5,725 research outputs found
Status of major southern California marine sport fish species with management recommendations, based on analyses of catch and size composition data collected on board commercial passenger fishing vessels from 1985 through 1987
This report on the status of major southern California marine sport fish species, together with management recommendations, is based on analyses of catch and size composition data, which were collected on board Commercial Passenger Fishing Vessels (CPFV) from 1985 through
1987. The project was designed to determine the status of those fishes that support the CPFV industry, and to make management recommendations when deemed necessary.
We collected and analyzed data based on random, stratified, on-board sampling of weekday (excluding holidays), open CPFV's on a year-round basis. We sampled 1/2-day, 3/4-day, and full-day type trips at a level of 5%. The survey area extended from below the United States-Mexican
border to Point Arguello. Catch estimates were extrapolated to include weekday as well as weekend and holiday, open and chartered CPFV's.
We sampled 736 CPFV trips in 1985, 650 in 1986, and 631 in 1987. We encountered 180 species of fishes, including 49 species of rockfishes. We performed detailed analyses on 14 non-rockfish species and 12 rockfish species, as well as
all fishes as a group and all rockfishes as a group.
We found a moderate increase in total catch of combined fish species between this study and one in the mid-1970's, due primarily to sizeable increases in catches of Pacific mackerel, kelp bass, barred sand bass,
and barracuda. However, we also found that there has been more than a 50% decline in the CPFV rockfish catches, due primarily to substantial decreases in catches of bocaccio, chilipepper, and olive rockfish. We have recommended that the current 15-rockfish bag limit regulation be reduced to a 10-rockfish bag limit, and that additional and equitable conservation measures also be implemented on the commercial rockfish fishery. (385pp.
Gain Stabilization of a Submillimeter SIS Heterodyne Receiver
We have designed a system to stabilize the gain of a submillimeter heterodyne
receiver against thermal fluctuations of the mixing element. In the most
sensitive heterodyne receivers, the mixer is usually cooled to 4 K using a
closed-cycle cryocooler, which can introduce ~1% fluctuations in the physical
temperature of the receiver components. We compensate for the resulting mixer
conversion gain fluctuations by monitoring the physical temperature of the
mixer and adjusting the gain of the intermediate frequency (IF) amplifier that
immediately follows the mixer. This IF power stabilization scheme, developed
for use at the Submillimeter Array (SMA), a submillimeter interferometer
telescope on Mauna Kea in Hawaii, routinely achieves a receiver gain stability
of 1 part in 6,000 (rms to mean). This is an order of magnitude improvement
over the typical uncorrected stability of 1 part in a few hundred. Our gain
stabilization scheme is a useful addition to SIS heterodyne receivers that are
cooled using closed-cycle cryocoolers in which the 4 K temperature fluctuations
tend to be the leading cause of IF power fluctuations.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures accepted to IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory
and Technique
Cosmological constant in scale-invariant theories
The incorporation of a small cosmological constant within radiatively-broken
scale-invariant models is discussed. We show that phenomenologically consistent
scale-invariant models can be constructed which allow a small positive
cosmological constant, providing certain relation between the particle masses
is satisfied. As a result, the mass of the dilaton is generated at two-loop
level. Another interesting consequence is that the electroweak
symmetry-breaking vacuum in such models is necessarily a metastable `false'
vacuum which, fortunately, is not expected to decay on cosmological time
scales.Comment: 10 pages; v2: clarifying remarks added, to appear in Physical Review
Faculty Hiring Criteria in Hospitality Education Programs
This study examined criteria used in selecting faculty at I-CHRIE hospitality-management education programs in the United States. Results provide a baseline for consideration of faculty at all ranks. The three most important hiring criteria for assistant professors were a PhD or equivalent terminal degree, publication/research, and hospitality-industry work experience. For associate and full professors, the three most important factors were a PhD or equivalent terminal degree, publication/research, and college teaching experience. Results indicated that most programs use similar criteria in evaluating faculty applicants. This study also found that leadership ability is the most important factor in hiring department heads/directors. Results are useful to administrators and faculty evaluating applicants and to faculty interested in applying to hospitality-management education programs
Cdc48/p97 promotes degradation of aberrant nascent polypeptides bound to the ribosome
Ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis can initiate at ribosomes for myriad reasons including
misfolding of a nascent chain or stalling of the ribosome during translation of mRNA. Clearance of a
stalled complex is required to recycle the ribosome for future use. Here we show that the ubiquitin
(Ub) pathway segregase Cdc48/p97 and its adaptors Ufd1-Npl4 participate in ribosome-associated
degradation (RAD) by mediating the clearance of ubiquitinated, tRNA-linked nascent peptides from
ribosomes. Through characterization of both endogenously-generated and heterologous model
substrates for the RAD pathway, we conclude that budding yeast Cdc48 functions downstream of
the Ub ligases Ltn1 and Ubr1 to release nascent proteins from the ribosome so that they can be
degraded by the proteasome. Defective RAD could contribute to the pathophysiology of human
diseases caused by mutations in p97
Beringer Wine Estates Holdings, Inc. 1997
The Beringer Wine Estates Company has been expanding its market share in the premium segment of the wine industry through the decade of the 1990s. After operating as a wholly owned subsidiary of the giant Nestle Food Company for about a quarter of a century, the firm was sold in 1996 to new owners in a leveraged buyout.
Students are presented with a number of corporate decisions covering management\u27s decision to go public in the late 1990s. Timing issues are critical, as is the pricing of the issue, and the impact of this decision on the firm\u27s cost of capital. Financial strategies, financial forecasting, and the valuation of a private vs. a public firm flow from the case data as well as the use of publicly-traded common stock that could be used as currency for enhancing the firm\u27s growth rate and business opportunities
The economic implications of HLA matching in cadaveric renal transplantation.
Abstract
Background: The potential economic effects of the allocation of cadaveric kidneys on the basis of tissue-matching criteria are controversial. We analyzed the economic costs associated with the transplantation of cadaveric kidneys with various numbers of HLA mismatches and examined the potential economic benefits of a local, as compared with a national, system designed to minimize HLA mismatches between donor and recipient in first cadaveric renal transplantations. Methods: All data were supplied by the U.S. Renal Data System. Data on all payments made by Medicare from 1991 through 1997 for the care of recipients of a first cadaveric renal transplant were analyzed according to the number of HLA-A, B, and DR mismatches between donor and recipient and the duration of cold ischemia before transplantation. Results: Average Medicare payments for renal-transplant recipients in the three years after transplantation increased from 80,807 for kidneys with six HLA mismatches between donor and recipient, a difference of 34 percent (P\u3c0.001). By three years after transplantation, the average Medicare payments were 74,997 for those with more than 36 hours (P\u3c0.001). In simulations, the assignment of cadaveric kidneys to recipients by a method that minimized HLA mismatching within a local geographic area (i.e., within one of the approximately 50 organ-procurement organizations, which cover widely varying geographic areas) produced the largest cost savings ($4,290 per patient over a period of three years) and the largest improvements in the graft-survival rate (2.3 percent) when the potential costs of longer cold-ischemia time were considered. Conclusions: Transplantation of better-matched cadaveric kidneys could have substantial economic advantages. In our simulations, HLA-based allocation of kidneys at the local level produced the largest estimated cost savings, when the duration of cold ischemia was taken into account. No additional savings were estimated to result from a national allocation program, because the additional costs of longer cold-ischemia time were greater than the advantages of optimizing HLA matching
Headache and Acute Illness in Children
Thirty-seven children with headaches who were seen in a walk-in clinic were matched to 37 headache-free controls. Thirty percent of the headache group and 11% of the headache-free control group had a body temperature above 38°C (p < 0.05). Nonrhythmic pain was more commonly associated with fever than was rhythmic pain (p < 0.05). Of 34 headache subjects who completed questionnaires, those with more intense headaches reported a greater number of headache-exacerbating factors (p < 0.01).Bilateral headaches were more painful than unilateral headaches, and in two thirds of the subjects, the intensity of pain paralleled the course of the underlying illness. A family history of migraine was more common in the headache group as compared to the headache-free control group (p < 0.05). Headaches associated with acute illnesses may be a precursor to later migraine. (J Child Neurol 1987;2:22-27)Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68022/2/10.1177_088307388700200104.pd
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