181,477 research outputs found
TANF and Low-Income Family Support: Hearing Before the H. Subcomm. on Income Security and Family Support of the H. Comm. on Ways and Means, 111th Cong., Mar. 11, 2010 (Statement of Professor Peter B. Edelman, Geo. U. L. Center)
TANF should be a work-based safety net that strengthens families. The history of the past fourteen years shows the way to improving it for the future. It would be more successful in promoting work if it analyzed the individual needs and challenges of recipients and provided tailored education, training, support services, and other assistance to help people get and keep jobs. It would be more successful as a safety net if benefits were increased and if people in need could succeed in greater numbers in gaining access to the program
Comment on "Central limit behavior in deterministic dynamical systems"
We check claims for a generalized central limit theorem holding at the
Feigenbaum (infinite bifurcation) point of the logistic map, made recently by
U. Tirnakli, C. Beck, and C. Tsallis (Phys. Rev. {\bf 75}, 040106(R) (2007)).
We show that there is no obvious way that these claims can be made consistent
with high statistics simulations. We also refute more recent claims by the same
authors that extend the claims made in the above reference.Comment: 3 pages, including 3 figure
Second sound spectroscopy of a nonequilibrium superfluid-normal interface
An experiment is proposed to test a previously developed theory of the
hydrodynamics of a nonequilibrium heat current-induced superfluid-normal
interface. It is shown that the interfacial ``trapped'' second sound mode
predicted by the theory leads to a sharp resonant dip in the reflected signal
from an external second sound pulse propagated towards the interface when its
horizontal phase speed matches that of the interface mode. The influence of the
interface on thermal fluctuations in the bulk superfluid is shown to lead to
slow power dependence of the order parameter, and other quantities, on distance
from it.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Brief for Amici Curiae AARP et al., United States Department of Housing and Urban Development v. Rucker et al., Nos. 00-1770 & 00-1781 (U.S. Dec. 20, 2001)
Sequence-specific double-strand cleavage of DNA by penta-N-methylpyrrolecarboxamide-EDTA·Fe(II)
In the presence of O2 and 5 mM dithiothreitol, penta-N-methylpyrrolecarboxamide-EDTA·Fe(II) [P5E·Fe(II)] at 0.5 µ M cleaves pBR322 plasmid DNA (50 µ M in base pairs) on opposite strands to afford discrete DNA fragments as analyzed by agarose gel electrophoresis. High-resolution denaturing gel electrophoresis of a 32P-end-labeled 517-base-pair restriction fragment containing a major cleavage site reveals that P5E·Fe(II) cleaves 3-5 base pairs contiguous to a 6-base-pair sequence, 5'-T-T-T-T-T-A-3' (4,323-4,328 base pairs). The major binding orientation of the pentapeptide occurs with the amino terminus at the adenine side of this sequence. In the presence of 5 mM dithiothreitol, 0.01 µ M P5E·Fe(II) converts form I pBR322 DNA at 0.22 µ M plasmid (1.0 mM in base pairs) to 40% form II, indicating the cleavage reaction is catalytic, turning over a minimum of nine times. This synthetic molecule achieves double-strand cleavage of DNA (pH 7.9, 25 degrees C) at the 6-base-pair recognition level and may provide an approach to the design of "artificial restriction enzymes.
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