5,387 research outputs found
Kathleen Hall Jamieson on political advertising
A production of Public Affairs Television, Inc. ; a presentation of Thirteen/WNET New York ; director, Mark Ganguzza. Host, Bill Moyers.Amidst the mudslinging, campaign promises, and scare tactics, what is really being said in those highly produced political ads? In this program, Bill Moyers talks with one of America's leading political and media analysts, Kathleen Hall Jamieson, dean of the Annenberg School of Communication and author of Everything You Think You Know About Politics ... And Why You're Wrong. Through astute analysis, Jamieson deconstructs more than a dozen TV commercials used by politicians and public interest groups, homing in on their visual and rhetorical methods to expose their actual agendas of issue advocacy. Together, Jamieson and Moyers discuss the significance of these ads in the contexts of future elections and American politics in general
Mr. Jamieson B. Hurry, The wood plant and its dye
Bloch Marc. Mr. Jamieson B. Hurry, The wood plant and its dye. In: Annales d'histoire économique et sociale. 4ᵉ année, N. 16, 1932. pp. 407-408
Ep. #026 - Dale Jamieson
This recording and transcript form part of a collection of podcasts conducted by the Cultures of Energy at Rice University. Cultures of Energy brings writers, artists and scholars together to talk, think and feel their way into the Anthropocene. We cover serious issues like climate change, species extinction and energy transition. But we also try to confront seemingly huge and insurmountable problems with insight, creativity and laughter.It’s Dominic’s birthday and he’ll cry if he wants to. Your co-hosts first talk green virtue and anthropocenic temperance and Cymene’s childhood close encounter with a tiger. We then (9:02) welcome to the podcast a very distinguished guest, Dale Jamieson, Professor of Environmental Studies and Philosophy at New York University and author of Reason in a Dark Time (Oxford University Press, 2014). We talk at length about his moving collaborative project with novelist Bonnie Nadzam (author of Lamb and Lions) and their recently published collection, Love in the Anthropocene (http://www.orbooks.com/catalog/love-in-the-anthropocene-by-jamieson-and-nadzam/). Dale posits love as the antithesis of narcissism and describes why contact with the real is so much more important than enveloping ourselves in fantasy. We talk hierarchy and class and why the Anthropocene will be better for some than for others. Yet, Dale emphasizes the newness of our present situation and says we should spend more time thinking and trying to understand our problems and less time relying on familiar categories and chasing solutions. Tracking back to Dale’s earlier work, we touch on the virtues, our need to recover agency, why we should tax email, and the intergenerational ethics of climate change. Then we turn to his current research on how the Anthropocene has challenged the categories and practices of liberalism, eroding both our traditional agency presupposition and public/private distinctions. The point being that we really don’t know how to govern in the Anthropocene—and, maybe we didn’t in the Holocene either! But in any case we live in a time in need of a great deal of political experimentation. We close with how surfing brought Dale to Environmental Studies and why philosophy matters in the wake of Hurricane Sandy. Do you think we have too much populism and not enough democracy? Listen on
General -- 1963 -- Correspondence, OPV Miscellaneous -- letter, 1962-11-26
Letter from Jamieson, S. R. to Sabin, Albert B. dated 1962-11-26.Sabin Collection Fair Use Policy</a
Kay Dalton and Darlene Jamieson, 1984
b&w photographVery good condition with some marking on white borderKay Dalton (left) presents scholarship to Darlene Jamieson (right).Written on the back in red pencil crayon: 'L-R Mrs. Kay Dalton/ Darlene Jamieson.
Narrative voice
Claire Jamieson, author of a new monograph on NATØ, examines the enduring significance of ‘the last radical architectural group of the twentieth century
Kynotidae Jamieson 1971
Kynotidae Jamieson, 1971 <p> <b>Type genus</b>. <i>Kynotus</i> Michaelsen, 1891. Monotypic.</p>Published as part of <i>Csuzdi, Csaba, Razafindrakoto, Malalatiana & Blanchart, Eric, 2012, New and little known earthworm species from Central Madagascar (Oligochaeta: Kynotidae), pp. 36-42 in Zootaxa 3578</i> on page 37, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/283022">10.5281/zenodo.283022</a>
Biology and clinical application of regulatory RNAs in hepatocellular carcinoma
The majority of the human genome comprises of DNA genes that are translated into RNAs but not into proteins. These RNA molecules are named non‐coding RNAs (ncRNA). While in the past it was thought that ncRNAs would be redundant without relevant functions, it is now well established that ncRNAs identify a class of regulatory molecules that finely tune cell homeostasis and are deregulated in disease states, including Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC). Of note, the number of ncRNAs within a cell increases progressively with the complexity of the species indicating their essential role in the maintenance of regulatory networks that impact the intricacy of the organism. ncRNAs have been demonstrated to mediate HCC development and progression by affecting intrinsic cancer cell signaling and cross talk between malignant cells and the microenvironment. They hold promise as clinical biomarkers, but further evidence is warranted prior to translation and integration within clinical practice
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