986 research outputs found

    Challenges to admissions in the extended curriculum programme in the Faculty of Business and Management Sciences

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    The challenges that beset the ECP/FBMS (Extended Curriculum Programme/ Faculty of Business and Management Sciences) at the beginning of the year emanate mainly from the admissions and registration constraints. These constraints could however, be successfully addressed at faculty and institutional level. Of all the stakeholders, students and lecturers mainly bear the brunt of these challenges.Amongst the ECP students, there are two significant groups- those from the rural areas where technology is still lacking and those from townships where the technology is theoretically available but not always in practice. The great majority is faced with teachers who are not good enough; hence they all end up struggling to cope with university standards. A question naturally arises as to how the university responds to the continuous and prolific challenges of first year students.One approach that can be used to remedy the situation may lie in changes to the current admission policy that may better serve all students, both ECP and mainstream

    Sovereign debt crises in Latin America:A market pressure approach

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    Static intervortex forces

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    A point particle approximation to the classical dynamics of well separated vortices of the abelian Higgs model is developed. A static vortex is asymptotically identical to a solution of the linearized field theory (a Klein-Gordon/Proca theory) in the presence of a singular point source at the vortex centre. It is shown that this source is a composite scalar monopole and magnetic dipole, and the respective charges are determined numerically for various values of the coupling constant. The interaction potential of two well separated vortices is computed by calculating the interaction Lagrangian of two such point sources in the linear theory. The potential is used to model type II vortex scattering.Comment: Much shorter (10 pages) published version, new titl

    Morphology and function of preserved microvascular arterial grafts: an experimental study in rats

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    The aim of this study is to examine the morphology and function and small-caliber, arterial grafts after preservation in the University of Wisconsin solution (UW). Rat carotid arteries were stored in UW (n = 10) or in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) (n = 10) for 1, 3, 7, and 14 days and were examined with light microscopy (LM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Rat aortic preparations were stored in UW or PBS for 1 hour, 24 hours, 72 hours, 7 days, and 14 days and assessed for functional responses (stimulated contraction and endothelium-dependent relaxation). Segments (5 mm) of rat carotid arteries were stored in UW or PBS for 3 days, 7 days, and 14 days and orthotopically implanted as autografts and allografts. No immunosuppressive or anticoagulant agents were used. After 28 days of implantation, the grafts were assessed for patency and excised for LM and SEM. In UW, the endothelial layer remained intact up to 9 days of storage. In PBS, the endothelial layer showed deterioration after 1 day and was completely lost after 3 days. Functional responses were demonstrated to exist for as long as 7 days storage in UW. In PBS, no responses could be evoked after 24 hours storage. Autografts preserved in UW for 3 days (n = 6), 7 days (n = 6), and 14 days (n = 6) showed patency rates of 83.3%, 66.6%, and 66.6%, respectively, whereas patency rates of allografts were 66.6%, 33.3%, and 33.3%, respectively. Autografts stored in PBS for 3 days (n = 6), 7 days (n = 6), and 14 days (n = 6) showed patency rates of 33.3%, 33.3%, and 50%, respectively, whereas patency rates of allografts were 16.7%, 0%, and 33.3%, respectively. The UW preserved autografts showed normal morphology. All other groups showed vessel wall degeneration which in the allograft groups, were accompanied by lymphocellular infiltration. In conclusion, the endothelial layer and vessel wall of arteries are adequately preserved in UW. Functional responses are retained up to 14 days storage in UW, but, are lost after 24 hours storage in PBS. Autograft implantation studies accordingly show good performance of arterial segments preserved in UW, whereas allografts are subject to degradation as a result of rejectio

    Spin-Orbit-Induced Kondo Size Effect in Thin Films with 5/2-spin Impurities

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    Recently, for spin S=5/2S=5/2 impurities quite different size dependence of the Kondo contribution to the resistivity was found experimentally than for S=2. Therefore previous calculation about the effect of the spin-orbit-induced magnetic anisotropy on the Kondo amplitude of the resistivity is extended to the case of S=5/2S=5/2 impurity spin which differs from the integer spin case as the ground state is degenerated. In this case the Kondo contribution remains finite when the sample size goes to zero and the thickness dependence in the Kondo resistivity is much weaker for Cu(Mn). The behavior of the Kondo coefficient as a function of the thickness depends on the Kondo temperature, that is somewhat stronger for larger TKT_K. Comparing our results with a recent experiment in thin Cu(Mn) films, we find a good agreement.Comment: 8 pages, ReVTeX + 4 figures (Postscript

    Conditions for Adiabatic Spin Transport in Disordered Systems

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    We address the controversy concerning the necessary conditions for the observation of Berry phases in disordered mesoscopic conductors. For this purpose we calculate the spin-dependent conductance of disordered two-dimensional structures in the presence of inhomogeneous magnetic fields. Our numerical results show that for both, the overall conductance and quantum corrections, the relevant parameter defining adiabatic spin transport scales with the square root of the number of scattering events, in generalization of Stern's original proposal [Phys. Rev. Lett. 68, 1022 (1992)]. This could hinder a clear-cut experimental observation of Berry phase effects in diffusive metallic rings.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev. B (Rapid Communications

    Bispecific binder redirected lentiviral vector enables in vivo engineering of CAR-T cells

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    Background Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have shown considerable promise as a personalized cellular immunotherapy against B cell malignancies. However, the complex and lengthy manufacturing processes involved in generating CAR T cell products ex vivo result in substantial production time delays and high costs. Furthermore, ex vivo expansion of T cells promotes cell differentiation that reduces their in vivo replicative capacity and longevity. Methods Here, to overcome these limitations, CAR-T cells are engineered directly in vivo by administering a lentivirus expressing a mutant Sindbis envelope, coupled with a bispecific antibody binder that redirects the virus to CD3 + human T cells. Results This redirected lentiviral system offers exceptional specificity and efficiency; a single dose of the virus delivered to immunodeficient mice engrafted with human peripheral blood mononuclear cells generates CD19-specific CAR-T cells that markedly control the growth of an aggressive pre-established xenograft B cell tumor. Conclusions These findings underscore in vivo engineering of CAR-T cells as a promising approach for personalized cancer immunotherapy
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