311 research outputs found
Editorial: MYC as a disease target beyond cancer
Enfermedades no oncológicas; Focalización; Factor de transcripciónNon-oncologic diseases; Targeting; Transcription factorMalalties no oncològiques; Focalització; Factor de transcripcióThe author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. Generalitat de Catalunya (AGAUR 2021/SGR 01509)
Tegmen Roof of Plaxocrinus Mooresi (Whitfield)
Author Institution: Orion Museum, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210Preparation and study of a crinoid specimen in the Orton Museum collection reveal for the first time the tegmen roof of Plaxocrinus mooresi (Whitfield). The roof is flat and composed of 14 small polygonal plates encircled by 10 large spines which project laterally and abut along their sides proximally. The tegmen roof comprises part of the crown of a young individual showing the dorsal cup, plates of the posterior interradius, and adjacent arms. A portion of the tegmen roof of a mature crinoid is also referred to Plaxocrinus mooresi. Both specimens were collected near the base of the Allegheny Group, of Pennsylvanian age, at Carbon Hill, Hocking County, Ohio
The Cyclical Representation of the UK Conference Sector's Life Cycle: The Use of Refurbishments as Rejuvenation Triggers
The Tourism Area Life Cycle (TALC) model (Butler, 1980) is one of the most influential and frequently quoted tourism related lifecycle frameworks. Extensively applied and critiqued, it remains a cornerstone in tourism research. The model classifies the hypothetical temporal development of a destination into a series of stages, these being exploration, involvement, development, consolidation, stagnation and decline and/or rejuvenation, which when aggregated are represented diagrammatically as a S-shaped curve. This paper presents a theoretical extension of the TALC model, based on the decade in which UK conference venues initiated their conference product lifecycle, and the use of refurbishments as state changing triggers to rejuvenate the conference product lifecycle. This theoretical extension is applied to the four conference venue classifications that together constitute the UK conference sector, namely purpose-built venues, hotels, educational establishments and visitor attractions. Each of these venue types initiated its lifecycle at different times, with individual venues progressing through their lifecycle and either stagnating or rejuvenating through the use of refurbishment’s at differing times throughout the last 5 decades. Based on these findings, a linear model can be applied to the development of the UK conference sector. However, undertaking refurbishments, and thus the rejuvenation of the conference venues’ lifecycle, are occurring at differing times, and therefore this paper forwards the view that today a cyclical model is more appropriate to the UK conference sector
Huntsville Times sleeve HT0008229
Wrestling tournament / Bob Jones High School gym / Just need a few photos of anybody wrestling... / J. [G.] Jenkins / B. Daniel / Greg Blancit / Jeffrey Narrell / Darren [Nalove] / Matthew Cox / Barrett Eubanks / Jake Henson / Whit Proctor / Hayden Henderson / Patrick Zahm / Rico Elliott / Whit Whitfield / [Notes included
Diffuse scattering in PZN
Information on the format and analysis of the data in this collection is available from the instrument link(s) on this page (Is produced by:).Samples: PZN, lead znic niobate Analysis of the sample(s) listed above by the instruments at the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation. Investigators: * Dr Darren Goossens ([email protected]) * Dr Andrew Studer ([email protected]) * Richard Welberry ([email protected]) * Mr Ross Whitfield ([email protected]
Author-Publisher-Translator Communication in English-Canadian Literary Presses since 1960
Working from a translation practice perspective considering the publishing house as the primary institutional frame for translation events, this article examines author-publisher-translator communication at English-Canadian literary presses. Recent empirical research is contextualised through the political, cultural and economic factors conditioning practices at English-Canadian literary presses since 1960, and general questions about understanding author-publisher- translator communication are raised.Partant d’une perspective de pratique envisageant la maison d’édition comme site institutionnel principal des événements traductifs, cet article examine la communication entre auteurs/auteures, éditeurs/éditrices et traducteurs/traductrices au sein des presses canadiennes-anglaises. Des recherches empiriques récentes sont contextualisées par les facteurs politiques, culturels et économiques conditionnant les pratiques éditoriales canadiennes-anglaises depuis 1960. Une réflexion générale sur la communication entre auteurs/auteures, éditeurs/éditrices et traducteurs/traductrices est amorcée
Christian memoirs in the form of a new pilgrimage to the heavenly Jerusalem : containing by way of allegorical narrative a great variety of dialogues on the most interesting subjects, and adventures of eminently religious persons /
Includes (p. [387]-392): An elegy on the death of the Rev. George Whitfield, A.M. ... originally published in the year 1771.Includes (p. [383]-385): A short explanation of the principal characters in the Christian memoirs / by the author.The life is written by his son, who edited the 3rd ed., and signed the preface to it: W.S."With the life of the author."Mode of access: Internet.P. 197-200, and 394 mutilated
Tension and Taxation: Henry George and the Catholic Church
Individual Research Project
Research in progress for HIST 1302: United States History II
Faculty Mentor: Kyle Wilkison, Ph.D.
This paper well represents the individually-selected research topics produced by a decade\u27s worth of Honors History 1302 students. The two-semester-long project typically begins with an annotated bibliography in History 1301, followed by a complete paper in History 1302. Each student chooses her or his own topic bounded only by the chronological scope of the course with a demonstrable connection to the people of the United States. The assignment urges students to select topics—no matter how broad or narrow—to which they feel a strong connection. Once a special area of interest is established, we work together to discover a research question to explore.
Peter Whitfield\u27s paper demonstrates a particularly well-developed set of skills the course sought to strengthen. The author bases this story of an unlikely alliance between Gilded Age radical social reformer Henry George and New York City Catholic priest Father George McGlynn on thorough readings in a number of monographs, scholarly research articles, and primary sources. The reader finds herein clear narration and critical, incisive analysis that bodes well for this young scholar\u27s planned future graduate study of philosophy
<i>The Person-Centered Way: Revolutionizing Quality of Life in Long-Term Care</i>, by James H. Collins
American Bards: James M. Whitfield, Eliza R. Snow, John Rollin Ridge, and Walt Whitman
Despite recent efforts to recover a diverse range of nineteenth-century American poets, the aura that continues to surround Walt Whitman as the quintessential American bard has yet to be sufficiently challenged. This dissertation defamiliarizes the Whitman mystique of the national outsider-<i>cum</i>-national bard-the author as "one of the roughs" who also claims to be a representative American poet-by reinterpreting <i>Leaves of Grass</i> through the careers of three poets on the margins of national culture whose projects for American poetry parallel the central aspects of Whitman's own. During the 1850s, African American separatist James M. Whitfield, Mormon pioneer Eliza R. Snow, and Anglo-Cherokee journalist John Rollin Ridge claimed to speak for the United States as American bards despite the fact that they were only tenuously connected to the nation which they claimed to represent. Two years before Whitman first attempted to poetically contain a contradictory nation in the first (1855) edition of <i>Leaves of Grass</i>, James M. Whitfield recorded the conflicts of a nation riven by the contradictions of slavery in <i>America and Other Poems</i> (1853). Similarly, at the same time that Whitman was announcing himself as the poet of a new American religion, Eliza R. Snow had already been recognized as the poet laureate of a faith that observers such as Leo Tolstoy referred to as "the American religion." While Whitman would be characterized as "the first white aboriginal" by D. H. Lawrence in the early twentieth century, in the 1850s John Rollin Ridge had already constructed a poetic persona that attempted to mediate the United States' nostalgia for an indigenous past with its faith in national progress. By claiming to speak as national representatives to a nation that rejected them, Whitfield, Snow, and Ridge not only provide alternatives to a Whitman-centered approach to antebellum American poetry, they also offer insight into the contested nature of national identity at a time when poets in the United States were anxious to define their nation both politically and artistically
- …
