24 research outputs found

    Monitoring Pollution in our Communities: The Clean Air Coalition of Western New York

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    The Clean Air Coalition of Western New York (CACWNY) is a community health and advocacy group working to ensure local residents’ right to a healthy environment. The group organizes media campaigns, provides resources, and designs programs to help reduce pollution in local communities

    The Shocking Impact of Corporate Scandal on Directors\u27 and Officers\u27 Liability

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    Directors and officers liability (hereinafter D&O) serves as a deterrent to corporate wrongdoing. Recent cycles of corporate scandal have impacted the tools used to manage the risk that D&O liability creates. The impact of these scandals is a shock, which is a sudden event that alters the market profoundly. Market alteration has counter intuitively resulted in increased availability of D&O insurance at a lower price, despite an increase in D&O liability. With increased D&O coverage offerings at lower costs, the market has become soft, making coverage readily available. Carriers are competing for insureds and there is now a risk of undermining the deterrent effect that D&O liability provides. This paper explores whether D&O liability\u27s deterrent effect has been jeopardized in this soft D&O insurance marke

    The Lantern Vol. 58, No. 2, Summer 1991

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    • We All Fall Up • Clerical Nightmares • The Brass Bed • Mon Amour • The Lady of J. Alfred Prufrock • Forbidden Places • Edge of the Dance • Crystal World • Saturday, July 12, 1978, 4:59 pm • Of You I Think • Just Another Statistic • A 16Wordina16 Word in a 4.99 Trashcan • Souvenir • The Jester • Against a Rock • I Wish I Were a Fish • Too Small, Too Weak • Somewheres in N.Y.C. • Stuck Up • Patterns • I Should Tell You Now • Me, Tommy, and Miss May • Two Hands • All-Natural, Organically Grown Macadamia Butter • Irony of a Suburban Deathhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/lantern/1138/thumbnail.jp

    The Grizzly, January 28, 1991

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    Policies and Statistics, A Security Concern: New Quad Regulations; Crime Report Released • Sonia Sanchez: Poet for Peace • Gulf Dialogue Continues • Independence Dogs • Financial Aid Month • You Asked for it: You Got It!! • New Quad Policy • Presidency Symposium • When is Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.\u27s Birthday? • Who\u27s Who Announced • Mission Conference Held • Back to the Basics • The Innocent • Swimmers on Win Streak • Women Hope for Good Things to Come • A Roller Coaster Season for the Hoopsters • Women Rounding-out Season • The Dream Lives On • Letter: Bundle Up! • Researchers Psyched Out • The Technology of War • A Wasted Solution?https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1268/thumbnail.jp

    The Grizzly, October 16, 1990

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    Olin Walkway Changes the Face of Ursinus • Congressional Candidate Lewis Du Pont Smith Spurs Debate • The Minority Student Union: A Step Toward Diversity • USEAC Conference Bolsters Environmental Activism • Father Changes • Reflecting on Rosen • New Hang-out • The Replacements • Upcoming Berman • Cross Country Runs On • Soccer Wins Two • Netters Upset • Hockey Splits • Grubb Predicts Again • Football Refuses To Give Up • Letters: Complain, but Don\u27t Steal; Positive Pledging; Wismer Food: Quick Service and Healthy Variety • A Contradiction in American Beliefs • This is America? • A Spectacular Devicehttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1261/thumbnail.jp

    Effectiveness of an HIV Prevention Program for Women Visiting Their Incarcerated Partners: The HOME Project

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    Having an incarcerated partner presents a unique HIV risk for women, particularly low-income women of color. We developed a population-specific risk reduction intervention for women visiting men in prison that was peer educator-based and included individual and community-level intervention components. Women who were assessed prior to the intervention period had a positive association between the number of unprotected penetrative intercourse (UPI) episodes prior to their partners’ incarceration and the number of UPI episodes following partners’ release from prison. However, this association was negated among women assessed during the intervention. Intervention participants also were more likely to be tested for HIV, to have partners who got tested, and to talk with their partners about significantly more HIV-related topics. Conducting intervention and evaluation activities with women visiting incarcerated men is feasible and is a useful model for reaching more at-risk women

    Effects of Exercise and Cheese Supplemented Diet on Cholesterol and Lipoprotein Fractions in Free-living Young Human Subjects

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    Ten young adults were divided into an exercising group (n = 6) and sedentary group (n = 4). Smoking, ingestion of alcohol, drugs and oral contraceptives were prohibited during 9 weeks of study. Diets were prepared by university food service. Food consumed was recorded and nutrient intakes were assessed. Cheese was consumed in 84 to 112 gram portions every day for two separate 14 day periods. All other dairy products were prohibited in the diet except 240 ml of two percent milk per day. When cheese was consumed, daily diets contained ca 400 kcal, 100 mg cholesterol, and 700 mg calcium more than diets consumed without cheese. Individual body weights were stable and no significant changes occurred in any anthropometric measure over nine weeks. A trend of becoming more lean existed in the exercise group. However, there was no significant change in serum total cholesterol, lipids, calcium, or anthropometric measures during the study. These results seriously question the advisability of recommending restricted consumption of dairy products to lower serum cholesterol

    Translational diffusion of hydration water correlates with functional motions in folded and intrinsically disordered proteins

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    Hydration ​water is the natural matrix of biological macromolecules and is essential for their activity in cells. The coupling between ​water and protein dynamics has been intensively studied, yet it remains controversial. Here we combine protein perdeuteration, neutron scattering and molecular dynamics simulations to explore the nature of hydration ​water motions at temperatures between 200 and 300 K, across the so-called protein dynamical transition, in the intrinsically disordered human protein ​tau and the globular ​maltose binding protein. Quasi-elastic broadening is fitted with a model of translating, rotating and immobile ​water molecules. In both experiment and simulation, the translational component markedly increases at the protein dynamical transition (around 240 K), regardless of whether the protein is intrinsically disordered or folded. Thus, we generalize the notion that the translational diffusion of ​water molecules on a protein surface promotes the large-amplitude motions of proteins that are required for their biological activity

    Resistance and resilience in a life full of professionals and labels: narrative snapshots of Chris

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    In this article, the authors relate the life of Chris through narrative snapshots. Chris asked the authors to tell her story. They decided that it could be used to provide an insight into the different ways people with labels are confronted with professional practices and rituals. Although Chris lived a "tough life,'' her story is full of resilience and resistance. Chris will be kept in the authors' memory as a strong woman, a teacher, and a friend

    Evidence-Based Guidelines for Being Supportive of People Who Stutter in North America

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    While many resources, particularly those available on the Internet, provide suggestions for fluent speakers as they interact with people who stutter (PWS), little evidence exists to support these suggestions. Thus, the purpose of this study was to document the supportiveness of common public reactions, behaviors, or interventions to stuttering by PWS.Methods 148 PWS completed the Personal Appraisal of Support for Stuttering-Adults. Additionally, a comparison of the opinions of adults who stutter based on gender and their involvement in self-help/support groups was undertaken. Results Many of the Internet-based suggestions for interacting with PWS are aligned with the opinions of the participants of this study. Significant differences were found amongst people who stutter on the basis of gender and involvement in self-help groups.Conclusions Lists of “DOs and DON’Ts” that are readily available on the Internet are largely supported by the data in this study; however, the findings highlight the need for changing the emphasis from strict rules for interacting with people who stutter to more flexible principles that keep the needs of individual PWS in mind
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