173,548 research outputs found

    Hollis Arnett

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    Photograph of Hollis Arnett, c. 1970

    Is There a Text in This Grass?

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    Responds to Mark Baurerlein\u27s article ( The Written Orator of \u27Song of Myself\u27 ) by describing the author\u27s own work with Whitman\u27s poetry and Speech Act theory; qualifies Bauerlein\u27s assertions and takes issue with Bauerlein\u27s skepticism toward the claim that, as Hollis rephrases it, the printing of a speech carries (…) the illocutionary force of the original

    Three decades of industrialization

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    Economists have long searched for patterns that relate successful development to structure and policy. This article reviews the experience of growth and industrialization in the postwar period in more than 100 economies, drawing on time-series data over a three-decade period. Economies are classified according to their population size, the share of primary or manufactured goods in their exports, and the weight of exports in gross domestic product (GDP). We examine the composition of demand, trade, output, manufacturing type, and factor use overall and between sectors as they relate to income growth. Higher income growth and more marked transformation are found among the groups with large populations, a predominance of manufactures in exports, and a larger role of exports. We also find that the patterns suggested by cross-country analysis are robust when tested using the time series data now available. Although development experiences may vary over time and across countries, there is sufficient uniformity within them for the main features of structural transformation to emerge as clear and consistent patterns of modern economic growth.Industrialization; patterns of development

    Jaliscia caballeroi Bravo-Hollis 1960

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    Jaliscia caballeroi (Bravo-Hollis, 1960) Microcotyle caballeroi Bravo-Hollis, 1960: 87. Jaliscia caballeroi – Mamaev & Egorova 1977: 104. HOSTS. — Actinopterygii (gills). GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION. — Baja California Sur. Isla del Carmen: Caulolatilus princeps (Payne 1991) **. Jalisco. Puerto Vallarta: Selar crumenophthalmus (Bravo-Hollis 1960). Sinaloa. Mazatlán: Caulolatilus affinis (Lamothe-Argumedo et al. 1997b). Sonora. Bahía de Guaymas: C. princeps (Bravo-Hollis 1981c). SPECIMENS IN COLLECTIONS. — CNHE (147-8, 179, 370) (H, P); MNHN-HEL697, MNHN-HEL698.Published as part of Mendoza-Garfias, Berenit, García-Prieto, Luis & León, Gerardo Pérez-Ponce De, 2017, Checklist of the Monogenea (Platyhelminthes) parasitic in Mexican aquatic vertebrates, pp. 501-598 in Zoosystema 39 (4) on page 554, DOI: 10.5252/z2017n4a5, http://zenodo.org/record/457869

    Hollis, C. Carroll. Language and Style in Leaves of Grass [review]

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    Review of C. Carroll Hollis, Language and Style in Leaves of Grass.&nbsp

    Mitochondrial dysfunction in Autism Spectrum Disorder: clinical features and perspectives

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    Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a prototypic pervasive developmental disorder characterized by social interaction, and communication deficits, repetitive, stereotypic patterns of behavior, and impairments in language and development. Clinical studies have identified mitochondrial disturbances at the levels of DNA, activity, complexes, oxidative stress, and metabolites in blood and urine of ASD patients. However, these observations from postmortem brains or peripheral tissues do not provide a direct link between autism and mitochondria. The synaptic abnormality of autistic patients has not been investigated yet. Here we review the findings of clinical studies investigating mitochondria! involvement in ASD patients, focusing particularly on the brain and the limitations and future directions needed in order to fully understand the role of mitochondria in ASD pathology

    Mark D. Hollis : [transcript of interview in 1979 by Bill Watson and Jim Paine]

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    Summary of interview: Dr. Mark Hollis in a telephone interview in 1979 reflects on the transition of MCWA to CDC, of which he was the first director. He describes many meetings with early leaders of public health and tells of how CDC became the Communicable Disease Center, rather than an Institute like NIH. Included in his remarks are interesting asides about his impressions of others with whom he worked, their differences in approaches to public health, and ways in which they came to the decisions they did

    Lisronia varicicosta Hodkinson & Hollis

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    Lisronia varicicosta (Hodkinson & Hollis) Material examined. UG: 4 ♂, 2 ♀, Har Meron, 32º59.781’N 35º24.670’E, 1100 m, 8.v.2010, Cistus creticus, C. salviifolius (D. Burckhardt). Published records in Israel. CA, CP (Burckhardt & Halperin 1992). Host plant. Cistus creticus, C. salviifolius, Helianthemum stipulatum (Cistaceae).Published as part of Spodek, Malkie, Burckhardt, Daniel & Freidberg, Amnon, 2017, The Psylloidea (Hemiptera) of Israel, pp. 301-345 in Zootaxa 4276 (3) on page 315, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4276.3.1, http://zenodo.org/record/103910

    Stonor C. — The sherpa and the snowman. Londres, Hollis and Carter, 1955

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    Bourlière François. Stonor C. — The sherpa and the snowman. Londres, Hollis and Carter, 1955. In: La Terre et La Vie, Revue d'Histoire naturelle, tome 10, n°1, 1956. pp. 44-45

    Spongy-like porosity in peritidal carbonates: An interaction of cyclic sea-level oscillations, fresh water supply and sediment texture

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    This paper focuses upon the analysis of a complex paleokarstic system recorded within uppermost Triassic peritidal cycles in northwestern Sicily. Besides documenting spectacular karstification at the Triassic/Jurassic boundary, it provides an example of stratabound ‘spongy’ or ‘swiss-cheese’ dissolution. On the base of field observations, microfacies analysis, transmitted-light and cathodoluminescence petrography and stable-isotope analyses we put forward an original model for the formation of this peculiar stratabound dissolution. It implies a complex interaction of several controlling factors at the interface between the marine and meteoric diagenetic realms during the relative cyclic oscillations of sea-level. The presence of a fresh water supply from an adjacent emerged area is the key for the periodic formation of a mixing water lens during the relative sea level lowstand that brought about the subaerial exposure of the platform. The resulting dissolution pattern in the subtidal unit of a specific cycle is strongly controlled by the textural features of the sediments. In the case of bioturbated wackestones the ‘spongy’ or ‘swiss-cheese’ pattern develops, while inmollusk-rich beds biomoldic porosity occurs. Inwell-sorted subtidalmembers, such as algal grainstones, the dissolution originates as randomly distributed vuggy porosity. During periodic flooding of the platform, a new subtidal unit is formed and the dissolution stops as fully marine phreatic conditions are re-established
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