594 research outputs found
The Don Spring Memorial Oration - Part II: Early Management of the Developing Class III Malocclusion
This article is the second in the two-part series comprising The Don Spring Memorial Oration delivered by Dr Patrick Turley at the Hamilton Island meeting of the Australian Foundation for Research and Education, in September 1992. The article has been reprinted with the permission of the Editor of the Pacific Coast Society of Orthodontists’ Bulletin. Both articles in the series have been smnmarized by Andrea L. Feature D.D.S., M.S.
The Loadstone Rock: The Role of Harm in the Criminalization of Plural Unions
In this Article, Professor Turley explores the concept of social harm in the context of two recent cases in the United States and Canada over the criminalization of polygamy. The cases not only resulted in sharply divergent conclusions in striking down and upholding such laws respectively, but they offered strikingly different views of the concept of harm in the regulation of private consensual relations. Professor Turley draws comparisons with the debate over morality laws between figures like Lord Patrick Devlin and H.L.A. Hart in the last century. Professor Turley argues that the legal moralism of figures like Devlin have returned in a different form as a type of ¿compulsive liberalism¿ that seeks limitations on speech and consensual conduct to combat sexism and other social ills. The alternative, advocated in this Article, is the adoption of a Millian approach to harm that requires a more concrete form of injury or harm to justify individual choice. In what he calls the ¿Loadstone Rock¿ of constitutional analysis, the definition of harm continues to dictate the outcome of the conflict between individual choice and social mores
Supplemental Material - Impact of closed-incision negative pressure wound dressings on surgical site infection following groin Incisions in vascular Surgery; a Single-centre experience
Supplemental Material for Impact of closed incision negative pressure wound dressings on surgical site infection following groin Incisions in vascular Surgery; a Single-centre experience by Ian Patrick Barry, Luke P Turley, Brenig L Gwilym, David C Bosanquet and Toby Richards in Vascular</p
The Gospel of Freedom
Wilbur H. Siebert published his landmark study of the Underground Railroad in 1898, revealing a secret system of assisted slave escapes. A product of his time, Siebert based his research on the accounts of northern white male abolitionists. While useful in understanding the northern boundaries of the slaves\u27 journey, Siebert\u27s account leaves out the complicated narrative of assistance below the Mason-Dixon Line. In The Gospel of Freedom: Black Evangelicals and the Underground Railroad, author Alicestyne Turley positions Kentucky as a crucial pass through territory for escaping slaves and addresses the important contributions of white and black antislavery southerners who united to form organized networks to assist slaves in the Deep South. Drawing on family history and lore as well as a large range of primary sources, Turley shows how free and enslaved African Americans directly influenced efforts to physically and spiritually resist slavery and how slaves successfully developed their own systems to help others who were enslaved below the Mason-Dixon Line. Illuminating the roles of these black freedom fighters, Turley questions the validity of long-held conclusions based on Siebert\u27s original work and suggests new areas of inquiry for further exploration. The Gospel of Freedom seeks to fill the historical gaps and promote the lost voices of the Underground Railroad.https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_cr/1019/thumbnail.jp
TGF-beta 1 stimulation of cell locomotion utilizes the hyaluronan receptor RHAMM and hyaluronan.
TGF-beta is a potent stimulator of motility in a variety of cell types. It has recently been shown that hyaluronan (HA) can directly promote locomotion of cells through interaction with the HA receptor RHAMM. We have investigated the role of RHAMM and HA in TGF-beta-stimulated locomotion and show that TGF-beta triggers the transcription, synthesis and membrane expression of the RHAMM receptor and the secretion of HA coincident with the induction of the locomotory response. This was demonstrated by both incubating cells with exogenous TGF-beta1 and by stimulating the production of bioactive TGF-beta1 in tumor cells transfected with TGF-beta1 under the control of the metallothionein promoter. TGF-beta1-induced locomotion was suppressed by antibodies that prevented HA/RHAMM interaction, using polyclonal antibodies to either RHAMM fusion protein or RHAMM peptides, or mAbs to purified RHAMM. Peptides corresponding to the HA-binding motif of RHAMM also suppressed TGF-beta1-induced increases in motility rate. Spontaneous locomotion of fibrosarcoma cells was blocked by neutralizing secreted TGF-beta with panspecific TGF-beta antibodies and by inhibition of TGF-beta1 secretion with antisense oligonucleotides. Polyclonal anti-RHAMM fusion protein antibodies and peptide from the RHAMM HA-binding motif also suppressed the spontaneous motility rate of fibrosarcoma cells. These data suggest that fibrosarcoma cell locomotion requires TGF-beta, and the pathway by which TGF-beta stimulates locomotion uses the HA receptor RHAMM and HA.PT: J; CR: ALLEN JB, 1990, J EXP MED, V171, P231 ANZANO MA, 1985, MOL CELL BIOL, V5, P242 BARNARD JA, 1990, BIOCHIM BIOPHYS ACTA, V1032, P79 BASSOLS A, 1988, J BIOL CHEM, V263, P3039 BRAY BA, 1991, AM REV RESPIR DIS, V143, P284 CHAN BM, 1992, CELL, V68, P1051 CHEN JK, 1987, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V84, P5287 CULTY M, 1990, J CELL BIOL 1, V111, P2765 DALAL BI, 1993, AM J PATHOL, V143, P381 DANIELPOUR D, 1989, J CELL PHYSIOL, V138, P79 DELPECH B, 1981, J NEUROCHEM, V36, P855 DERYNCK R, 1987, CANCER RES, V47, P707 DOEGE K, 1987, J BIOL CHEM, V262, P17757 FASSEN AE, 1992, J CELL BIOL, V116, P521 FAVA RA, 1991, J EXP MED, V173, P1121 GOETINCK PF, 1987, J CELL BIOL, V105, P2403 GOUGH NM, 1988, ANAL BIOCHEM, V173, P93 HARDWICK C, 1992, J CELL BIOL, V117, P1343 HEINE UI, 1987, J CELL BIOL, V105, P286 HEINO J, 1989, J BIOL CHEM, V264, P380 HELDIN P, 1989, BIOCHEM J, V258, P919 HOOK M, 1984, ANNU REV BIOCHEM, V53, P847 HURTA RAR, 1991, J BIOL CHEM, V266, P24097 HYNES RO, 1992, CELL, V69, P11 KAHARI VM, 1991, J BIOL CHEM, V266, P10608 KHALIL N, 1989, J EXP MED, V170, P727 KHALIL N, 1991, CIBA F SYMP, V157, P194 KIMATA K, 1983, CANCER RES, V43, P1347 KLEINSOYER C, 1989, ARTERIOSCLEROSIS, V9, P147 KRUSIUS T, 1987, J BIOL CHEM, V262, P13120 LAEMMLI UK, 1970, NATURE, V227, P680 LIOTTA LA, 1988, CANCER SURV, V7, P631 MADRI JA, 1988, J CELL BIOL, V106, P1375 MASSAGUE J, 1990, ANNU REV CELL BIOL, V6, P597 MCCARTHY JB, 1992, IN PRESS CRC CRIT RE MCCLARTY GA, 1987, BIOCHEM BIOPH RES CO, V145, P1276 MOORADIAN DL, 1992, J NATL CANCER I, V84, P523 NEAME PJ, 1986, J BIOL CHEM, V261, P3519 NETTELBLADT O, 1989, AM REV RESPIR DIS, V139, P759 NUGENT MA, 1992, J BIOL CHEM, V267, P21256 PARTIN AW, 1988, CANCER RES, V48, P6050 PARTIN AW, 1989, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V86, P1254 PERIDES G, 1989, J BIOL CHEM, V264, P5981 PEROTTI D, 1991, CANCER RES, V51, P5491 PIERCE GF, 1989, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V86, P2229 POSTLETHWAITE AE, 1987, J EXP MED, V165, P251 REIBMAN J, 1991, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V88, P6805 ROBERTS AB, 1990, HDB EXPT PHARM, V95, P419 SAMUEL SK, 1992, EMBO J, V11, P1599 SATO Y, 1988, J CELL BIOL, V107, P1199 SCHOR SL, 1989, IN VITRO CELL DEV B, V25, P737 SCHWARZ LC, 1990, GROWTH FACTORS, V3, P115 STAMENKOVIC I, 1991, EMBO J, V10, P343 STOKER M, 1991, BIOCHIM BIOPHYS ACTA, V1072, P81 THOMAS L, 1992, J CELL BIOL, V118, P971 TOOLE BP, 1979, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V76, P6299 TOOLE BP, 1989, CIBA F SYMP, V143, P138 TOOLE BP, 1990, CURR OPIN CELL BIOL, V2, P839 TURLEY EA, 1985, CANCER RES, V45, P5098 TURLEY EA, 1985, EXP CELL RES, V161, P17 TURLEY EA, 1987, BIOCHEMISTRY-US, V26, P2997 TURLEY EA, 1989, EXP CELL RES, V181, P340 TURLEY EA, 1991, ADV DRUG DELIVER REV, V7, P257 TURLEY EA, 1991, J CELL BIOL, V112, P1041 WAHL SM, 1987, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V84, P5788 WELSH DR, 1991, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V87, P7678 YAMADA KM, 1990, CANCER RES, V50, P4485 YAMAGUCHI Y, 1990, NATURE, V346, P281 YANG BH, 1993, J BIOL CHEM, V268, P8617; NR: 69; TC: 73; J9: J CELL BIOL; PG: 10; GA: ME817Source type: Electronic(1
The school luncheon
by Ava B. Milam, Anna M. Turley, Helen Cowgill.This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Electronic reproduction. Salem, Or. : State Library of Oregon, 2023 Electronic reproduction from print version OrMode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
The Rise and Fall of Mark Hofmann
Join us on March 30, 2022 at 7:00 p.m. in room 101 to hear from Richard E. Turley Jr. as he discusses Mark Hofmann’s rise and fall. In 1980, Mark Hofmann was an obscure student at Utah State University. One morning that year, he walked into the university library with a discovery that helped catapult him to fame as a document dealer. Over the next five years, his document discoveries expanded from those related to Latter-day Saint and Utah history to stunning pieces of Americana. Ultimately, he hoped to sell the Oath of a Freeman, purportedly the earliest printed document in America, to the Library of Congress for 1.5 million dollars. Closer to home, he hinted that he was on the trail of the Holy Grail of Latter-day Saint history, the lost 116 pages of the Book of Mormon. Then in October 1985, three bombs went off in the Salt Lake Valley, the first fatally injuring a businessman who was a Hofmann client, the second killing the wife of the businessman\u27s associate, and the third nearly killing Hofmann himself. The ensuing investigation proved that Hofmann was the serial bomber and that virtually all of his key discoveries were forgeries. He was sentenced to prison for his crimes, with a recommendation that he never be paroled.
Richard E. Turley Jr. is an award-winning historian who served for twenty-two years as the managing director of the Church History Department of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He is the author of numerous books on Latter-day Saint and Western U.S. history, including Victims: The LDS Church and the Mark Hofmann Case
Consumption outside the market: an ethnography of consumer resistance among football fans
This study analysed football fandom utilising an ethnographic approach. Football fandom was selected as a research site for the study because it offered scope to explore for the presence of non-traditional forms of cultural capital (Bourdieu 1984).
It also offered scope to explore the extent to which fandom was a form of sacred consumption (Belk et a1 1989). Ethnography was selected as an appropriate methodology for several reasons. It provided the opportunity to develop a holistic perspective on fandom and it further provided scope to utilise an emergent design approach in the development of a conceptual understanding of fandom. What emerged fiom the ethnographic investigation of two separate football fan communities was that consumers experience and maintain a sense of the sacred by operating their own unofficial markets in competition with the official market in fanrelated goods and services. They also maintain localised systems of cultural capital which allow them to socially construct and maintain a sense of hierophany within their own communities (Belk et a1 1989), in opposition to the homogenised fan identity proffered by the official market. These systems of cultural capital not only allow fans to experience the sacred but also facilitate their sense of relationship with like-minded others in self-selecting communities of shared taste
Merry-go-round (carousel) at Forest Park Zoo
Merry-go-round (carousel) at Forest Park Zoo; left to right, Thomas Patrick Marshall with mother Mrs. T.E. Marshall of Shreveport; Cecil Marlow of Dallas; and Barbara Turley of Fort Worth.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1930s/3947/thumbnail.jp
Doing it differently: Engaging interview participants with imaginative variation
Imaginative variation was identified by Husserl (1936/1970) as a phenomenological technique for the purpose of elucidating the manner in which phenomena appear to consciousness. Briefly, by engaging in the phenomenological reduction and using imaginative variation, phenomenologists are able to describe the experience of consciousness, having stepped outside of the natural attitude through the epochē. Imaginative variation is a stage aimed at explicating the structures of experience, and is best described as a mental experiment. Features of the experience are imaginatively altered in order to view the phenomenon under investigation from varying perspectives. Husserl argued that this process will reveal the essences of an experience, as only those aspects that are invariant to the experience of the phenomenon will not be able to change through the variation.
Often in qualitative research interviews, participants struggle to articulate or verbalise their experiences. The purpose of this article is to detail a radical and novel way of using imaginative variation with interview participants, by asking the participants to engage with imaginative variation, in order to produce a rich and insightful experiential account of a phenomenon. We will discuss how the first author successfully used imaginative variation in this way in her study of the erotic experience of bondage, discipline, dominance & submission, and sadism & masochism (BDSM), before considering the usefulness of this technique when applied to areas of study beyond sexuality
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