18 research outputs found

    Prospectus, November 17, 1982

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    REVIEW BOARD VOTES TO DISMISS STUGO SENATOR; News Digest; We focus on Gibson City; Education necessary to prevent devastation; Election will not solve problems; Student concerned about car parking; \u27Humorist\u27 saga may end; Smokers face higher prices, risk; Parkland club notes: German Club, PMA, BSA; Day set aside to kick habit; Parkland students honored; Urbana High plans dinner; C-U Happenings; Mr. Roberts to speak at P.C.; Little snow seen for November; \u27Valspeak\u27 thought to be less than awesome; You too, can be like, incoherent; Gallery has photo exhibit; Ideas needed; Places and faces in Gibson City; The voodoo chile lives; Petty talent on upswing; Palin provides irreverent relevance; B movies receive star treatment; Abba member goes solo; Second City first rate; Tour the galaxy without panic; Classified; Skylines; Family weekend set for sports; Sports Shorts; \u27Will the big men bring home the bacon\u27?; Slow Samhttps://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1982/1004/thumbnail.jp

    Prospectus, October 6, 1982

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    PROSPECTUS FOCUS ON VILLA GROVE; News Digest; Villa Grove looks ahead to future; Voter turnout appreciated; What\u27s your opinion on draft revitalization?: Draft dialogue wanted by student; Listeners available for PC students; Christian humorist appears; Guides needed; Addition bids out, construction to begin this fall; C-U Happenings...; Voter turnout doubled since last election; Loan funding may increase; Can you picture this?; Winter is comin, are you ready?; Three-year restoration project for historic \u27Sunnyside\u27; Growth and tradition mark Villa Grove\u27s 150 years; Classified; Places and Faces in Villa Grove; \u27Wouldn\u27t trade my life for the world,\u27 says bear trainer; Newton-John gives \u27love-filled performace\u27; Live sound makes for smokin\u27 rock; \u27Playboy\u27 sued over photo; Students, instructors cast in fall play; Security does more than give tickets; New seminar offers transfer; Community Calendar; Voices join in \u27Messiah\u27; Convocations sponsors films; Cougar has two in top ten; Are the NFL players holding fans for ransom?; Area seniors to visit PC Campus; Reps to appear at PC; Women\u27s team looking good, may reach finals; Fast Freddy Contest; More participation expected; Golf Scores; Cross Countryhttps://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1982/1009/thumbnail.jp

    Total Data Genepop

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    File contains genotypes for abalone from for 27 locations using 9 microsatellite loci (labeled as total data in the manuscript). File is a text file in Genepop format. See Sampling_Information-2012-04-10.txt for geographic coordinates and sampling dates

    Data from: Broad-scale genetic patterns of New Zealand abalone, Haliotis iris, across a distribution spanning 13° latitude and major oceanic water masses

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    The New Zealand black-foot abalone, Haliotis iris, or pāua, is endemic to the rocky reefs surrounding New Zealand, whose main land mass spans 13° of latitude and separates the Tasman Sea from the Pacific Ocean. In this study, we examined the population genetic structure of this important commercial, cultural and recreational species by genotyping nine microsatellite loci in 485 pāua from 27 locations distributed across mainland New Zealand and the Chatham Islands. We found low, but significant, levels of genetic differentiation. Key genetic breaks were identified among the Chatham Islands and mainland samples; patterns that are strongly corroborated by prior work employing mtDNA sequences. AMOVAs indicated that samples from the south of the North Island were more similar to the South Island samples than to other North Island samples, however multivariate analysis and Bayesian clustering could not identify a significant pattern. Differentiation between the Chatham Islands and the mainland is most likely due to isolation by distance, while differentiation of North Island samples corresponds with major components of New Zealand’s oceanography, Cook Strait and the East Cape. Despite intense fishing pressure, we detected no signature of genetic bottlenecks in any region suggesting that population sizes have remained relatively stable over recent time or that the census size of this species is much larger than its effective population size

    5-Loci Data Genepop

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    File contains genotypes for abalone from for 27 locations using 5 microsatellite loci (labeled as 5-loci data from the manuscript). Loci AB22, AB31, AB75, EDN91 were excluded due to null alleles. File is a text file in Genepop format. See Sampling locations, dates, and coordinates (Sampling_Information-2012-04-10.txt) for geographic coordinates and sampling dates

    Sampling locations, dates, and coordinates

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    File is a tab-delimited text file that contains sampling locations (abbreviations and geographic coordinates) and sample collection dates for abalone

    24-Locations Data Genepop

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    File contains genotypes for abalone from for 24 locations using 9 microsatellite loci (labeled as 24-locations data from the manuscript). Locations TSK, WAI, and WST were excluded due to null alleles. File is a text file in Genepop format. See Sampling locations, dates, and coordinates (Sampling_Information-2012-04-10.txt) for geographic coordinates and sampling dates

    Risk of drug-related mortality during periods of transition in methadone maintenance treatment: A cohort study

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    This study aims to identify periods of elevated risk of drug-related mortality during methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) in primary care using a cohort of 3,162 Scottish drug users between January 1993 and February 2004. Deaths occurring during treatment or within 3 days after last methadone prescription expired were considered as cases “on treatment.” Fatalities occurring 4 days or more after leaving treatment were cases “off treatment.” Sixty-four drug-related deaths were identified. The greatest risk of drug-related death was in the first 2 weeks of treatment (adjusted hazard ratio 2.60, 95% confidence interval 1.03–6.56). Risk of drug-related death was lower after the first 30 days following treatment cessation, relative to the first 30 days off treatment. History of psychiatric admission was associated with increased risk of drug-related death in treatment. Increasing numbers of treatment episodes and urine testing were protective. History of psychiatric admission, increasing numbers of urine tests, and coprescriptions of benzodiazepines increased the risk of mortality out of treatment. The risk of drug-related mortality in MMT is elevated during periods of treatment transition, specifically treatment initiation and the first 30 days following treatment dropout or discharg
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