26 research outputs found

    The Lotus Sutra as Rhetorical Doctrine: Toward a Spiritual Paradigm Shift in Academia

    Get PDF
    The article explores a new approach on the relationship between religion and academia. It highlights the application of St. Augustine\u27s On Christian Doctrine on Ciceronian tactics to teaching, praising and motivating based on scripture. It mentions that the Buddhist text entitled The Lotus Sutra manifests how Buddhism extends in the rhetorical canon and delivers a spiritual renewal in the academia. An overview of the symbiosis between Buddhism and rhetoric that effectively connects religion and secular liberalism is also presented

    Buddhism’s Pedagogical Contribution to Mindfulness

    Get PDF
    Considering the rhetorical elements in the Buddhist text “The True Aspect of All Phenomena” opens the possibility of teaching students a more mindful approach to writing

    The Grizzly, September 25, 2008

    Get PDF
    Another Fantastically Fun-Filled Family Day for Ursinus College • Worcester High School Pregnancy Pact Fact? • So Long Shea Stadium • Lower Draws Crowds • Ursinus Students to Attend Activist Workshop at Swarthmore • UC Writing Center? What\u27s That? • UC Fringe Cabaret Strikes a Chord with Music, Improv and Acrobatics • Abroad in Germany: Culture Shock! • Up \u27Til Dawn Awareness Week at UChttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1769/thumbnail.jp

    The Lantern Vol. 62, No. 1, December 1994

    Get PDF
    • Hollow • A Little Knowledge is Dangerous • My Old Block • Life • The Natural Born Fool • Oracle • Formation of a Triangle • Marie on the Beach • The Tweed Derby • Tripping • In Vitro • The Character • Coming Home for Christmas • Unkempt • Too Much • Reimertanti-Ode • Seeds • Secrethttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/lantern/1145/thumbnail.jp

    The Lantern Vol. 63, No. 1, Fall 1995

    Get PDF
    • The Birthday Celebration • Surprise! Surprise! • Oregold • Future of Parenthood #2 • Seeds • How I Spent My Summer Vacation • Random Scenes From 1/2 Hour at Work • Life in the Coal Mines • Driveway • Midnight in the Court of Kings • The Black Quadrilateral • People I Hate to See, But Refuse to Dismiss • Metropolized • Poetry in Motion • Dream #3 • Rhythms • Mercykilling • Untitled • Lupine Lord • At the Bottom of the Cup • House of Commons • Poetry I Can\u27t Standhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/lantern/1147/thumbnail.jp

    The Lantern Vol. 63, No. 2, Spring 1996

    Get PDF
    • Poet, Lead Me On • St. Patrick\u27s Day • The Last Three Days • The Impressionable • Roundabout • The Bench • Carnivorous • Kyrie • Second Glance • Porch • Cruel Design • A Mime • Flaxen Crown • My Embryonic Ocean of Love • Stone Matrix • Voices from the Past • Skipping the Bullfight: Toreadors and Gaudi • Another Part of My Lacolonialism • Translucent Pane • Linguistics • Treehouse • A Disagreeable Music Piece • Vigil • A Brief History of American Poetry in Englishhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/lantern/1148/thumbnail.jp

    The Lantern Vol. 62, No. 2, Summer 1995

    Get PDF
    • In the Season of Grief • Subtleties • Crazehaze • Blacksmith • I Feel Your Weight • L\u27Amour Manque • Sense of You • Greed • Gender (Rolled) • Soliloquy of a Punter • Nightmares • God is a Frisbee • Cleansing • Flat • Chemistry of Mind • Louderback • Ritual • Rebuilding Mother • Scott Lomba • The Acting Bug • Untitled • The Seek • Gluttony • Great South Bay • Archangel • Suburban Zeus • Vespers • At Change of A-Dress • The Hierarchy of Coolness • The Apology • I Know it is Evening There • Pridehttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/lantern/1146/thumbnail.jp

    Sequence-Based Prediction of Type III Secreted Proteins

    Get PDF
    The type III secretion system (TTSS) is a key mechanism for host cell interaction used by a variety of bacterial pathogens and symbionts of plants and animals including humans. The TTSS represents a molecular syringe with which the bacteria deliver effector proteins directly into the host cell cytosol. Despite the importance of the TTSS for bacterial pathogenesis, recognition and targeting of type III secreted proteins has up until now been poorly understood. Several hypotheses are discussed, including an mRNA-based signal, a chaperon-mediated process, or an N-terminal signal peptide. In this study, we systematically analyzed the amino acid composition and secondary structure of N-termini of 100 experimentally verified effector proteins. Based on this, we developed a machine-learning approach for the prediction of TTSS effector proteins, taking into account N-terminal sequence features such as frequencies of amino acids, short peptides, or residues with certain physico-chemical properties. The resulting computational model revealed a strong type III secretion signal in the N-terminus that can be used to detect effectors with sensitivity of ∼71% and selectivity of ∼85%. This signal seems to be taxonomically universal and conserved among animal pathogens and plant symbionts, since we could successfully detect effector proteins if the respective group was excluded from training. The application of our prediction approach to 739 complete bacterial and archaeal genome sequences resulted in the identification of between 0% and 12% putative TTSS effector proteins. Comparison of effector proteins with orthologs that are not secreted by the TTSS showed no clear pattern of signal acquisition by fusion, suggesting convergent evolutionary processes shaping the type III secretion signal. The newly developed program EffectiveT3 (http://www.chlamydiaedb.org) is the first universal in silico prediction program for the identification of novel TTSS effectors. Our findings will facilitate further studies on and improve our understanding of type III secretion and its role in pathogen–host interactions

    Invasive Extravillous Trophoblasts Restrict Intracellular Growth and Spread of Listeria monocytogenes

    Get PDF
    Listeria monocytogenes is a facultative intracellular bacterial pathogen that can infect the placenta, a chimeric organ made of maternal and fetal cells. Extravillous trophoblasts (EVT) are specialized fetal cells that invade the uterine implantation site, where they come into direct contact with maternal cells. We have shown previously that EVT are the preferred site of initial placental infection. In this report, we infected primary human EVT with L. monocytogenes. EVT eliminated ∼80% of intracellular bacteria over 24-hours. Bacteria were unable to escape into the cytoplasm and remained confined to vacuolar compartments that became acidified and co-localized with LAMP1, consistent with bacterial degradation in lysosomes. In human placental organ cultures bacterial vacuolar escape rates differed between specific trophoblast subpopulations. The most invasive EVT—those that would be in direct contact with maternal cells in vivo—had lower escape rates than trophoblasts that were surrounded by fetal cells and tissues. Our results suggest that EVT present a bottleneck in the spread of L. monocytogenes from mother to fetus by inhibiting vacuolar escape, and thus intracellular bacterial growth. However, if L. monocytogenes is able to spread beyond EVT it can find a more hospitable environment. Our results elucidate a novel aspect of the maternal-fetal barrier

    Methods and tools to evaluate the availability of renewable energy sources

    Get PDF
    The recent statements of both the European Union and the US Presidency pushed in the direction of using renewable forms of energy, in order to act against climate changes induced by the growing concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. In this paper, a survey regarding methods and tools presently available to determine potential and exploitable energy in the most important renewable sectors (i.e., solar, wind, wave, biomass and geothermal energy) is presented. Moreover, challenges for each renewable resource are highlighted as well as the available tools that can help in evaluating the use of a mix of different sources
    corecore