Thursday, December 10, 2009

Dois anybody know if led zeppelin will perform at madison square garden??

im just wondering if they will do a couple of shows there or something. so if u have any info please tell me.



Dois anybody know if led zeppelin will perform at madison square garden??sheet music



The other day, someone here posted news that Plant said no to a Zeppelin tour.



:(



Dois anybody know if led zeppelin will perform at madison square garden??state theatre opera theater



Plant was the only one who said no to Zep ever playing again. Sucks I know.

Please get your time to read it and answer it please!?

Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd (Construction) is a construction company. It has three directors: Ben, chairperson of the board, Sally and Jessie. James is the company secretary. The correct forms have been filed with ASIC to show that the officers have been appointed.



Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd has never appointed a CEO. On several occasions over the past three years, Ben has entered into contracts on behalf of the company, Craig %26amp; Sons without first seeking authorisation from the company’s board. However on each of the occasions, Ben has later obtained board approval for the contracts. Craig %26amp; Sons common seal was not used in any of these contracts.



Clause 10 of Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd constitution says “the directors shall provide for safe custody the company’s common seal. The seal shall be used only by the authority of the board of directors. Every document to which the seal is fixed shall be signed by the director and counter signed by another director or company secretary.”



Ben is also director of Apex Pty Ltd. Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd does not hold any shares in Apex and Apex does not hold any shares in Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd. Three months ago, Apex borrowed $500,000 from ANZ Bank. ANZ approved the loan to Apex only after Ben agreed that Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd would guarantee repayment of the loan. Sally %26amp; Jessie know nothing about the loan or the guarantee document. The guarantee was signed by an ANZ loans officer, Peter. The common seal of Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd was fixed to the guarantee document by Ben, who signed next to it. Ben’s brother, Sam counter-signed and wrote company secretary. Peter asked Ben whether Sam was company secretary and Ben said “Yes”. Peter did not perform a search of the ASIC data base to check who were the properly appointed officers of Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd.



APEX has defaulted on loan repayments to ANZ bank with $300,000 plus interest still owing on the loan. ANZ is seeking to enforce the guarantee given by Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd.



Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd (Construction) is a construction company. It has three directors: Ben, chairperson of the board, Sally and Jessie. James is the company secretary. The correct forms have been filed with ASIC to show that the officers have been appointed.



Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd has never appointed a CEO. On several occasions over the past three years, Ben has entered into contracts on behalf of the company, Craig %26amp; Sons without first seeking authorisation from the company’s board. However on each of the occasions, Ben has later obtained board approval for the contracts. Craig %26amp; Sons common seal was not used in any of these contracts.



Clause 10 of Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd constitution says “the directors shall provide for safe custody the company’s common seal. The seal shall be used only by the authority of the board of directors. Every document to which the seal is fixed shall be signed by the director and counter signed by another director or company secretary.”



Ben is also director of Apex Pty Ltd. Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd does not hold any shares in Apex and Apex does not hold any shares in Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd. Three months ago, Apex borrowed $500,000 from ANZ Bank. ANZ approved the loan to Apex only after Ben agreed that Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd would guarantee repayment of the loan. Sally %26amp; Jessie know nothing about the loan or the guarantee document. The guarantee was signed by an ANZ loans officer, Peter. The common seal of Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd was fixed to the guarantee document by Ben, who signed next to it. Ben’s brother, Sam counter-signed and wrote company secretary. Peter asked Ben whether Sam was company secretary and Ben said “Yes”. Peter did not perform a search of the ASIC data base to check who were the properly appointed officers of Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd.



APEX has defaulted on loan repayments to ANZ bank with $300,000 plus interest still owing on the loan. ANZ is seeking to enforce the guarantee given by Craig %26amp; Sons Pty Ltd.



Please get your time to read it and answer it please!?headache



Contact a lawyer. Maybe you can try to fight it as fraud by one of your partners.

Anyone else have problems with Firefox and Flash (Shockwave)?

A couple of months ago I suddenly started having problems with Firefox



A little more info:



Here's actual text of error message that I frequently get before the eventual crash:



"Illegal Operation in Plug-in



The plug-in performed an illegal operation. You are strongly advised to restart Firefox.



-- Don't show this message again during this session?



I've done some web searches and this appears to be a frequent problem but I haven't found a good solution



Has anybody else run across this problem? Anyone have a fix?



Anyone else have problems with Firefox and Flash (Shockwave)?plays



yes, i have. and i havent found a fix...yet. I will keep trying though.



Anyone else have problems with Firefox and Flash (Shockwave)?opera ticket opera theater



Personally I have not had that problem.



But have you tried uninstalling flash, then reinstalling it? Don't just reinstall over top; Adobe admits Flash errors don't get fixed doing that and they recommend you uninstall first.
well i have a problem where i cant install plug-ins in firefox so i have manually download it from the website and then install it ,but nothing like yours.sorry

There's going to be a hiphop performance for me, and I need help!?

I am doing my performance with a friend of mine, and this is a really good opportunity for me, so please don't give me any mean answers.



There is a Talent Show at my school. My performance can only be 1 and a half minutes long, and my hip hop dance is about 2 minutes 50 seconds. I really want to show the whole dance because the ending is the best part. I cannot perform faster because I won't follow the music. How can I persuade the teacher to extend it, and let me finish the whole dance? I really don't want to have to shorten it.



There's going to be a hiphop performance for me, and I need help!?ms stress



Hi. Good for you performing. I'm sorry, but you answered your own question when you said "My performance can only be..." A friend had a killer song she was singing, the last few seconds were the best part. She went over and ended up being completely disqualified since she didn't follow the rule. I mean, ask, but to be fair (which sometimes sucks), the teacher would have to give everyone extra time. Wish I had better news. Good luck.

How do you perform head cleaning on a JVC mini DV digital video camera ?

My camera viewing screen shows the picture breaking up into little segments and the message (needs head cleaning)appears.I tried a cartridge cleaner that came with a regular film cartridge and it didn't help. I can't find a camera shop that will talk to me about this.



I called the JVC number several times to no avail. Also I talked to 2 different JVC repair centers and still haven't had any success in answering my problem.The camera is model GRDVL500U,and was purchased 11/30/2000.Any suggestions will be appreciated.I think that the new digital cameras have put the camera repair shops out of business,at least in my local area.



How do you perform head cleaning on a JVC mini DV digital video camera ?binoculars



get another cleaning tape. look for a wet system. try it several times. if this doesnt do it you may have a clogged head if you're brave get some chamois ended swabs and some cleaning fluid. Try radio shack. take off the cover over the area where the tape loads place the soppy wet swab against the head drum withmoderate pressure and rotate the head under the swab several times



How do you perform head cleaning on a JVC mini DV digital video camera ?violin opera theater



you could take it to best-buy and have them do it for you..



but when you bought it , you should have recived a blank - tape-cleaner, which you just insert and let it do the job for you, I would look for it ..
Use a DV head cleaner. I saw something like this at Best Buy. If this doesn't work, then go with what the other guy said (take it there to get it fixed)

I need help????

The Relationship Between Test Anxiety, Sleep Habits, and



Self-Perceived Academic Competency



Introduction



?1Self-perceived academic competency has been shown to be a significant contributor to the academic success of college students. Bandura (1986) defines self-perceived competency as “people’s judgments of their capabilities to organize and execute courses of action required to attain designated types of performances” (p. 10). It has been found by Lee and Babko (1994) that when in a difficult situation such as a college-type test, a person with a strong sense of self-perceived academic competency will devote more attention and effort to the task at hand, therefore trying harder and persisting longer, than will those who have lower levels of self-perceived competency.



?2Self-perceived academic competency can be affected by a plethora of variables. In this study, the variables of test anxiety and sleep habits will be examined in relationship to college students’ selfperceived academic competency.



?3Lewis (1970) defines anxiety as “an unpleasant emotion experienced as dread, scare, alarm, fright, trepidation, horror or panic” (p. 63). Test anxiety, then, is the debilitating experience of anxiety, as described by Lewis, during the preparation for a test or during the test itself. Although anxiety is often detrimental, it may be beneficial if it is not extreme. Simpson, Parker, and Harrison (1995) convey this through two well-known principles of anxiety: “A minimal amount of anxiety” (an optimal amount is more accurate) “can mobilize human beings to respond rapidly and efficiently,” while “excessive amounts of anxiety may foster poor response and sometimes inhibit response” (p. 700). Knox, Schacht, and Turner



The Body of a Research Paper—APA



The body of the APA paper runs uninterrupted until the separate References page. The first page of an APA paper will look like the facing page, except for the paragraph numbers, included here for reference only.



? Repeat the title of your paper, exactly as it appears on the title page, on the first page of the research essay.



? Be sure the title is centered and properly capitalized.



? Begin the body of the essay two lines (a double space) below the title.



? Double-space the body of the essay.



? Use at least one-inch margins at the sides, top, and bottom of this and all subsequent pages.



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? Provide copyright/permission data for figures or tables borrowed from other sources.



Test Anxiety 4



(1993) state that test anxiety can include performance anxiety and content (e.g., math) anxiety. Both of these make it hard for students to concentrate and perform adequately on tests. Knox et al. (1993) also recognize the consequences of poorly managed test anxiety. “Failure to manage test anxiety can result in failing courses, dropping out of school, a negative self-concept and a low earning potential” (p. 295).



?4Research on test anxiety has identified three models that explain the origin of test anxiety: (1) The problem lies not in taking the test, but in preparing for the test. Kleijn, Van der Ploeg, and Topman (1994) have identified this as the learning-deficit model. According to this model, the student with high test anxiety tends to have or use inadequate learning or study skills while in the preparation stage of exam taking. (2) The second model is termed the interference model (Kleijn et al., 1994). The problem for people in this model is that during tests, individuals with test anxiety focus on task-irrelevant stimuli that negatively affect their performanceb (Sarason, 1975). The attention diverted from the task at hand can be categorized into two types, according to Sarason. The first type of distraction can be classified as physical and includes an increase in awareness of heightened autonomic activity (e.g., sweaty palms, muscle tension). The second type of distraction includes inappropriate cognitions, such as saying to oneself, “Others are finishing before me, so I must not know the material,” or “I’m stupid, I won’t pass.” The presence of either of these two task-irrelevant cognitions will affect the quality of a student’s performance. (3) The third model of test anxiety includes people who think they have prepared adequately for a test, but in reality, did not. These people question their abilities after the test, which creates anxiousness during the next test.



?5Sleep patterns are believed to be more irregular among college students, and irregular sleep patterns are believed to affect both selfperceived academic competency and academic performance. Sleep, therefore, seems to be an important factor in a college student’s success and self-perceived ability. An optimal sleep pattern, as defined here, is one in which an individual goes to bed and wakes up at about the same time every day while allowing an adequate amount of time in each of the five stages of the sleep cycle. The function of the body that keeps our sleep patterns in this constant waking and sleeping cycle is called the circadian rhythm. During the night a person enters into and out of five different stages of sleep, the most



important being REM (rapid eye movement) sleep. When the circadian rhythm of a person’s sleep is thrown off, less time is spent in REM sleep (Lahey, 1995). People deprived of REM sleep are likely to experience irritability, inefficiency, and fatigue (Hobson, 1989; Webb %26amp; Bonnet, 1979). Furthermore, they are more likely to experience irritability and fatigue when switched from the day shift to the night shift rather than from the night shift to the day shift (Wilkinson, Allison, Feeney, %26amp; Kaminska, 1989). This phenomenon known as “jet lag” is consistent with our natural tendency to lengthen our circadian rhythms. For example, one experiment demonstrated that participants’ circadian rhythms continued even when they were isolated in constantly lighted chambers. However, their rhythms quickly changed to a twenty-five-hour cycle (Aschoff, 1981; Horne, 1988). This phenomenon suggests that college students are particularly prone to sleep deprivation because college students



are notorious for “cramming” information into their memories the night before a test. To do this, they stay up longer and wake up earlier than they usually would. The impact of sleep deprivation on academic performance is negative; consequently, it is hypothesized that students with poor sleep habits will have a lower level of selfperceived academic competency since each test is taken in a state marked by inefficient, irritable, or fatigued thinking.



?6While there have been numerous studies on self-perceived competency and academic performance, on test anxiety and performance, and on sleep and performance, little direct information exists on the relationship among these variables taken together. It is believed that in our findings it will be shown that test anxiety and irregular sleep patterns will lower college students’ self-perceived academic competency.



Methods



Participants



?7One hundred fifty-eight college students participated in the study. There were 89 first- and second-year students and 64 thirdand fourth-year students. Among the participants, there were 67 males and 89 females. Demographic data obtained from the participants included gender, age, year in school, major, and their



estimated current grade point average (GPA).



Instruments



?8The Test Attitude Inventory (TAI), created by Spielberger (1980), was used to measure test anxiety. The TAI subscales measure self-reported worry and emotionality. The TAI contains twenty items that are situation-specific to academically related test situations and environments. A five-point Likert scale (5 represented “usually” and 1 represented “never”) was used to obtain the participants’ responses.



?9To measure sleep habits, the Sleep Questionnaire constructed by Domino, Blair, and Bridges (1984) was used. The questionnaire contains fifty-four questions pertaining to various sleep and related behaviors. The same five-point Likert scale that was used for the TAI was used by this instrument as well. In addition, three closed-ended questions help reveal the approximate time of sleep onset, the approximate time of awakening, and whether or not the participants



take naps during the day.



?10The College Academic Self-Efficacy Scale (CASES), created by Owen and Froman (1988), was administered to determine the degree of confidence participants believe they have in various academic settings (e.g., note taking during class or using the library). A fivepoint Likert Scale was also used here, where 5 represented “a lot of confidence,” and 1 represented “little confidence.” This scale consists of thirty-three questions covering a wide variety of academic settings and situations that are pertinent to the students’ overall academic self-competency rating. Owen and Froman (1988) found the alpha internal consistency of the CASES, in two different trials, to be .9 and .92.



Procedure



?11Packets were prepared which contained a demographic data sheet, consent form, test anxiety inventory, CASES, and the sleep habits questionnaire, in that order. Next, professors in the selected classes were given information on the purpose of the study, shown the survey instruments, and told approximately how long it would take for students to complete the entire packet (20–30 minutes). We were invited to six different class meetings. The students were informed verbally that the purpose of the study was to examine the relationships between test anxiety, sleep habits, and self-perceived academic competency. The students were also informed that participation in the experiment was completely voluntary and that



their responses would be kept anonymous. The students who agreed to participate in the study signed a consent form. These students then filled out the demographic data and the four surveys. The participants were then thanked for their willingness to participate in the study.



Results



?12The mean score for test anxiety was 52.67 (out of a possible 100), with a high score of 95 and a low score of 24. In order to see if differences existed between people with high test anxiety and low test anxiety, the participants’ test anxiety scores were divided into three levels (low, moderate, and high) and compared to the CASES using an ANOVA. Those people in the low test anxiety group scored 124.50 (a higher score indicates greater self-perceived academic competency) on the CASES. Those people in the moderate test anxiety group scored 113.75 on the CASES. Those people in the high test anxiety group scored 106.21 on the CASES. The p-value was found to be .001. This finding is represented in Figure 1. It was also found that there were significant differences between test anxiety groups and GPA (a measure of performance). The low test anxiety group reported having a 3.29 GPA, the group that reported moderate anxiety had a 3.13 GPA, and the group with high test anxiety reported having a 3.02 GPA. The p-value was found to be .05.



?13Similarly, the sleep scores were also divided into three groups (bad sleep, moderate sleep, and good sleep) for the purpose of comparing mean differences. The mean sleep score was 130.28 (out of 200), with a high score of 163 and a low score of 90. The lower sleep scores represent better sleep habits. The people in the bad sleep group scored 110.42 on?14 the CASES, the moderate sleepers scored 114.98 on the CASES, and the people in the good sleep group scored 119.33. This is represented in Figure 2.



?15Furthermore, grade point averages were significantly different depending on which sleep group the student was associated with. Students in the bad sleep group reported having a 3.02 GPA, while students in the moderate sleep group reported having a 3.11 GPA. Also, those students who fell into the good sleep group reported having a 3.31 GPA. The p-value was found to be .03.



?16Correlations were also figured for the following variables (shown in Table 1): quality of sleep habits, test anxiety, self-perceived academic competency, and GPA. It was found that the quality of sleep habits and test anxiety were negatively correlated at the –.26 level (p-value of .001). The quality of sleep habits was also found to be positively correlated with self perceived academic competency at the .19 level (p-value of .016). Additionally, it was found that the quality of sleep habits was positively correlated with GPA at the .18 level (p-value of .024). Test anxiety and self-perceived academic competency were negatively correlated at the –.41 level (p-value of .001). GPA and test anxiety were negatively correlated at the –.21 level (p-value of .01). Lastly, self-perceived academic competency and GPA were positively correlated at the .47 level (p-value of .001).



Discussion



?17The findings presented indicate that bad sleep habits and high test anxiety negatively affect self-perceived academic competency, as was hypothesized. Additionally, it was found that low self-perceived academic competency negatively affected students’ GPA.



?18Quality of sleep habits was found to be a factor in self-perceived academic competence. If college students do experience REM sleep deprivation more than the average population, then the findings of this study need to be passed on to college students. The findings in this study suggest that college students with poor sleep habits may perceive themselves as having lower academic competency. The study also showed that self-perceived academic competency was positively correlated to academic performance. Thus, according to Hobson (1989), Webb %26amp; Bonnet (1979), and this study, those college students who do have poor sleep habits will negatively affect their academic performance.



?19It was also found that test anxiety and grade point average are negatively correlated, and that quality of sleep and grade point average are positively correlated. This finding, and the fact that quality of sleep and test anxiety are negatively related, suggest interrelationships among the variables test anxiety, sleep habits, selfperceived academic competency, and academic performance. This result highlights the fact that professors need to instruct their students on how to manage test anxiety. Students also need to be aware of the effects that poor sleep and low self-perceived academic competency have on academic performance. Thus, the phrase “I think I can, I think I can . . .” may be beneficial only if students reduce their test anxiety and develop better sleep habits. More research needs to be done to find other variables that affect self-perceived academic competence.



References



Aschoff, J. (1981). Handbook of behavioral neurobiology (Vol. 4).



Biological rhythms. New York: Plenum.



Bandura, A. (1986). Social foundations of thought and action: A social



cognitive theory. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.



Domino, G., Blair, G., %26amp; Bridges, A. (1984). Subjective assessment of



sleep by sleep questionnaire. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 59,



163–170.



Hobson, J. A. (1989). Sleep. New York: Scientific American Library.



Horne, J. (1988). Why we sleep: The functions of sleep in humans and



other mammals. New York: Oxford University Press.



Kleijn, W. C., Van der Ploeg, H. M., %26amp; Topman, R. M. (1994). Cognition,



study habits, test anxiety, and academic performance.



Psychological Reports, 75, 1219–1226.



Knox, D., Schacht, C., %26amp; Turner, J. (1993). Virtual reality: A proposal



for treating test anxiety in college students. College Student



Journal, 27, 294–296.



Lahey, B. B. (1995). In M. Lange, S. Connors, A. Fuerste, K. M. Huinker-



Timp, %26amp; L. Fuller (Eds.), Psychology: An Introduction. Dubuque,



IA: Brown %26amp; Benchmark.



Lee, C., %26amp; Babko, P. (1994). Self-efficacy beliefs: Comparison of five



measures. Journal of Applied Psychology, 79, 364–369.



Lewis, A. (1970). The ambiguous word “anxiety.” International Journal



of Psychiatry, 9, 62–79.



Owen, S. V., %26amp; Froman, R. D. (1988). Development of an academic self



efficacyscale. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the



National Council on Measurement in Education, New Orleans, LA.



Sarason, I. G. (1975). Test anxiety and the self-disclosing coping model.



Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 43, 148–152.



Simpson, M. L., Parker, P. W., %26amp; Harrison, A. W. (1995). Differential



performance on Taylor’s Manifest Anxiety Scale in black private



college freshmen, a partial report. Perceptual and Motor Skills,



80, 699–702.



Spielberger, C. D. (1980). Preliminary professional manual for the Test



Attitude Inventory. Palo Alto, CA: Consulting Psychologists Press.



Webb, W. B., %26amp; Bonnet, M. H. (1979). Sleep and dreams. In M. E. Meyer



(Ed.), Foundations of contemporary psychology. New York:



Oxford University Press.



Wilkinson, R., Allison, S., Feeney, M., %26amp; Kaminska, Z. (1989). Alertness



of night nurses: Two shift systems compared. Ergonomics, 32,



281–292.



References Pages—APA



Sources contributing directly to the paper are listed alphabetically on a separate page immediately after the body of the essay.



? Center the title (References) at the top of the page.



? All sources mentioned in the text of the paper must appear in the References list, except personal communications; similarly, every source listed in the References must be mentioned in the paper.



? Arrange the items in the References list alphabetically by the last name of the author. Give only initials for first names. If no author is given for a work, list and alphabetize it by the first word in the title, excluding articles (A, An, The).



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I need help????performing arts center



I think it's a really good paper but it jumps around a lot, esp. in the beginning. The organization could be a lot tighter in the beginning and instead of jumping from competency to anxiety back to competency with a little about sleep in the middle, you could use some better transitions between sentences.



I need help????sunshine opera theater



do ur own paper.. its too much to read
Sounds good!
sounds good and a good paper. it is very wonderful but next time do ur own paper or piece

How do you perform a Beta Test?

I have a new online program I need to beta test, does anyone know of how to run a good beta test or a website that shows you how?



How do you perform a Beta Test?greek theater



Well, I would disagree with Kasey on this one.. If you are referring to beta testing as in acceptance testing i.e. putting the site up for a limited audience to gather responses, then its already narrow enough to warrant an answer. For this type of testing, there are a variety of frameworks that could be of use for you, but the question is what you want to accomplish.



Selenium is an excellent platform agnostic testing framework which will allow you to even test AJAX, but it might not do what you want it to do. It will more or less allow you to create a test suite with specific tests that will ensure that a form field is on the page, that the page contains a certain word, that a certain action leads to a desired result in the browser, etc, stuff like that. There's a bunch of other ones that are broader, too such as Fitnesse and there are even test frameworks that are specific for your language/environment, so again, this might not be for you.



I guess this is as far as I can answer your question, but like I said, I really like Selenium and its worked out great for our team in testing a large e-commerce site to ensure that things are getting outputted to the screen as expected and more importantly, that it doesn't break as new browsers come out etc.



How do you perform a Beta Test?performing arts show opera theater



I'm afraid it depends on the program itself.



You want blackbox or whitebox testing?



Software testing is almost as complicated as software engineering. It's not something we can explain in a couple paragraphs.

 
Ltd