2,959 research outputs found

    Russell L. Neal and Elaine Neal Interview, September 18, 1984

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    Russell and Elaine Neal discuss Missoula\u27s West side--the Lowell and Whittier school areas--and the effects of the Depression on the teachers and families in the area. They speak about the effects organizations such as the PTA and the Westside Club had on the schools, community, and public policy of Missoula. This audio has not been transcribed, but a tape counter index is available.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/depressioninmissoula_oralhistory/1014/thumbnail.jp

    Letter from H. L. Russell to Carl Hayden

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    Letter from H. L. Russell to Carl Hayden regarding fines in the park

    Sugarbeet harvesting efficiency

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    Bulletin no. 770 Moscow, Idaho :University of Idaho, College of Agriculture, Agriculture Experiment Station, 1994-12-01. Author(s): Withers, Russell V.; Thompson, Joseph C.; Peterson, Charles L

    The evolution of black neighborhoods since Kerner

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    Article published in: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences Volume 4, Number 6, October 2018This article studies the evolution of African American neighborhoods since the publication of the groundbreaking Kerner Commission report in 1968. We first examine how black and riot-affected neighborhoods evolved in four representative cities—Detroit, Newark, Los Angeles, and Washington, D.C.—during this period. Among black neighborhoods in these cities, we find that black neighborhoods not directly affected by riots fare better but trend similar to those that were. Notably, a number of disparities the commission identified as policy priorities—such as relatively lower income, higher poverty, and higher unemployment—persist despite declines in racist attitudes, extreme segregation, and an increased suburbanization of blacks. Fifty years after its publication, these findings suggest that the concerns of the Kerner Commission report remain relevant

    Author Interview--Roseann Bacha-Garza (Editor), Christopher L. Miller (Editor), Russell K. Skowronek (Editor) (The Civil War on the Rio Grande, 1846-1876) 2/2

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    Interview with the editors of The Civil War on the Rio Grande, Roseann Bacha-Garza (Editor), Christopher L. Miller (Editor), Russell K. Skowronek.https://scholarworks.utrgv.edu/chapspublications/1017/thumbnail.jp

    El proyecto humano en Bertrand Russell

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    El  propósito de este ensayo es examinar algunos de los puntos de vista relacionados con la ética en el pensamiento de Bertrand Russell. Los puntos de vistas éticos de Russell  no están expresados de manera técnica o sistemática, es decir, él no escribió sobre estos asuntos como filosofo moral perteneciente a la academia, sino mas bien, sencillamente como autor.  La visión de Russsell constituye una rica mezcla de conceptos e ideas,  los cuales contemplan clemencias  tales como  la felicidad, el placer,  los derechos individuales y el bienestar disponible  para todos, que han sido laxamente denominadas en este ensayo como su proyecto humano. Abstract The purpose of this essay is to examine sorne of Bernard Russell’s views in relation to his ethical thought. His views are not expressed in a technical or systematic manner owing to the fact that Russell dealer with  these markers simply  as an author, instead  of as a moral  philosopher  immersed  in an academic environment. Russell\u27s thought construers a rich blend of concepts which contemplates cements such as happiness, pleasure, individual rights and welfare available to all have, in very broad rearms, referred to all these dements as his human   project

    Action-monitoring and Intention Reporting in Children with Autism

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    The “mindblindness” theory of core cognitive impairment in autism and at least one of the executive theories of the core cognitive deficit both predict that children with autism should find it difficult to report what their intention was when it diverged from an outcome. The former predicts this because it takes intention reporting to require a “theory of mind” and the latter predicts it because the theory posits an impairment in the monitoring of goal-directed actions. The latter also predicts impairments in the ability to monitor basic actions. Our three studies failed to support either of these views. Experiment 1 demonstrated intact abilities in the monitoring of basic actions (detecting which stimulus of a number of stimuli one is controlling). Experiment 2 demonstrated intact abilities in reporting an intention, both for self and for another agent, when the outcome was unintended but desired. In Experiment 3, using the novel “transparent intentions task”, we found (with a minor qualification) intact ability in reporting on nonballistic intended actions when the result that the action achieved was unexpected. The implications of these results for views of the relation between theory of mind and executive difficulties in autism are discussed

    Molecular mechanisms of ovulation: co-ordination through the cumulus complex

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    © The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: [email protected] ovulation requires that developmentally competent oocytes are released with appropriate timing from the ovarian follicle. Somatic cells of the follicle sense the ovulatory stimulus and guide resumption of meiosis and release of the oocyte, as well as structural remodelling and luteinization of the follicle. Complex intercellular communication co-ordinates critical stages of oocyte maturation and links this process with release from the follicle. To achieve these outcomes, ovulation is controlled through multiple inputs, including endocrine hormones, immune and metabolic signals, as well as intrafollicular paracrine factors from the theca, mural and cumulus granulosa cells and the oocyte itself. This review focuses on the recent advances in understanding of molecular mechanisms that commence after the gonadotrophin surge and culminate with release of the oocyte. These mechanisms include intracellular signalling, gene regulation and remodelling of tissue structure in each of the distinct ovarian compartments. Most critical ovulatory mediators exert effects through the cumulus cell complex that surrounds and connects with the oocyte. The convergence of ovulatory signals through the cumulus complex co-ordinates the key mechanistic processes that mediate and control oocyte maturation and ovulation.Darryl L. Russell and Rebecca L. Robke
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