112 research outputs found

    An Unseen Light

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    In An Unseen Light: Black Struggles for Freedom in Memphis, Tennessee, eminent and rising scholars present a multidisciplinary examination of African American activism in Memphis from the dawn of emancipation to the twenty-first century. Together, they investigate episodes such as the 1940 Reign of Terror when black Memphians experienced a prolonged campaign of harassment, mass arrests, and violence at the hands of police. They also examine topics including the relationship between the labor and civil rights movements, the fight for economic advancement in black communities, and the impact of music on the city\u27s culture. Covering subjects as diverse as politics, sports, music, activism, and religion, An Unseen Light illuminates Memphis\u27s place in the long history of the struggle for African American freedom and human dignity. Aram Goudsouzian is Bizot Family Professor of History at the University of Memphis. His books include Sidney Poitier: Man, Actor, Icon, King of the Court: Bill Russell and the Basketball Revolution, and Down to the Crossroads: Civil Rights, Black Power, and the Meredith March Against Fear. Charles W. McKinney Jr. is the Neville Frierson Bryan Chair of Africana Studies and associate professor of history at Rhodes College. A scholar of the Black Freedom Struggle, he is the author of Greater Freedom: The Evolution of the Civil Rights Struggle in Wilson, North Carolina.https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_cr/1003/thumbnail.jp

    HIST 105-05, The African American Intellectual Traditions, Fall 2005

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    This syllabus was submitted to the Rhodes College Office of Academic Affairs by the course instructorThis course will adhere to the definition of intellectual history as “the history not of thought, but of [people] thinking.” To that end, students will grapple with an intellectual tradition that encompasses the work and thought of both “elite” and “non-elite” actors in the African American experience. From slaves to senators, the African American Intellectual tradition is broad, wide and deep. To that end, students will examine intellectual responses to slavery, emancipation, nation-building, and the long civil rights movement. In our examination of expressive culture, writings and speeches, we will come to a greater understanding of the centrality and multi-layered meanings of freedom. Finally, students will explore the critical role that African American intellectuals—in all their guises—have played in the shaping of the American historical and intellectual landscape

    Partnering for Quail in South Carolina: A Cooperative Approach Making a Difference

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    The National Bobwhite Conservation Initiative (NBCI) identified 15 national quail focal areas throughout the distribution of the northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) in June 2016. The first NBCI Focal Area on U.S. Forest Service System land emerged from the existing 16,200-hectare Indian Creek Woodland and Savanna Restoration Initiative (ICWSRI). The ICWSRI is an ongoing collaborative project involving partners from 10 agencies and organizations in the Piedmont of South Carolina. Cooperation among federal and state agencies, non-governmental organizations (NGO), and private landowners, combined with assistance programs such as the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) have currently resulted in 2,547 hectares (1,600 hectares on private land and 947 hectares on public land) of improved habitat for wildlife species associated with pine woodlands and savannas. Data obtained through the Breeding Bird Survey, spring whistle counts, and fall covey counts suggest a correlation between woodland and savanna restoration and avian response across the ICWSRI area. Fall covey count minimum population estimates (birds/ha) ranged from 1/38 in 2008 to 1/7 in 2016. Spring whistle count population density estimates (birds/ha) ranged from 1/37 in 2009 to 1/6 in 2012. Although monitoring suggests an initial increase in bobwhite densities across the project area, it is imperative to continue involving existing and additional partners to increase habitat availability, connectivity, and quality for bobwhite and associated species. Collaborative efforts and partnerships across ownership boundaries are necessary to increase bobwhite populations on a landscape scale. The Indian Creek project has effectively involved efforts from federal, state, NGO, and private partners to restore and improve bobwhite habitat and may serve as an example for other areas where incorporating a cooperative approach could positively influence bobwhite populations

    The Vehicle, 1969, Vol. 11 no. 2

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    Vol. 11, No. 2 Table of Contents Short Story: The TripCharles Whitepage 4 PhotoDale Huberpage 5 A NightRoger Zulaufpage 6 Sixteen-year-old Students...NBpage 6 LostJim Biropage 6 The AmateurRoger Zulaufpage 7 ManRoger Zulaufpage 7 My CamelotRonald Garnerpage 7 The Rose and the BriarKenneth L. Folkertspage 9 Who Am I?Frank McKennedypage 10 PhotoDale Huberpage 11 Mr. Samuel ClemensLarry A. Millerpage 11 Lock OutAra Childspage 12 Excuse MeRoger Zulaufpage 12 On Shadows from a Candle \u2767Michael G. McKeepage 12 beginning of an endCaryl Dagropage 12 DrawingMADpage 13 We Ain\u27t Un HurJames Birchlerpage 13 Genesis II, 18 \u2767Michael G. McKeepage 13 Short Story: A Patent Leather PaleEleanor Aikenpage 14 hungry childRoger Zulaufpage 15 DrawingRoger Zulaufpage 15 PhotoRoger Digglepage 16 Do You Like The Rain?Linda Boltmanpage 17 Seasons ChangePerry J. Carterpage 17 PhotoDale Huberpage 19 Whistling TreesPam McKinneypage 19 PostscriptThomas W. Reapage 20 PhotoDale Huberpage 20https://thekeep.eiu.edu/vehicle/1020/thumbnail.jp

    The Vehicle, 1969, Vol. 11 no. 2

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    Vol. 11, No. 2 Table of Contents Short Story: The TripCharles Whitepage 4 PhotoDale Huberpage 5 A NightRoger Zulaufpage 6 Sixteen-year-old Students...NBpage 6 LostJim Biropage 6 The AmateurRoger Zulaufpage 7 ManRoger Zulaufpage 7 My CamelotRonald Garnerpage 7 The Rose and the BriarKenneth L. Folkertspage 9 Who Am I?Frank McKennedypage 10 PhotoDale Huberpage 11 Mr. Samuel ClemensLarry A. Millerpage 11 Lock OutAra Childspage 12 Excuse MeRoger Zulaufpage 12 On Shadows from a Candle \u2767Michael G. McKeepage 12 beginning of an endCaryl Dagropage 12 DrawingMADpage 13 We Ain\u27t Un HurJames Birchlerpage 13 Genesis II, 18 \u2767Michael G. McKeepage 13 Short Story: A Patent Leather PaleEleanor Aikenpage 14 hungry childRoger Zulaufpage 15 DrawingRoger Zulaufpage 15 PhotoRoger Digglepage 16 Do You Like The Rain?Linda Boltmanpage 17 Seasons ChangePerry J. Carterpage 17 PhotoDale Huberpage 19 Whistling TreesPam McKinneypage 19 PostscriptThomas W. Reapage 20 PhotoDale Huberpage 20https://thekeep.eiu.edu/vehicle/1020/thumbnail.jp

    Comparison of polychlorinated biphenyl levels across studies of human neurodevelopment.

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    Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are persistent pollutants that are ubiquitous in the food chain, and detectable amounts are in the blood of almost every person in most populations that have been examined. Extensive evidence from animal studies shows that PCBs are neurotoxins, even at low doses. Interpretation of human data regarding low-level, early-life PCB exposure and subsequent neurodevelopment is problematic because levels of exposure were not similarly quantified across studies. We expressed the exposure levels from 10 studies of PCB and neurodevelopment in a uniform manner using a combination of data from original investigators, laboratory reanalyses, calculations based on published data, and expert opinion. The mainstay of our comparison was the median level of PCB 153 in maternal pregnancy serum. The median concentration of PCB 153 in the 10 studies ranged from 30 to 450 ng/g serum lipid, and the median of the 10 medians was 110 ng/g. We found that (a)) the distribution of PCB 153 exposure in most studies overlapped substantially, (b)) exposure levels in the Faroe Islands study were about 3-4-fold higher than in most other studies, and (c)) the exposure levels in the two recent U.S. studies were about one-third of those in the four earlier U.S. studies or recent Dutch, German, and northern Québec studies. Our results will facilitate a direct comparison of the findings on PCBs and neurodevelopment when they are published for all 10 studies

    Black Hole Spin via Continuum Fitting and the Role of Spin in Powering Transient Jets

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    The spins of ten stellar black holes have been measured using the continuum-fitting method. These black holes are located in two distinct classes of X-ray binary systems, one that is persistently X-ray bright and another that is transient. Both the persistent and transient black holes remain for long periods in a state where their spectra are dominated by a thermal accretion disk component. The spin of a black hole of known mass and distance can be measured by fitting this thermal continuum spectrum to the thin-disk model of Novikov and Thorne; the key fit parameter is the radius of the inner edge of the black hole's accretion disk. Strong observational and theoretical evidence links the inner-disk radius to the radius of the innermost stable circular orbit, which is trivially related to the dimensionless spin parameter a_* of the black hole (|a_*| < 1). The ten spins that have so far been measured by this continuum-fitting method range widely from a_* \approx 0 to a_* > 0.95. The robustness of the method is demonstrated by the dozens or hundreds of independent and consistent measurements of spin that have been obtained for several black holes, and through careful consideration of many sources of systematic error. Among the results discussed is a dichotomy between the transient and persistent black holes; the latter have higher spins and larger masses. Also discussed is recently discovered evidence in the transient sources for a correlation between the power of ballistic jets and black hole spin.Comment: 30 pages. Accepted for publication in Space Science Reviews. Also to appear in hard cover in the Space Sciences Series of ISSI "The Physics of Accretion onto Black Holes" (Springer Publisher). Changes to Sections 5.2, 6.1 and 7.4. Section 7.4 responds to Russell et al. 2013 (MNRAS, 431, 405) who find no evidence for a correlation between the power of ballistic jets and black hole spi

    Signal Transmission in the Auditory System

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    Contains table of contents for Section 3, an introduction and reports on seven research projects.National Institutes of Health Grant P01-DC-00119National Institutes of Health Grant R01-DC-00194National Institutes of Health Grant R01 DC00238National Institutes of Health Grant R01-DC02258National Institutes of Health Grant T32-DC00038National Institutes of Health Grant P01-DC00361National Institutes of Health Grant 2RO1 DC00235National Institutes of Health Contract N01-DC2240

    Signal Transmission in the Auditory System

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    Contains table of contents for Section 3, an introduction and reports on six research projects.National Institutes of Health Grant RO1-DC-00194-11National Institutes of Health Grant PO1-DC00119 Sub-Project 1National Institutes of Health Grant F32-DC00073-3National Institutes of Health Contract P01-DC00119National Institutes of Health Grant R01 DC00238National Institutes of Health Grant P01-DC00119National Institutes of Health Grant T32-DC00038National Institutes of Health Contract P01-DC00361National Institutes of Health Grant R01-DC00235National Institutes of Health Contract NO1-DC2240

    Condensed Mitotic Chromosome Structure at Nanometer Resolution Using PALM and EGFP- Histones

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    Photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM) and related fluorescent biological imaging methods are capable of providing very high spatial resolutions (up to 20 nm). Two major demands limit its widespread use on biological samples: requirements for photoactivatable/photoconvertible fluorescent molecules, which are sometimes difficult to incorporate, and high background signals from autofluorescence or fluorophores in adjacent focal planes in three-dimensional imaging which reduces PALM resolution significantly. We present here a high-resolution PALM method utilizing conventional EGFP as the photoconvertible fluorophore, improved algorithms to deal with high levels of biological background noise, and apply this to imaging higher order chromatin structure. We found that the emission wavelength of EGFP is efficiently converted from green to red when exposed to blue light in the presence of reduced riboflavin. The photon yield of red-converted EGFP using riboflavin is comparable to other bright photoconvertible fluorescent proteins that allow <20 nm resolution. We further found that image pre-processing using a combination of denoising and deconvolution of the raw PALM images substantially improved the spatial resolution of the reconstruction from noisy images. Performing PALM on Drosophila mitotic chromosomes labeled with H2AvD-EGFP, a histone H2A variant, revealed filamentous components of ∼70 nm. This is the first observation of fine chromatin filaments specific for one histone variant at a resolution approximating that of conventional electron microscope images (10–30 nm). As demonstrated by modeling and experiments on a challenging specimen, the techniques described here facilitate super-resolution fluorescent imaging with common biological samples
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