1,054 research outputs found
Alien Registration- Wagner, Maude H. (Portland, Cumberland County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/23105/thumbnail.jp
Alien Registration- Wagner, Maude H. (Portland, Cumberland County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/23105/thumbnail.jp
The importance of check-cashing businesses to the unbanked: racial/ethnic differences
The roughly 9.5 percent of all U.S. families that are without some type of transaction account (unbanked) are disproportionately represented by minorities. The unbanked often must rely on alternative ways to carry out basic financial transactions such as cashing payroll checks and paying bills. This study analyzes unique survey data and finds that a consumer's decision to patronize check-cashing businesses is jointly made with the decision to be unbanked. For the unbanked, these businesses are an important source for financial services. Attributes that contribute to these decisions, however, vary for each racial/ethnic group. Latent preference effects are also observed to influence this joint decision for Blacks and Hispanics. These findings may explain in part why the provisions of the Debt Collection Improvement Act (DCIA) of 1996 have not been more successful in bringing unbanked federal benefits recipients into the financial mainstream. ; Consumer participation in mainstream financial markets can improve their ability to build assets and create wealth, protect them from theft and discriminatory, predatory or unsavory lending practices, and may promote economic stability and vitality in the communities where they reside. By more fully understanding a consumer's financial decisions, policies can be better directed to improve the effectiveness of legislation such as the DCIA of 1996 in encouraging mainstream financial market participation.Nonbank financial institutions ; Debt management ; Checks
Faculty concert
This is the program for the faculty recital featuring the following artists (in order of performance): Miss Maude Oliver and Mrs. Rosa Hill Dunwody; Mr. Alfred Hall; Mrs. Rosa Hill Dunwody; Miss Maude Oliver; Mr. L. H. Mitchell; Miss Aileen Haralson; Miss Olive Rigor Rusk; and Mr. Alfred Hall. This recital took place on November 6, 1916
Liver sinusoidal endothelial transcription factors in metabolic homeostasis and disease.
Liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (LSECs) are highly specialized endothelial cells that form the liver microvasculature. LSECs maintain liver homeostasis, scavenging bloodborne molecules, regulating immune response, and actively promoting hepatic stellate cell quiescence. These diverse functions are underpinned by a suite of unique phenotypical attributes distinct from other blood vessels. In recent years, studies have begun to reveal the specific contributions of LSECs to liver metabolic homeostasis and how LSEC dysfunction associates with disease aetiology. This has been particularly evident in the context of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), the hepatic manifestation of metabolic syndrome, which is associated with loss of key LSEC phenotypical characteristics and molecular identity. Comparative transcriptome studies of LSECs and other endothelial cells, together with rodent knockout models, have revealed that loss of LSEC identity through disruption of core transcription factor activity leads to impaired metabolic homeostasis and to hallmarks of liver disease. This review explores the current knowledge of LSEC transcription factors, covering their roles in LSEC development and maintenance of key phenotypic features, which, when disturbed, lead to loss of liver metabolic homeostasis and promote features of chronic liver diseases, such as non-alcoholic liver disease
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Contrasting arbuscular mycorrhizal communities colonizing different host plants show a similar response to a soil phosphorus concentration gradient
High soil phosphorus (P) concentration is frequently shown to reduce root colonization by arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi, but the influence of P on the diversity of colonizing AM fungi is uncertain.
We used terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) of 18S rDNA and cloning to assess diversity of AM fungi colonizing maize (Zea mays), soybean (Glycene max) and field violet (Viola arvensis) at three time points in one season along a P gradient of 10–280 mg l−1 in the field.
Percentage AM colonization changed between sampling time points but was not reduced by high soil P except in maize. There was no significant difference in AM diversity between sampling time points. Diversity was reduced at concentrations of P > 25 mg l−1, particularly in maize and soybean. Both cloning and T-RFLP indicated differences between AM communities in the different host species. Host species was more important than soil P in determining the AM community, except at the highest P concentration.
Our results show that the impact of soil P on the diversity of AM fungi colonizing plants was broadly similar, despite the fact that different plants contained different communities. However, subtle differences in the response of the AM community in each host were evident
Bostonia. Volume 15
Founded in 1900, Bostonia magazine is Boston University's main alumni publication, which covers alumni and student life, as well as university activities, events, and programs
High Field magnetospectroscopy to probe the 1.4eV Ni color center in diamond
A magneto-optical study of the 1.4 eV Ni color center in boron-free synthetic
diamond, grown at high pressure and high temperature, has been performed in
magnetic fields up to 56 T. The data is interpreted using the effective spin
Hamiltonian of Nazar\'e, Nevers and Davies [Phys. Rev. B 43, 14196 (1991)] for
interstitial Ni with the electronic configuration and effective
spin . Our results unequivocally demonstrate the trigonal symmetry of
the defect which preferentially aligns along the [111] growth direction on the
(111) face, but reveal the shortcomings of the crystal field model for this
particular defect.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures, submitted to PR
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