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The book is printed on 241b. parchment paper and bound with metal Chicago screws". Appears to be a special printing of the work, possibly a one-off. Publisher name is his/her ebay name... [Pg.111]

The Appeal Board has a dual role, acting over the activities of the Code of Practice Panel and the PMCPA as both an appeal body and as a supervisory body. All complaints received by the Authority and all rulings by the Code of Practice Panel are reported to the Appeal Board, thus ensuring independent scrutiny from outside the pharmaceutical industry of both the authority s and the panel s activities by the independent members and independent chairman of the Appeal Board. Where promotional material or activities are ruled in breach of the Code, the company concerned must cease to use the material or cease the activity in question forthwith and provide a written undertaking to that effect. Reports on all cases under the Code of Practice are also published, naming companies ruled in breach of the code. These reports receive wide coverage, particularly in the pharmaceutical press and occasionally find their way into the lay press. [Pg.361]

As a consequence of these favorable structural features and because of their considerable biological activity,a substantial effort has been devoted to a continued search for new analogs. The proposed and by now well-established system of nomenclature (see Section 11.2) will be used, leading in some instances to a change of published names as far as the a,(3-designations are concerned. New entries are listed in Table 11.15. [Pg.586]

Despite the apparent clarity of the nomenclature rules, several papers in the area of the A-type proanthocyanidins still lack proper implementation of these rules. The reader must therefore ascertain the correctness of published names. In addition, the reader is also referred to the growing body of evidence of the physiological importance of these compounds, data of which can be found in several of the papers listed in the references. [Pg.587]

Treat the name of the law as a chapter title (roman, terminated with a period). No publisher name is needed. The number and date of the law are separated by a comma. If additional publication information is given, it is preceded by a semicolon. [Pg.313]

Comparison of Computer-Generated Names with Published Names (Results of Analysis of 303 Systematic Names)... [Pg.34]

Although the term enamine was coined in 1927 (to emphasize the structural analogy with enols)1, it wasn t until 1936 that a general synthesis for enamines was published, namely the condensation between aldehydes and secondary amines developed by Mannich and Davidsen2. That method was improved in the early 1950s by Herr and Heyl who employed the azeotropic removal of water to facilitate formation of a wider variety of enamines than had been available3. As described by Haynes, many other preparations were subsequently devised4. [Pg.1050]

This chapter does not aim to give a complete treatise on the extensive literature on nitrile bioconversions, but rather aims at presenting an overview of enzymatic nitrile hydrolysis with a selection of recent and significant examples. Several reviews on the bioconversions of organic nitriles and their potential technological applications have been published namely by Banerjee et al. (2002), Mylerova and Martinkova (2003), Martinkova and Kren (2002). [Pg.360]

Lists of both proposed and recommended INNs are sent together with a circular letter to WHO Member States (at present 193), to national pharmacopoeia commissions and to other bodies designated by member states. In this letter, the WHO requests that member states should take such steps as are necessary to prevent the acquisition of proprietary rights in the published names, including prohibiting registration of these names as tradenames. [Pg.872]

A few frequently cited values of PZCs/IEPs have actually never been published. Namely, they have been cited after secondary sources, without checking the primary source, which reports different PZCs/IEPs than that in a secondary source, a result of limited significance, or no PZCs/IEPs at all. Reference [2469] is quoted in [1] and then by a few other authors (probably after [1]) as an authoritative source of the IEP of hematite. Actually, no specific IEP is reported in [2469]. The authors mention that pH 2.4-4.2 is far from the IEP, but they do not specify how far. [Pg.866]

Figure 3-2 is not shown because the copyright permission granted to the Borden Institute, TMM, does not allow the Borden Institute to grant permission to other users and/or does not include usage in electronic media. The current user must apply to the publisher named in the figure legend for permission to use this illustration in any type of publication media. [Pg.89]


See other pages where Publisher names is mentioned: [Pg.102]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.486]    [Pg.307]    [Pg.302]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.397]    [Pg.400]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.221]    [Pg.231]    [Pg.338]    [Pg.56]   


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Published names, quality

Publisher names author

Quality of Published Chemical Names

References—continued publisher names

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