517 research outputs found

    The loss of South Carolina to the British in 1780: a threat to America\u27s independence

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    This will cover eventful months in the history of this country, from the American rebuff at Savannah in October 1779, to the resounding American defets at Camden, South Carolina on August 16,1780

    Criteria for successful ultra high frequency TV operation 1954.

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    Thesis (M.S.)--Boston UniversityTelevision has become part of our daily lives. This electronic wonderment has provided the masses with a new means of communication. It can serve many fields and phases of life; science, industry, education, and the entertainment world. They can channel their message to the public through this media. Television because of its complexity presents many serious problems of interest. Since television serves as a dominant social force, and because it is so young, there are many problems involved in its growth. I am of the opinion that at least one of theses many problems is worthy of some discussion, and solution as well. My study has to do with what I term, "Criteria For Successful Ultra High Frequency Operation." This UHF problem has reached serious proportions. Congress recently stepped in and is about to investigate the problem. Some forty UHF stations have turned back their applications before they even went on the air. UHF stations all over the country are finding many hardships and disappointments they didn't bargain for at the outset. As a result of research on successful UHF operations on the air, I have arrived at what I consider a proposed plan to insure a successful UHF endeavor. The study also contains a research report of a successful UHF operation. This station has followed and observed the criteria which, as a result of this study, I have found necessary for successful UHF operation. Perhaps this work, because of its detailed accounts, can clarify the UHF situation to a greater extent. If it does nothing more than ascertain that there is a UHF problem in television, then the study will not have been in vain

    The Normativity of Mind-World Relations:Comments on Sosa

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    A new in vitro assay measuring direct interaction of nonsense suppressors with the eukaryotic protein synthesis machinery [preprint]

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    Nonsense suppressors (NonSups) treat premature termination codon (PTC) disorders by inducing the selection of near cognate tRNAs at the PTC position, allowing readthrough of the PTC and production of full-length protein. Studies of NonSup-induced readthrough of eukaryotic PTCs have been carried out using animals, cells or crude cell extracts. In these studies, NonSups can promote readthrough directly, by binding to components of the protein synthesis machinery, or indirectly, by inhibiting nonsense-mediated mRNA decay or by other mechanisms. Here we utilize a highly-purified in vitro system (Zhang et al., 2016. eLife 5: e13429) to measure exclusively direct NonSup-induced readthrough. Of 17 previously identified NonSups, 13 display direct effects, apparently via at least two different mechanisms. We can monitor such direct effects by single molecule FRET (smFRET). Future smFRET experiments will permit elucidation of the mechanisms by which NonSups stimulate direct readthrough, aiding ongoing efforts to improve the clinical usefulness of NonSups

    Inhaled nitric oxide therapy in neonates and children: reaching a European consensus

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    Inhaled nitric oxide (iNO) was first used in neonatal practice in 1992 and has subsequently been used extensively in the management of neonates and children with cardiorespiratory failure. This paper assesses evidence for the use of iNO in this population as presented to a consensus meeting jointly organised by the European Society of Paediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care, the European Society of Paediatric Research and the European Society of Neonatology. Consensus Guidelines on the Use of iNO in Neonates and Children were produced following discussion of the evidence at the consensus meeting

    Not a Second Time? John Lennon’s Aeolian Cadence Reconsidered

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    In 1963 William Mann coined the term “aeolian cadence” to describe a harmonic progression in the song “Not a Second Time” by the Beatles. This term has caused confusion ever since. In this article, I discuss why Mann might have used this confusing phrase and how it relates to this song by John Lennon. I will argue that, in the debate that ensued from Mann’s observations, his commentators were primarily preoccupied with terminology and definitions but forgot to listen to Lennon. More specifically, I argue that, if the interplay between the music and lyrics is considered, the famous cadence in “Not a Second Time” can best be interpreted as “deceptive.
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