1,587 research outputs found

    Steven Garber

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    Steven Garber speaks on the importance and value of truth. Steven Garber is the principal of The Washington Institute for Faith, Vocation & Culture, which is focused on reframing the way people understand life, especially the meaning of vocation and the common good. A consultant to foundations, corporations and educational institutions, he is a teacher of many people in many places. The author of The Fabric of Faithfulness: Weaving Together Belief and Behavior, and Visions of Vocation: Common Grace for the Common Good, he is also a contributor to the books, Faith Goes to Work: Reflections from the Marketplace, and Get Up Off Your Knees: Preaching the U2 Catalogue. He lives with his wife Meg in Virginia

    England, Joseph G. interview

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    Oral history interview with Joseph G. England. Interview conducted by George Holland and David Garber at Trevor Colburn Hall, UCF, 12796 Aquarius Agora Drive, Orlando, Florida on November 9, 2018

    Godspell

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    Left to right: Thigpen, Lynne (Lynne); McCormick, Gilmer (Gilmer); Jonas, Joanne (Joanne); Hanley, Katie (Katie); Haskell, David (John/Judas); Garber, Victor (Jesus

    Godspell

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    Left to right: Thigpen, Lynne (Lynne); McCormick, Gilmer (Gilmer); Jonas, Joanne (Joanne); Hanley, Katie (Katie); Haskell, David (John/Judas); Garber, Victor (Jesus

    Godspell

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    Left to right: Hanley, Katie (Katie); Sroka, Jerry (Jerry); Thigpen, Lynne (Lynne); Garber, Victor (Jesus); Haskell, David (John/Judas); Mylett, Jeffrey (Jeffrey); Jackson, Merrell (Merrell

    Godspell

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    Left to right: Hanley, Katie (Katie); Lamont, Robin (Robin); Garber, Victor (Jesus); Mylett, Jeffrey (Jeffrey); Sroka, Jerry (Jerry); Jackson, Merrell (Merrell); Haskell, David (John/Judas); McCormick, Gilmer (Gilmer); Jonas, Joanne (Joanne

    Godspell

    No full text
    Left to right: Thigpen, Lynne (Lynne); Jackson, Merrell (Merrell); Haskell, David (John/Judas); Hanley, Katie (Katie); Garber, Victor (Jesus); Sroka, Jerry (Jerry); Lamont, Robin (Robin); McCormick, Gilmer (Gilmer); Mylett, Jeffrey (Jeffrey

    Accn2505_001_035

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    Set of letters from 1969 between Dwight W. Garber of Perrysville, Ohio, and the Henry E. Huntington Library in San Marino, California, where Garber sought to obtain a copy of a narrative about the Haun\u27s Mill massacre by David Lewis, a survivor

    A high-throughput chromatin immunoprecipitation approach reveals principles of dynamic gene regulation in mammals

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    Full author list omitted for brevity. For the full list of authors, see article.Understanding the principles governing mammalian gene regulation has been hampered by the difficulty in measuring in vivo binding dynamics of large numbers of transcription factors (TF) to DNA. Here, we develop a high-throughput Chromatin ImmunoPrecipitation (HT-ChIP) method to systematically map protein-DNA interactions. HT-ChIP was applied to define the dynamics of DNA binding by 25 TFs and 4 chromatin marks at 4 time-points following pathogen stimulus of dendritic cells. Analyzing over 180,000 TF-DNA interactions we find that TFs vary substantially in their temporal binding landscapes. This data suggests a model for transcription regulation whereby TF networks are hierarchically organized into cell differentiation factors, factors that bind targets prior to stimulus to prime them for induction, and factors that regulate specific gene programs. Overlaying HT-ChIP data on gene-expression dynamics shows that many TF-DNA interactions are established prior to the stimuli, predominantly at immediate-early genes, and identified specific TF ensembles that coordinately regulate gene-induction

    Is It 1958 or 1968? Three Notes on the Longevity of the Revived Bretton Woods System

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    This paper examines the durability of what we have elsewhere called the Revived Bretton Woods system. We show that the recent behavior of long-term interest rates is consistent with market expectations that the system will last for a considerable period. We also show that emerging economies with chronic current account surpluses have not experienced the financial crises that many have predicted will trigger the system’s breakdown. Unusually long episodes of current account surpluses and reserve accumulations have been followed by real depreciation and capital gains on reserves, with little or no disruption of economic activity. We argue that, under the original Bretton Woods system, the definition of the balance of payments considered relevant was based on the assumption that collateral, not trust, supports international capital flows. We view the current system as likewise supported by collateral, in the form of goods already produced and delivered to the United States.macroeconomics, 1958, 1968, Longevity, Revived Bretton Woods System
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