Results 161 to 170 of about 66,731 (214)
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Ocular Angiostrongyliasis in Semarang, Central Java

The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1977
A worm removed intact from the anterior chamber of the left eye of a 23-year-old woman from Central Java was identified as a mle Angiostrongylus cantonensis, 11.1 mm in length and 0.24 mm in maximum width. A useful degree of eye function was preserved. Five similar cases have been reported--three from Thailand, two from South Vietnam.
, Widagdo   +3 more
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Central and East Java

1973
Anyone coming into contact with a form of music hitherto unknown to himself is confronted by considerable difficulties, even though he may be musically receptive and full of goodwill: he has to eliminate his own theoretical conceptions, his own aesthetics and axioms—if he has any—as well as his own conventional ideas—which he is sure to have.
J. Kunst, E. L. Heins
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Addendum to: Central and East Java

1973
The sad news reached me — too late for its inclusion in the text — that there is now a single gong-smithy left in Semarang. As a result, owners of gamelans in both Java and Bali, knowing the replacement of their gongs to have become impossible, are giving greater care than ever to their maintenance.
J. Kunst, E. L. Heins
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An Economic Survey of Central Java

Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 1969
(1969). An Economic Survey of Central Java. Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies: Vol. 5, No. 3, pp. 29-46.
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Deletional Types of Alpha-Thalassaemia in Central Java

Human Heredity, 1992
The frequency of deletional alpha-thalassaemia in a Javanese population sample (n = 103) was investigated at three restriction sites of the alpha-globin gene (BamHI, BglII and RsaI). The overall gene frequency of alpha+ deletional thalassaemia was found to be very low (0.03).
Tan, J.A.M.A.   +6 more
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Music and Trance in Central Java

Ethnomusicology, 1973
n the eyes of some Javanese as well as some well-informed outsiders, the cultural identity of the Javanese people is bound up almost entirely with the elegant, brilliant art of the four Central Javanese courts. Perhaps no other area in Indonesia, excepting Bali, can lay claim to such cultural eminence and prestige as the royal seats of Central Java and
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Tembang Macapat in Central Java

Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association, 1983
One of the most important poetic forms in Java is inseparably connected with melody: the form known as tembang. Tembang have always been sung, never spoken. The word ‘tembang’ itself is used in two senses: it refers both to a broad category of verse-forms and to the various melodies associated with them.
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Breast-feeding in Central Java

Population Studies, 1982
M D, Bracher, G, Santow
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Central and East Java, With Madura

1981
[We can now give] our attention to two islands said to be without adat law or to have only a scanty remnant of it. As long as it was believed that Javanese adat law had to be explained in terms of what was known about Java itself, there was bound to be disappointment owing to lack of information.
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