23, 2000)
(University of Missouri--Columbia. University Affairs. Publications and Alumni Communication., 2000)
Mizzou weekly, volume 23, number 10 (October 25, 2001)
(University of Missouri--Columbia. University Affairs. Publications and Alumni Communication., 2001)
Mizzou weekly, volume 22, number 18
(University of Missouri--Columbia. University Affairs. Publications and Alumni Communication., 2001)
Gladys D. Weinberg
(University of Missouri--Columbia. Museum of Art and Archaeology, 2002)
Mizzou weekly, volume 27, number 20 (February 16, 2006)
(University of Missouri--Columbia. University Affairs. Publications and Alumni Communication., 2006)
Comparative study of type 2 median crossovers and median u-turns
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 2008)
Many states use rural expressway median crossovers which provide for separation between the two opposing traffic lanes to manage the direct left turn movements between the expressways and cross roads. As the volume increases on the major road...
Mizzou weekly, volume 21, number 17 (January 20, 2000)
(University of Missouri--Columbia. University Affairs. Publications and Alumni Communication., 2000)
Mizzou weekly, volume 34, number 08 (October 11, 2012)
(University of Missouri--Columbia. University Affairs. Publications and Alumni Communication., 2012)
Mizzou weekly, volume 22, number 15
(University of Missouri--Columbia. University Affairs. Publications and Alumni Communication., 2000)
Mizzou weekly, volume 25, number 29 (April 29, 2004)
(University of Missouri--Columbia. University Affairs. Publications and Alumni Communication., 2004)
Mizzou weekly, volume 25, number 20 (February 19, 2004)
(University of Missouri--Columbia. University Affairs. Publications and Alumni Communication., 2004)
Mizzou weekly, volume 29, number 06 (September 27, 2007)
(University of Missouri--Columbia. University Affairs. Publications and Alumni Communication., 2007)
Mizzou weekly, volume 21, number 18 (January 27, 2000)
(University of Missouri--Columbia. University Affairs. Publications and Alumni Communication., 2000)
Mizzou weekly, volume 23, number 17 (January 31, 2002)
(University of Missouri--Columbia. University Affairs. Publications and Alumni Communication., 2002)
A Fifteenth-Century French Illuminated Calendar Leaf
(University of Missouri--Columbia. Museum of Art and Archaeology, 2005)
to the circle of the Coerivy Master. In the case of the Missouri leaf, we are fortunate: enough sister leaves are documented to reconstruct an idea of the manuscript's textual and visual content. These clues suggest that the calendar leafwas part of a unified...
Thoughts on the Provenance of Some Merovingian-Era Buckles at the University of Missouri
(University of Missouri--Columbia. Museum of Art and Archaeology, 2010)
"Among the thousands of objects in the collection of the Museum of Art and Archaeology at the University of Missouri is a little-known group of early medieval artifacts from France. Given by the artist Evelyn Borchard Metzger in 1962, the European...
Liming in Missouri in the 20th century
(University of Missouri--Columbia, Agricultural Experiment Station, 2003)
The following are objectives of this publication ... Provide a condensed history of liming research and practices in Missouri ... Summarize the methods in use at the end of the Twentieth Century to estimate the need for liming material ... Sumarize...
Modeling the financial impact of management decisions on loblolly pine (Pinus taeda) production
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 2010)
Located primarily in the southeastern United States, Loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) is a variety of Southern yellow pine that is often planted by non-industrial private landowners seeking a beneficial long-term investment ...
The Funerary Stele of Heliodora, Astrologer
(University of Missouri--Columbia. Museum of Art and Archaeology, 2019)
, and a considerable number of further examples known but not yet published, the stele in the University of Missouri Museum of Art and Archaeology belongs to a tiny group of such gravestones with unusual interest and, indeed, a unique description...