106 research outputs found

    The Ursinus Weekly, November 22, 1948

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    Radio broadcasting begun by students over station WURS • Racial prejudice poll completed by \u27CORE\u27 • Weekly staff grows to record size as cub reporters join • Y asks students to give toys for foreign Christmas • Med schools pick twenty-three for next year\u27s class • Uncle Harry set; cast full of talent • What do you consider an ideal weekend? • Crystal ball motif to be used for Senior Ball at Sunnybrook • Cub reporter suffers collapse; visualizes growth of Ursinus • Inscription creates frustration, defeat, malnutrition, scorn • Marsteller perfects apparatus for department of astronomy • Scarcity of squirrels is fall highlight • Belles notch fifth victory by downing Chestnut Hillers 7-1 • Ten gridders end college careers • Jay Vees trounce Chestnut Hill coeds • Seeders cuts squad to twenty-three; Veterans near peak as opener looms • Grizzlies bow to Staggs 13-0 ending season with 7 losses • Junior varsity due for \u2749 promotion as seven hockey stars leave in June • Last minute tally gives Diplomats 2-1 victory over bears • Belles drop second as Temple wins 3-1 • Music club offers 1st student recital • Pre-Meds observe microscopy exhibit at regular meeting • Ruby to hold Basket-Ball in gym featuring court game and dancehttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1602/thumbnail.jp

    Observational and theoretical evidence for frictional-viscous flow at shallow crustal levels

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    Along the Hikurangi Subduction Margin, accretionary prism uplift has exposed the Hungaroa fault zone, an inactive thrust developed within the Middle to Late Eocene Wanstead Formation. Within the ~33 m-wide fault core, deformation of the smectitic, calcareous mudstone matrix produced a penetrative foliation that locally wraps around clasts. Deformation occurred at temperatures constrained by syntectonic calcite vein clumped isotope thermometry, which yielded a narrow range of Δ47 values between 0.445 ± 0.024‰ and 0.482 ± 0.013‰, corresponding to a mean calcite precipitation temperature of 82−12+13 °C. Optical and scanning electron microscopy analyses reveal that calcite underwent: dissolution along stylolites and clast, vein, and microlithon margins; precipitation in foliation-parallel and foliation-perpendicular extension veins; and precipitation in hybrid veins and strain fringes. Maximum differential stress estimates obtained from calcite twin densities (44.1 ± 13.9 to 96.6 ± 20.8 MPa) are consistent with those sustainable by a cohesionless fault at ~3 km depth with a friction coefficient in the range measured for two calcareous mudstones (μ = 0.38 to 0.50) and a micrite clast (μ = 0.61 and 0.64). Marlstone clasts within the foliated calcareous mudstone matrix contain mutually cross-cutting shear fractures and extension veins with crack-seal textures, providing evidence for temporal fluctuations in shear strength resulting from pore fluid overpressure transients. At strain rates imposed during laboratory experiments, frictional sliding involves granular flow processes. Yet, calcite microstructures indicate that diffusive mass transfer played an important role in accommodating deformation. We model the fault zone rheology assuming diffusion-controlled frictional-viscous flow, with deformation at strain rates γ˙≤ 10−9 s−1 able to have taken place at very low shear stresses (τ < 10 MPa) given sufficiently short diffusion distances (d < 0.1 mm), even in the absence of pore fluid overpressures. However, if grain-scale and fracture-scale processes change the diffusion distance, fault zones deforming via frictional-viscous flow can exhibit temporally variable strain rates. Thus, our results suggest that the shallow (up-dip) limit of the seismogenic zone is not a simple function of temperature in fault zones governed by a frictional-viscous flow rheology

    How to stabilize the banking system: Lessons from the pre-1914 London money market

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    Copyright © European Association for Banking and Financial History e.V. 2016. This article argues that the British financial system in the era prior to World War I provides modern policymakers with a successful model of how to stabilize the banking system. This model had two components: incentives were structured to ensure that all banks that originated or traded assets on the money market sought only to trade in high-quality assets; and macro-prudential regulation promoted the segregation of money markets from capital markets, monitored the growth of money market credit, and restricted trade on the money market in assets issued by entities and sectors whose money market liabilities were growing so fast that the most reasonable explanation was that the money market was being used to finance longer-term investment. These facts indicate that policymakers can successfully stabilize the banking system through a combination of structural reform and regulation of the growth of credit

    Climate change implications for tidal marshes and food web linkages to estuarine and coastal nekton

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    Climate change is altering naturally fluctuating environmental conditions in coastal and estuarine ecosystems across the globe. Departures from long-term averages and ranges of environmental variables are increasingly being observed as directional changes [e.g., rising sea levels, sea surface temperatures (SST)] and less predictable periodic cycles (e.g., Atlantic or Pacific decadal oscillations) and extremes (e.g., coastal flooding, marine heatwaves). Quantifying the short- and long-term impacts of climate change on tidal marsh seascape structure and function for nekton is a critical step toward fisheries conservation and management. The multiple stressor framework provides a promising approach for advancing integrative, cross-disciplinary research on tidal marshes and food web dynamics. It can be used to quantify climate change effects on and interactions between coastal oceans (e.g., SST, ocean currents, waves) and watersheds (e.g., precipitation, river flows), tidal marsh geomorphology (e.g., vegetation structure, elevation capital, sedimentation), and estuarine and coastal nekton (e.g., species distributions, life history adaptations, predator-prey dynamics). However, disentangling the cumulative impacts of multiple interacting stressors on tidal marshes, whether the effects are additive, synergistic, or antagonistic, and the time scales at which they occur, poses a significant research challenge. This perspective highlights the key physical and ecological processes affecting tidal marshes, with an emphasis on the trophic linkages between marsh production and estuarine and coastal nekton, recommended for consideration in future climate change studies. Such studies are urgently needed to understand climate change effects on tidal marshes now and into the future

    Effective knowledge translation approaches and practices in Indigenous health research: A systematic review protocol

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    Background: Effective knowledge translation (KT) is critical to implementing program and policy changes that require shared understandings of knowledge systems, assumptions, and practices. Within mainstream research institutions and funding agencies, systemic and insidious inequities, privileges, and power relationships inhibit Indigenous peoples' control, input, and benefits over research. This systematic review will examine literature on KT initiatives in Indigenous health research to help identify wise and promising Indigenous KT practices and language in Canada and abroad. Methods: Indexed databases including Aboriginal Health Abstract Database, Bibliography of Native North Americans, CINAHL, Circumpolar Health Bibliographic Database, Dissertation Abstracts, First Nations Periodical Index, Medline, National Indigenous Studies Portal, ProQuest Conference Papers Index, PsycInfo, Social Services Abstracts, Social Work Abstracts, and Web of Science will be searched. A comprehensive list of non-indexed and grey literature sources will also be searched. For inclusion, documents must be published in English; linked to Indigenous health and wellbeing; focused on Indigenous people; document KT goals, activities, and rationale; an

    Risk factors for breast cancer in postmenopausal Caucasian and Chinese-Canadian women

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    Abstract Introduction Striking differences exist between countries in the incidence of breast cancer. The causes of these differences are unknown, but because incidence rates change in migrants, they are thought to be due to lifestyle rather than genetic differences. The goal of this cross-sectional study was to examine breast cancer risk factors in populations with different risks for breast cancer. Methods We compared breast cancer risk factors among three groups of postmenopausal Canadian women at substantially different risk of developing breast cancer - Caucasians (N = 413), Chinese women born in the West or who migrated to the West before age 21 (N = 216), and recent Chinese migrants (N = 421). Information on risk factors and dietary acculturation were collected by telephone interviews using questionnaires, and anthropometric measurements were taken at a home visit. Results Compared to Caucasians, recent Chinese migrants weighed on average 14 kg less, were 6 cm shorter, had menarche a year later, were more often parous, less often had a family history of breast cancer or a benign breast biopsy, a higher Chinese dietary score, and a lower Western dietary score. For most of these variables, Western born Chinese and early Chinese migrants had values intermediate between those of Caucasians and recent Chinese migrants. We estimated five-year absolute risks for breast cancer using the Gail Model and found that risk estimates in Caucasians would be reduced by only 11% if they had the risk factor profile of recent Chinese migrants for the risk factors in the Gail Model. Conclusions Our results suggest that in addition to the risk factors in the Gail Model, there likely are other factors that also contribute to the large difference in breast cancer risk between Canada and China

    Cysteine Redox Potential Determines Pro-Inflammatory IL-1β Levels

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    Cysteine (Cys) and its disulfide, cystine (CySS) represent the major extracellular thiol/disulfide redox control system. The redox potential (E(h)) of Cys/CySS is centered at approximately -80 mV in the plasma of healthy adults, and oxidation of E(h) Cys/CySS is implicated in inflammation associated with various diseases.The purpose of the present study was to determine whether oxidized E(h) Cys/CySS is a determinant of interleukin (IL)-1beta levels. Results showed a 1.7-fold increase in secreted pro-IL-1beta levels in U937 monocytes exposed to oxidized E(h) Cys/CySS (-46 mV), compared to controls exposed to a physiological E(h) of -80 mV (P<0.01). In LPS-challenged mice, preservation of plasma E(h) Cys/CySS from oxidation by dietary sulfur amino acid (SAA) supplementation, was associated with a 1.6-fold decrease in plasma IL-1beta compared to control mice fed an isonitrogenous SAA-adequate diet (P<0.01). Analysis of E(h) Cys/CySS and IL-1beta in human plasma revealed a significant positive association between oxidized E(h) Cys/CySS and IL-1beta after controlling for age, gender, and BMI (P<0.001).These data show that oxidized extracellular E(h) Cys/CySS is a determinant of IL-1beta levels, and suggest that strategies to preserve E(h) Cys/CySS may represent a means to control IL-1beta in inflammatory disease states

    Influence of HLA-DR and -DQ alleles on autoantibody recognition of distinct epitopes within the juxtamembrane domain of the IA-2 autoantigen in type 1 diabetes

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    Aims/hypothesis: Insulinoma-associated protein 2 (IA-2) is a major target of autoimmunity in type 1 diabetes. When first detected, IA-2-autoantibodies commonly bind epitopes in the juxtamembrane (JM) domain of IA-2 and antibody responses subsequently spread to the tyrosine phosphatase domain. Definition of structures of epitopes in the JM domain, and genetic requirements for autoimmunity to these epitopes, is important for our understanding of initiation and progression of autoimmunity. The aims of this study were to investigate the contribution of individual amino acids in the IA-2 JM domain to antibody binding to these epitopes and the role of HLA genotypes in determining epitope specificity. Methods: Regions of the JM domain recognised by autoantibodies were identified by peptide competition and inhibitory effects of alanine substitutions of residues within the JM region. Antibody binding was determined by radioligand binding assays using sera from patients genotyped for HLA-DRB1 and -DQB1 alleles. Results: Patients were categorised into two distinct groups of JM antibody reactivity according to peptide inhibition. Inhibition by substitutions of individual amino acids within the JM domain differed between patients, indicating heterogeneity in epitope recognition. Cluster analysis defined six groups of residues having similar inhibitory effects on antibody binding, with three clusters showing differences in patients affected or unaffected by peptide. One cluster demonstrated significant differences in antibody binding between HLA-DRB1*04 and HLA-DRB1*07 patients and within DRB1*04 individuals; antibody recognition of a second cluster depended on expression of HLA-DQB1*0302. Conclusions/interpretation: The results identify amino acids contributing to distinct epitopes on IA-2, with both HLA-DR and HLA-DQ alleles influencing epitope specificity
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