188,995 research outputs found

    James D. Ebert, Homer P. Smith, and H. Burr Steinbach

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    Ebert, Smith, and Steinbach standing together in a room talking.Inscriptions on image and/or album page: "James D. Ebert Homer P. Smith H. Burr Steinbach"Digitized by: MBLWHOI Libraryimage/jpg color image reformatted digitalPhotograph

    Steinbach (Haut-Rhin)

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    Bohly Bernard. Steinbach (Haut-Rhin). In: Archéologie médiévale, tome 13, 1983. p. 348

    Jacob Steinbach Store, Long Branch, N.J.

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    Boyd's Monmouth County, New Jersey, Directory, 1896-7 lists Jacob Steinbach, drygoods, at 181 Broadway (p. 397).466_0556Pach # S 534Title provided by cataloger.Title on negative sleeve: Steinbach, Long Branch, NJImages have been scanned as they appear on the original glass plate, with no alterations.The Jacob Steinbach Building at 181-185 Broadway, Long Branch, New Jersey, burned down on January 2, 1905. The store was rebuilt at 199 Broadway, though the exact date the new structure was rebuilt is unknown. This photograph depicts the building at 199 Broadway. The store closed in 1942 and reopened in 1945 as Vogel's.--Cf. email to New Jersey Digital Highway on January 24, 2021, and Asbury Park Press, January 3, 1905, page 1

    Jérôme et Jocelyne Steinbach, Phnom Penh Libéré

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    Ponchaud François. Jérôme et Jocelyne Steinbach, Phnom Penh Libéré. In: Revue d'études comparatives Est-Ouest, vol. 8, 1977, n°4. L'Asie socialiste, sous la direction de Georges H. Mond. p. 221

    Jérôme et Jocelyne Steinbach, Phnom Penh Libéré

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    Ponchaud François. Jérôme et Jocelyne Steinbach, Phnom Penh Libéré. In: Revue d'études comparatives Est-Ouest, vol. 8, 1977, n°4. L'Asie socialiste, sous la direction de Georges H. Mond. p. 221

    Head Start Immunity: Characterising the early protection of C strain vaccine against subsequent classical swine fever virus infection

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    Supplementary Material: The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2019.01584/full#supplementary-material .Copyright © 2019 McCarthy, Everett, Graham, Steinbach and Crooke. Classical Swine Fever Virus (CSFV) is an ongoing threat to the pig industry due to the high transmission and mortality rates associated with infection. Live attenuated vaccines such as the CSFV C strain vaccine are capable of protecting against infection within 5 days of vaccination, but the molecular mechanisms through which this early protection is mediated have yet to be established. In this study, we compared the response of pigs vaccinated with the C strain to non-vaccinated pigs both challenged with a pathogenic strain of CSFV. Analysis of transcriptomic data from the tonsils of these animals during the early stages after vaccination and challenge reveals a set of regulated genes that appear throughout the analysis. Many of these are linked to the ISG15 antiviral pathway suggesting it may play a role in the rapid and early protection conferred by C strain vaccination
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