CaiH, Cao T, Li N, Fang P, Xu P, Wu X, Zhang B, Xiang D. Quantitative monitoring of a panel of stress-induced biomarkers in human plasma by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry: an application in a comparative study between depressive patients and healthy subjects. Anal Bioanal Chem. 2019 Jun 14. doi: 10.1007/s00216-019-01956-2. [Epub ahead of print]
Kappler L, Hoene M, Hu C, von Toerne C, Li J, Bleher D, Hoffmann C, Bhm A, Kollipara L, Zischka H, Knigsrainer A, Hring HU, Peter A, Xu G, Sickmann A, Hauck SM, Weigert C, Lehmann R. Linking bioenergetic function of mitochondria to tissue-specific molecular fingerprints. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2019 Jun 18. doi: 10.1152/ajpendo.00088.2019. [Epub ahead of print]
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product.title Reminder: If you have not uploaded a valid pesticide license this product cannot be shipped. If you have already submitted in your pesticide license and its still valid (not expired), you do not need to re-upload.
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product.titleThanks for your interest in our turf seed. We will be getting more tall fescue seed at the end of August and new tags will be available at the beginning of September. Please check back at that time if you are interested in different cultivars.
Fertilizers feed the turf important nutrients for healthy growth and development. With 19-0-6 featuring Dimension herbicide, the lawn grows thicker and greener while also keeping away crabgrass and other annual broadleaf weeds and grasses. It's perfect for use on cool-season grasses and may be applied in spring and fall.
This product contains 19 percent nitrogen and 6 percent soluble potash, two vital nutrients needed for plant health and growth. As a fertilizer, it helps established turfgrass maintain a thicker appearance. Because it also contains 0.1 percent Dimension herbicide, it will help to control annual weeds and grasses from taking over the lawn.
Use Dimension plus fertilizer on cool-season grasses like creeping and Kentucky bentgrasses, Kentucky bluegrass, fine and tall fescues, and perennial ryegrass. It can be used on seeded, sodded or sprigged lawns and ornamental turfs that are already well-established. It's an ideal turf product to use on golf courses to maintain the overall appearance. Avoid using this product on stressed turf, such as those affected by weather, pests and chemicals, as it may cause further injury.
19-0-6 with Dimension herbicide provides pre-emergent control of crabgrass and other annual broadleaf grasses and weeds. It helps to prevent the growth of barnyardgrass, crowfootgrass, goosegrass, kikuyu and more. Some common benefits include:
19-0-6 is an important turf fertilizer, giving the grass what it needs to grow thicker, healthier and more resistant to stress. It also contains Dimension herbicide, helping to keep away unwanted weeds and grasses for a more pristine landscape.
The Andersons 19-0-0 pre-emergent crabgrass control with fertilizer contains 25% Fortify-N for extended nitrogen release. Dimension provides pre- and post-emergent, season-long control for crabgrass and pre-emergent control for a variety of other weed seeds. See product label for rates and specifications.
On Jan. 17, 2008, three days before the Patriots beat the Chargers to go to 18-0 and advance to the Super Bowl, The Kraft Group filed for trademarks in preparation for merchandising the Patriots' perfect season subject to winning the Super Bowl. The company filed to trademark "Road To Perfection," "19-0" and "Perfect Season."
More thought was apparently given to the other two trademarks -- "Perfect Season" and "19-0" -- as The Kraft Group filed for the maximum of five extensions to provide the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office with the necessary documentation over the next eight years.
The one complication with those two filings is that, while thousands of T-shirts were printed commemorating a perfect Patriots season, none of them were ever sold. Emblazoned with an event that didn't occur, they instead were shipped to other countries.
Having to prove that they deserved the right to the phrase, the Patriots apparently licensed "Perfect Season" to the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association, which produced a DVD of the 2015 state football championship game between Xaverian Brothers and Central Catholic high schools. Xaverian prevailed, winning its 24th straight game (spanning two seasons).
The Patriots have a deeper connection to Xaverian. Hall of Famer Andre Tippett's son Cody played on that 2015 team and was presented with the award for the best player in Massachusetts high school football by Patriots owner Robert Kraft. Former Patriots Vince Wilfork and Steve Grogan also sent their sons to Xaverian.
All-natural, organic-based Natural Alternative Late Spring Fertilizer 19-0-3 (Application 2 of the five-part Natural Alternative Lawn Care System) helps keep your lawn green and lush as consistently warmer temperatures heat up the soil. The nutrient combination feeds your lawn for late spring and minimizes quick growth spurts and frequent mowing, promoting even and hardy growth throughout the season. Our organic lawn fertilizer, best for late Spring, is blended with Protilizer, a seed & plant activator exclusive to Natural Alternative which strengthens roots and aids in nutrient and water uptake.
For Established Lawns: Apply this zero-phosphorus fertilizer in late spring at a rate of 3 lbs. of product per 1,000 square feet. Apply evenly with a calibrated fertilizer spreader. 3 lbs. of this product per 1,000 square feet is equivalent to 0.57 lbs. of nitrogen per 1,000 square feet.
For Newly Seeded Lawns: Rake the fertilizer for late Spring into the upper inch of the soil before seeding. Water until the seed germinates and establishes. Continue with the remaining Natural Alternative 5-Part Lawn Care System.
Late Spring Fertilizer 19-0-3 is an all-natural, organic-based fertilizer that is specially formulated for late spring lawn care. It is designed to keep your lawn green and lush by promoting even and hardy growth throughout the season.
Protilizer is a seed and plant activator that is exclusive to Natural Alternative products. It strengthens roots and aids in nutrient and water uptake, which promotes healthy growth and helps keep your lawn green and lush.
For established lawns, apply Late Spring Fertilizer 19-0-3 in late spring at a rate of 3 lbs. of product per 1,000 square feet using a calibrated fertilizer spreader. For newly seeded lawns, rake the fertilizer into the upper inch of the soil before seeding and water until the seed germinates and establishes.
I live where the soil is already high in phosphorus (the middle number) and it's hard to find any with none locally. I buy one of these each season and they are well worth the cost. My neighbors all say my yard is looking much better than under the prior homeowner.
1969. If you didn't live through this year, as I did, you've no doubt heard many things about it. It wasn't easy to select just one game from this star-crossed season that ended up in failure. What to choose? The Opening Day win with Willie Smith's 11th-inning walkoff homer? How about a six-run 10th inning in Cincinnati in June? Or even a couple of famous losses, such as a protested game in Montreal June 30 when Expos outfielder Rusty Staub claimed an Ernie Banks home run had gone under the fence and got it nullified. Or how about July 9 against the Mets in New York when Jimmy Qualls broke up Tom Seaver's perfect game with one out in the ninth?
Kenny Holtzman threw a no-hitter August 19 at Wrigley against the Braves. The Cubs beat the Reds 8-2 in Cincinnati September 2 to go to 32 games over .500, the most they'd been over .500 since 1945 (and they wouldn't get that far over again until 2008).
No, I decided, those games have already had their due; I've written about several of them here before. Instead, I'm choosing a game from early in the season, this 19-0 win over the expansion Padres; it happened May 13 at Wrigley Field. The Cubs ran their record to 22-11 and were four games in first place in the then-new National League East.
Why this game? Because I think this one, played on a cloudy, 60-degree spring afternoon, was the one that finally convinced Cubs fans that their team was at last returned to the dominance it showed over the first 45 years of the 20th Century. George Langford summed up all the records the team set in that game, in the Tribune, using words that would never make it past editors today:
Oliver, a spare-part infielder, hit just .159 that year; the home run and four RBI were his entire count for the season. It was Oliver's final major-league home run; despite spending the entire season on the roster and the Cubs desperately needing to give their regulars a break, he started only seven more games the rest of the year, one of those after the Cubs had been mathematically eliminated. Meanwhile, Banks' seven RBI (one of just three games in his career when he had that many) gave him 1,500 for his career, at the time that count ranked 17th in MLB history (his final career total of 1,636 currently ranks 29th).
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