7,478 research outputs found

    Local Church Week: Stephanie Collins

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    Stephanie Collins speaks on why serving in local churches is so important for Local Church Week. Stephanie Collins is the NextGen Pastor at The Gathering in Muncie, IN. She loves working with the kids and youth there, helping them discover who God created them to be. Stephanie is a graduate of Mid-America Christian University, where she received a Bachelor’s Degree in Bible and Theology. She is also a graduate of Anderson University School of Theology where she received her Master of Divinity degree in 2014. Stephanie is excited to be speaking at TU, because she loves investing into the lives of college students. In her free time, Stephanie loves to bake and watch Football! Go Broncos

    Beyond Individualism

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    In this chapter, Stephanie Collins examines the idea that individuals can acquire ‘membership duties’ as a result of being members of a group that itself bears duties. In particular, powerful and wealthy states are duty-bearing groups, and their citizens have derivative membership duties (for example, to contribute to putting right wrongs that have been done in the past by the group in question, and to increase the extent to which the group fulfils its duties). In addition, she argues, individuals have duties to signal their willingness to coordinate with others so as to do more good than the sum of what each could do on their own. Putting these two things together, Collins suggests, individuals’ duties in (for instance) matters of global poverty might be largely driven by such group-based considerations, leaving little room for the duties that would follow from more individualistic reasoning

    Recent findings and future directions for interpolar mitotic kinesin inhibitors in cancer therapy

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    The kinesin class of microtubule-associated motor proteins present attractive anticancer targets owing to their roles in key functions in dividing cells. Two interpolar mitotic kinesins Eg5 and HSET have opposing motor functions in mitotic spindle assembly with respect to microtubule movement, but both offer opportunities to develop cancer selective therapeutic agents. Here, we summarize the progress to date in developing inhibitors of Eg5 and HSET, with an emphasis on structural biology insights into the binding modes of allosteric inhibitors, compound selectivity and mechanisms of action of different chemical scaffolds. We discuss translation of preclinical studies to clinical experience with Eg5 inhibitors, recent findings on potential resistance mechanisms and explore the implications for future anticancer drug development against these targets

    Letter from W. [Wayne] M. Collins to Hajime Kishi, January 8, 1952

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    This letter from Wayne M. Collins, a lawyer, explains that Katsumi Kishi and Masao Kishi are native born Peruvian citizens and therefore cannot be deported to Japan. Mr. Wayne Collins goes on to explain that there should be no cause for alarm at any potential deportation.Collection of notes, articles, correspondence, photographs, and term papers collected by Yukio Mochizuki, a student at CSU Dominguez Hills, while researching Japanese American incarceration and Japanese Peruvian internment during World War II

    Letter from W. [Wayne] M. Collins, to Hajime Kishi, January 8, 1952

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    In this letter, Wayne M. Collins, an attorney, explains that as native born Peruvians, Katsumi Kishi and Masao Kishi cannot be deported to Japan. Collins also informs Kishi that he will negotiate with the Peruvian authorities to authorize their return to Peru.Collection of notes, articles, correspondence, photographs, and term papers collected by Yukio Mochizuki, a student at CSU Dominguez Hills, while researching Japanese American incarceration and Japanese Peruvian internment during World War II

    The liminal and the (oral) drive: Neurotic tensions and neo- liberal recuperations

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    In this chapter, Carol Owens and Stephanie Swales explore liminality as a crucial concept in drive theory and argue that approaching the role and function of the drive requires considering the proxies for satisfaction afforded by late capitalism and contemporary culture. Capitalism’s ceaseless injunction to enjoy, along with post-modern ideals and accompanying technologies and the requirement of interminable reinvention that never satisfy, means subjects are caught in an ideology of ceaseless liminality and consumption. This unceasing consumption results in disturbances of the oral drive indicated in the cultural proliferation of the culinary field and an explosion of eating disorders. Drawing with precision from Freud’s case of Emmy von N., they propose that liminality is not only a site of psychic disorder locatable in disordered bodies and pathological eating/non-eating but that eating disorders are an attempt to offer a solution to the drive’s encounter with the liminal

    Letter from Wayne M. Collins to Renunciant-Plaintiffs, December 24, 1952

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    A letter from Wayne M. Collins to "Renunciant-Plaintiff(s)" informing those involved in Collins' mass renunciation legal suits that they must register under the new alien registration law since their U.S. citizen renunciation hadn't been cancelled and their citizenship was still in question. The letter also reports updated to the legal cases.The Chuman (Hayao "Sam" and Toshiko) Papers documents the World War II experiences of Hayao "Sam" and Toshiko Chuman, who were Kibei Nisei born in the United States but grew up and completed school in Japan, and then returned to the U.S. prior to the war. It chronicles the Chuman's incarceration from the Santa Anita Assembly Center, through Jerome, Rohwer, Tule Lake camps, and the Santa Fe and Crystal City internment camps as well as their struggle for restoring their U.S. citizenships in the 1960s. The digital collection consists of mostly textual material, including correspondence, affidavits, incarceration camp records, lease agreements, financial documents, receipts, pamphlets, and booklets

    Letter from Wayne M. Collins to Renunciant-Plaintiffs, January 5, 1953

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    A letter from Wayne M. Collins to "Renunciant-Plaintiff(s)" informing those involved in Collins' mass renunciation legal suits of their obligations to register under the new Alien Registration Law if they hadn't already registered under the Alien Registration Act of 1940. The letter also includes a Japanese translation of a previous letter from December 24, 1952.The Chuman (Hayao "Sam" and Toshiko) Papers documents the World War II experiences of Hayao "Sam" and Toshiko Chuman, who were Kibei Nisei born in the United States but grew up and completed school in Japan, and then returned to the U.S. prior to the war. It chronicles the Chuman's incarceration from the Santa Anita Assembly Center, through Jerome, Rohwer, Tule Lake camps, and the Santa Fe and Crystal City internment camps as well as their struggle for restoring their U.S. citizenships in the 1960s. The digital collection consists of mostly textual material, including correspondence, affidavits, incarceration camp records, lease agreements, financial documents, receipts, pamphlets, and booklets

    Letter from Wayne M. Collins to Tsugitada Kanamori, May 13, 1958

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    This letter refers to the court proceedings in item: csudh_tsu_0010. The letter reiterates the court decision that Tsugitada Kanamori's renunciation of his citizenship as a result of "fear, coercion, and duress," will be canceled and therefore confirming that Kanamori remains a citizen of the United States. Collins adds that the transmittal letter can be taken to the Department of State to receive a U.S. Passport.This collection contains one box of documents belonging to Tsugitada Kanamori. Materials in this collection mostly pertain to Kanamori’s efforts regarding canceling his renunciation and reinstating his American citizenship

    Submission Pauline Collins ANON-Z1E7-QWCC-N

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    This submission advocates in view of the 50 previous reports, with 750 recommendations since 2000 and the ad hoc, piecemeal changes making an already complex system more burdened after 40 years it is time to repeal the Defence Force Discipline Act 1982 and look at an entirely fresh approach. This is advocated in light of the High Court Private R v Cowen decision and the changing environment in which military members are comprised of an all-volunteer and defence civilian workforce operating in complex multi-force foreign conflicts and internal domestic domains both in security scenarios e.g. border force and community events such as the pandemic and climate episodes. Firsthand accounts from members to this author describe the lifelong stress and dysfunction caused because of the military discipline system
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