675 research outputs found
Ursinus College Bulletin, Winter 1981
Ursinus: Traditionally good sports • Athletics: Are they part of a liberal arts education? • Hall of Fame for Athletes • Ursinus women: They\u27re leading the field • Across the great divide: Comprehending the complexities of the NCAA • Homecoming I • Homecoming II • Businessmen\u27s special • The curtain goes up on the Ritter Center • Bearing good news • Beta signals • Can you manage? • Looking peaked • DuPont grant benefits Ursinus chemistry program • Speaking of... • News notes • Evening School • Marriages • Births • Deathshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/new_bulletin/1028/thumbnail.jp
Ursinus College Bulletin, Summer 1982
Commencement: Leading questions • Classified information • Creditable words from a new class • Board actions • Do you know? • Election results • Zimmer named assistant dean of admissions • Ursinus student wins national award • Special sports • Alumna presents DuPont check • Diamond day • Chemistry conference • Put your name in lights • Have we got news for you • Upcoming art exhibits • Alumni Weekend • News notes • Marriages • Births • Deaths • Questionnaire answershttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/new_bulletin/1032/thumbnail.jp
1972 Ruby Yearbook
A digitized copy of the 1972 Ruby, the Ursinus College yearbook.https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/ruby/1075/thumbnail.jp
Ursinus College Bulletin, Summer 1980
Fellow alumni: Advice to future ambassadors • For this P. R. man letting off steam is a really hot story • Making it in the long run • He\u27s not just a passing fancy: Or, how will Howard ever learn to say Ursinus • Filling the gap: Or, what I did on my summer vacation • East meets West at Ursinus College (and the Philadelphia area reads about an Ursinus cultural exchange program) • To the wall and back again: Ursinus\u27 elder statesman visits China • His career\u27s on the right track • New faculty appointments • Archivist needed • Kane named to post • Gifts to Ursinus College • Lost alumni: Reunion years 1981 • News notes • Evening School • Births • Marriages • Deathshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/new_bulletin/1027/thumbnail.jp
The BBC, Austerity and Broadcasting the 1948 Olympic Games
Based on original archive research, including papers held in the BBC Written Archives Centre, and interviews with those involved, this paper analyses the historical importance for the BBC of the 1948 Games as the first publicly televised Olympics. In particular, the paper addresses the management of operations by the Head of Outside Broadcasting at the BBC, Seymour Joly de Lotbiniere. De Lotbiniere had been an important figure in the development of outside broadcasting commentaries during the inter-war period and was given the task of organising the radio and television coverage of the London Games in 1948. The paper examines the technical, operational and ideological issues raised by the event for the BBC and its legacy for the development of live televised outside broadcasts from sport. The analysis suggests the BBC’s ability to host international broadcasters became a matter of prestige and its forays into television a sign of its emerging post-War modernity
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Characterisation of proguanylin expressing cells in the intestine – evidence for constitutive luminal secretion
Abstract: Guanylin, a peptide implicated in regulation of intestinal fluid secretion, is expressed in the mucosa, but the exact cellular origin remains controversial. In a new transgenic mouse model fluorescent reporter protein expression driven by the proguanylin promoter was observed throughout the small intestine and colon in goblet and Paneth(-like) cells and, except in duodenum, in mature enterocytes. In Ussing chamber experiments employing both human and mouse intestinal tissue, proguanylin was released predominantly in the luminal direction. Measurements of proguanylin expression and secretion in cell lines and organoids indicated that secretion is largely constitutive and requires ER to Golgi transport but was not acutely regulated by salt or other stimuli. Using a newly-developed proguanylin assay, we found plasma levels to be raised in humans after total gastrectomy or intestinal transplantation, but largely unresponsive to nutrient ingestion. By LC-MS/MS we identified processed forms in tissue and luminal extracts, but in plasma we only detected full-length proguanylin. Our transgenic approach provides information about the cellular origins of proguanylin, complementing previous immunohistochemical and in-situ hybridisation results. The identification of processed forms of proguanylin in the intestinal lumen but not in plasma supports the notion that the primary site of action is the gut itself
Pneumococcal carriage in sub-Saharan Africa--a systematic review.
BACKGROUND: Pneumococcal epidemiology varies geographically and few data are available from the African continent. We assess pneumococcal carriage from studies conducted in sub-Saharan Africa (sSA) before and after the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) era. METHODS: A search for pneumococcal carriage studies published before 2012 was conducted to describe carriage in sSA. The review also describes pneumococcal serotypes and assesses the impact of vaccination on carriage in this region. RESULTS: Fifty-seven studies were included in this review with the majority (40.3%) from South Africa. There was considerable variability in the prevalence of carriage between studies (I-squared statistic = 99%). Carriage was higher in children and decreased with increasing age, 63.2% (95% CI: 55.6-70.8) in children less than 5 years, 42.6% (95% CI: 29.9-55.4) in children 5-15 years and 28.0% (95% CI: 19.0-37.0) in adults older than 15 years. There was no difference in the prevalence of carriage between males and females in 9/11 studies. Serotypes 19F, 6B, 6A, 14 and 23F were the five most common isolates. A meta-analysis of four randomized trials of PCV vaccination in children aged 9-24 months showed that carriage of vaccine type (VT) serotypes decreased with PCV vaccination; however, overall carriage remained the same because of a concomitant increase in non-vaccine type (NVT) serotypes. CONCLUSION: Pneumococcal carriage is generally high in the African continent, particularly in young children. The five most common serotypes in sSA are among the top seven serotypes that cause invasive pneumococcal disease in children globally. These serotypes are covered by the two PCVs recommended for routine childhood immunization by the WHO. The distribution of serotypes found in the nasopharynx is altered by PCV vaccination
Deprotection, tethering and activation of a one-legged metalloporphyrin on a chemically active metal surface: NEXAFS, synchrotron XPS and STM study of [SAc]P- Mn(III)Cl on Ag(100)
Abstract The structural and reactive properties of the acetyl-protected "one-legged" manganese porphyrin [SAc]P-Mn(III)Cl on Ag(100) have been studied by NEXAFS, synchrotron XPS and STM. Spontaneous surface-mediated de-protection occurs at 300 K accompanied by spreading of the resulting thio-tethered porphyrin across the metal surface. Loss of the axial chlorine ligand occurs at 498 K, without any de-metallation of the macrocycle, leaving the Mn center in a low co-ordination state. At low coverages the macrocycle is markedly tilted towards the silver surface, as is the phenyl group that forms part of the tethering "leg". In the monolayer region a striking transition occurs whereby the molecule rolls over, preserving the tilt angle of the phenyl group, strongly increasing that of the 2 macrocycle, decreasing the apparent height of the molecule and decreasing its footprint, thus enabling closer packing. These findings are in marked contrast with those previously reported for the corresponding more rigidly bound four-legged porphyrin [JACS 2009[JACS , 126, 1910 suggesting that the physico-chemical properties and potential applications of these versatile systems should be strongly dependent on the mode of tethering to the surface
The MAGPI Survey: impact of environment on the total internal mass distribution of galaxies in the last 5 Gyr
We investigate the impact of environment on the internal mass distribution of galaxies using the Middle Ages Galaxy Properties with Integral field spectroscopy (MAGPI) survey. We use 2D resolved stellar kinematics to construct Jeans dynamical models for galaxies at mean redshift z ∼ 0.3, corresponding to a lookback time of 3–4 Gyr. The internal mass distribution for each galaxy is parametrized by the combined mass density slope γ (baryons + dark matter), which is the logarithmic change of density with radius. We use a MAGPI sample of 28 galaxies from low-to-mid density environments and compare to density slopes derived from galaxies in the high density Frontier Fields clusters in the redshift range 0.29 < z < 0.55, corresponding to a lookback time of ∼5 Gyr. We find a median density slope of γ = −2.22 ± 0.05 for the MAGPI sample, which is significantly steeper than the Frontier Fields median slope (γ = −2.00 ± 0.04), implying the cluster galaxies are less centrally concentrated in their mass distribution than MAGPI galaxies. We also compare to the distribution of density slopes from galaxies in ATLAS3D at z ∼ 0, because the sample probes a similar environmental range as MAGPI. The ATLAS3D median total slope is γ = −2.25 ± 0.02, consistent with the MAGPI median. Our results indicate environment plays a role in the internal mass distribution of galaxies, with no evolution of the slope in the last 3–4 Gyr. These results are in agreement with the predictions of cosmological simulations
Safety Implications of High-Field MRI: Actuation of Endogenous Magnetic Iron Oxides in the Human Body
Background: Magnetic Resonance Imaging scanners have become ubiquitous in hospitals and high-field systems (greater than 3 Tesla) are becoming increasingly common. In light of recent European Union moves to limit high-field exposure for those working with MRI scanners, we have evaluated the potential for detrimental cellular effects via nanomagnetic actuation of endogenous iron oxides in the body.Methodology: Theoretical models and experimental data on the composition and magnetic properties of endogenous iron oxides in human tissue were used to analyze the forces on iron oxide particles.Principal Finding and Conclusions: Results show that, even at 9.4 Tesla, forces on these particles are unlikely to disrupt normal cellular function via nanomagnetic actuation
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