2,038 research outputs found

    Flyer Promoting America by David Coyle, 1941

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    A promotional pamphlet for a book entitled, America , written by David Cushman Coyle, dating from circa 1941. Within, readers are instructed to stop the Nazi octopus now and read Coyle\u27s book.https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/fmhw_secondworldwar_documents/1115/thumbnail.jp

    J. David Greenstone, Karen Orren (eds. et al.). — Studies in American Political Development

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    Coyle Dauphin Joanne. J. David Greenstone, Karen Orren (eds. et al.). — Studies in American Political Development. In: Revue Française d'Etudes Américaines, N°35, février 1988. Droit et affaires aux Etats-Unis. p. 174

    J. David Greenstone, ed. — Public Values and Private Power in American Politics

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    Coyle Dauphin Joanne. J. David Greenstone, ed. — Public Values and Private Power in American Politics. In: Revue Française d'Etudes Américaines, N°24-25, mai 1985. L'impérialisme culturel américain ? p. 324

    J. David Greenstone, ed. — Public Values and Private Power in American Politics

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    Coyle Dauphin Joanne. J. David Greenstone, ed. — Public Values and Private Power in American Politics. In: Revue Française d'Etudes Américaines, N°24-25, mai 1985. L'impérialisme culturel américain ? p. 324

    Introduction: The Six Hues of Penal Abolition

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    This chapter begins by presenting the general viewpoint of the penal abolitionist. We then consider penal abolitionism in six hues of thinking, speaking, acting, reflecting, hearing and changing: (1) penal abolitionism as an intellectual and theoretical perspective providing a way of interpreting the world; (2) penal abolitionism as a language; (3) penal abolitionism as a social movement engaged in emancipatory praxis and direct social struggle against penal oppression; (4) penal abolitionism conceived as a form of reflexive political strategy and emancipatory political engagement that builds on abolitionist theory and direct interventions in the social world; (5) penal abolitionism conceptualised as a broader set of ethico-political values and principles that inform how we should live on a day-to-day basis; and (6) penal abolitionism as revolutionary praxis that hears and responds to the voice of subjugated social actors in a given historical conjuncture

    James's Turn of the Screw

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    [sound recording] / John Smith. Hardy's Tess of the d'Urbervilles by J.J. Coyle.; 1 sound cassette (60 minutes); Broadcast on CFCY Radio, Charlottetown, December 16 & 20, 1971.; Hardy's Tess of the d'Urberville

    sj-pdf-1-saj-10.1177_08897077231165619 – Supplemental material for Buprenorphine Prescribing and Dosing Limits: Evidence and Policy Goals

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-saj-10.1177_08897077231165619 for Buprenorphine Prescribing and Dosing Limits: Evidence and Policy Goals by David Tyler Coyle, Stephanie Stewart, Cole Bortz, Jane Manalo, Alexis Ritvo and Martin Krsak in Substance Abuse</p

    Osteopontin as a regulator of leukemia inhibitory factor mRNA levels in the AtT-20 mouse pituitary cell line

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    The highly phosphorylated glycoprotein Osteopontin (OPN) is a multifaceted protein with a diversity of roles in many immunological processes, and has recently been found to have a significant role in the Hypothalamus-Pituitary-Adrenal (HPA) axis. Its role was discovered when unstressed OPN-knockout mice were found to have abnormally high basal corticosterone levels, which is the hormone typically elevated following stress induction of the HPA axis. Another protein rigorously studied and repeatedly identified in the successful functioning of the HPA axis is Leukemia Inhibitory Factor (LIF). I propose that OPN may possess a regulatory role in the expression of LIF, with the absence of OPN leading to a greater abundance of LIF mRNA, and consequently, over-production of corticosterone in non-stressful situations. Using the mouse anterior pituitary cell-line AtT-20, a common and highly useful model in HPA axis research, I have found evidence that treatment of these cells with OPN partially inhibits the expression of LIF mRNA. The dose-dependency of this inhibition appears to behave as either positive or negative depending on the cellular density of the culture treated with OPN. Should OPN turn out to be a regulator of LIF mRNA expression, then absence of OPN may lead to an over-abundance of LIF, therefore affecting the expression of several proteins downstream of LIF that potently stimulate corticosterone production, such as the cholesterol transport protein StAR. It may turn out that OPN has an especially significant and indispensable role in the HPA axis via regulation of LIF mRNA levels.M.S.Includes bibliographical referencesby Luke Coyl
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