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The Editor's Corner
If I seem a little elated at the appearance of our own modest historical journal, I trust I will be forgiven. For, sadly clothed though it is in a simple cover of coloured duplicating paper and its telling and purposeful lines set out by the humble scribe of a duplicating concern, it nevertheless represents the realisation of an aim set very early in our existence. With this publication we have now crossed the Rubicon of our existence and henceforth there shall be no turning back. We have joined issue with an historically "dead" community, and our aim will be to bring back to life the stirring things that were
Autophagic cell death exists.
The term autophagic cell death (ACD) initially referred to cell death with greatly enhanced autophagy, but is increasingly used to imply a death-mediating role of autophagy, as shown by a protective effect of autophagy inhibition. In addition, many authors require that autophagic cell death must not involve apoptosis or necrosis. Adopting these new and restrictive criteria, and emphasizing their own failure to protect human osteosarcoma cells by autophagy inhibition, the authors of a recent Editor's Corner article in this journal argued for the extreme rarity or nonexistence of autophagic cell death. We here maintain that, even with the more stringent recent criteria, autophagic cell death exists in several situations, some of which were ignored by the Editor's Corner authors. We reject their additional criterion that the autophagy in ACD must be the agent of ultimate cell dismantlement. And we argue that rapidly dividing mammalian cells such as cancer cells are not the most likely situation for finding pure ACD
Whalesong
Shirley Andersen retires after 12 years -- November is Native American month -- How Raven brought light to the world -- Editor's Corner -- Letters to the Editor -- Little big vote -- STDs top most common infectious diseases -- Fear... and the Boy -- The whirled record -- Isaac's World -- Crossword Puzzle -- Comic
EDITOR\u27S CORNER
Since the inception of NAIES, the matter of the organization serving as a communications network has been one of some concern. The need for this kind of activity within the Association is self-evident. When a program, person, or institution encounters difficulty, the existence of a vehicle which can bring to bear external pressure can often be extremely useful. Some might raise the question of being seen as an “outside agitator,” but given the scope of the membership of NAIES, this kind of pressure can often be brought from closeby. The matter of a network for communication also opens the door to increased community involvement. While a minority community might not understand the internal intrigues of academic harassment, they should and can understand attempts to undermine ethnic and minority programs, from whatever source, especially from a media element
Whalesong
Problem parking plagues students -- Whalesong on World Wide Web -- How to catch a Whale on the Net -- Editor's Corner -- Letters to the Editor -- Swimmer sues to get back into the pool -- UAS Student Government -- The whirled record -- Domestic Violence -- Outdoor recreation classes offered -- Movie Reviews -- Imaginarium -- UAS Classified
Barnes Hospital Record
https://digitalcommons.wustl.edu/bjc_barnes_record/1085/thumbnail.jp
The Cowl - v.27 - Special Edition - Sep, 1974
The Cowl - student newspaper of Providence College. Volume 27, Special Edition - September, 1974. 2 pages. Note:: This issue was printed without a specified calendar day. Note: The volume number printed on the banner page of this issue (XXVII) duplicates the volume number for 1964-65 academic year
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