MOspace Institutional Repository
The MOspace Institutional Repository is an online repository for creative and scholarly works and other resources created by faculty, students, and staff at the University of Missouri--Columbia and the University of Missouri--Kansas City. MOspace makes these resources freely available on the web and assures their preservation for the future.
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Evaluation of natural fermentation and germination to improve the nutritive value of cereal grains
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 1978)Natural fermentation was used to improve the nutritional quality of cereal grains. Three lots each of soft wheat, three lots of dent corn and one variety each of barley, oats, millet and rice were ground and separately ... -
Phenomenological criticism : an analysis and an application to the fiction of John Updike
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 1975)Although phenomenological criticism of literature varies in its appearance, it is all based upon the seminal studies in phenomenology of Edmund Husserl (1859-1938). The value of Husserl’s phenomenology to literary criticism ... -
Economics of compensation in backgrounding systems to evaluate alternative beef production strategies
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 1972)"Demand for beef is expanding and the United States cattle industry is growing rapidly. In a study of the livestock industry projected to 1930, Kamenidis and Rhodes estimate a 30 to 40 percent increase in cattle feeding ... -
Improving delirium management in hospitalized elderly patients
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 2024)Delirium is the leading complication in hospitalized older adults associated with increased mortality, adverse inpatient outcomes, and decreased functionality (McCusker et al., 2003). Delirium is a syndrome with various ... -
Molecular and genetic analyses of the maize B chromosome centromere
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 1997)"The genetic material of eukaryotic organisms is packaged into highly organized structures termed chromosomes. Chromosomes require at least three elements for thei r stability, replica tion and transmission during both ...