426,291 research outputs found

    Fran Secord

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    My career at Cornell began on June 28, 1979, as a Kitchen Assistant in the the ILR Conference Center under Irene Grant’s supervision. In 1981, I was hired as an administrative assistant by David Eastman. I moved to the Research Building and took on very diff erent responsibilities. My career took another turn in October of 1987, I joined the Martin P. Catherwood library staff with Phil Dankert as my supervisor. This was quite an undertaking. I had no library experience. A couple weeks into the job, I wondered if I had made the mistake of a lifetime. I worked very hard, learned the necessary new skills and prevailed. My job in the library changed in 2004. I became a web assistant for our web site Digital Commons. This was another challenge which required learning new skills. It has been quite a journey. 28 years later, it is time to start yet another journey. My career at Cornell has come to an end

    Distinction of representations via Bruhat-Tits buildings of p-adic groups

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    Introductory and pedagogical treatmeant of the article : P. Broussous "Distinction of the Steinberg representation", with an appendix by Fran\c{c}ois Court\`es, IMRN 2014, no 11, 3140-3157. To appear in Proceedings of Chaire Jean Morlet, Dipendra Prasad, Volker Heiermann Ed. 2017. Contains modified and simplified proofs of loc. cit. This article is written in memory of Fran\c{c}ois Court\`es who passed away in september 2016.Comment: 33 pages, 4 figure

    The companion dog as a model for human aging and mortality

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    Around the world, human populations have experienced large increases in average lifespan over the last 150 years, and while individuals are living longer, they are spending more years of life with multiple chronic morbidities. Researchers have used numerous laboratory animal models to understand the biological and environmental factors that influence aging, morbidity, and longevity. However, the most commonly studied animal species, laboratory mice and rats, do not experience environmental conditions similar to those to which humans are exposed, nor do we often diagnose them with many of the naturally occurring pathologies seen in humans. Recently, the companion dog has been proposed as a powerful model to better understand the genetic and environmental determinants of morbidity and mortality in humans. However, it is not known to what extent the age-related dynamics of morbidity, comorbidity, and mortality are shared between humans and dogs. Here, we present the first large-scale comparison of human and canine patterns of age-specific morbidity and mortality. We find that many chronic conditions that commonly occur in human populations (obesity, arthritis, hypothyroidism, and diabetes), and which are associated with comorbidities, are also associated with similarly high levels of comorbidity in companion dogs. We also find significant similarities in the effect of age on disease risk in humans and dogs, with neoplastic, congenital, and metabolic causes of death showing similar age trajectories between the two species. Overall, our study suggests that the companion dog may be an ideal translational model to study the many complex facets of human morbidity and mortality

    Inspiring practice: a guide to developing an integrated approach to supervision in children’s trusts

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    CWDC would like to thank Fran McDonnell and Harry Zutshi for their work on this guide

    Fran in action!

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    Alaska and the Arctic

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    If We Can Win Here: The New Front Lines Of The Labor Movement

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    [Excerpt] Do service-sector workers represent the future of the U.S. labor movement? Mid-twentieth-century union activism transformed manufacturing jobs from backbreaking, low-wage work into careers that allowed workers to buy homes and send their kids to college. Some union activists insist that there is no reason why service-sector workers cannot follow that same path. In If We Can Win Here, Fran Quigley tells the stories of janitors, fry cooks, and health care aides trying to fight their way to middle-class incomes in Indianapolis. He also chronicles the struggles of the union organizers with whom the workers have made common cause. The service-sector workers of Indianapolis mirror the city\u27s demographics: they are white, African American, and Latino. In contrast, the union organizers are mostly white and younger than the workers they help rally. Quigley chronicles these allies’ setbacks, victories, bonds, and conflicts while placing their journey in the broader context of the global economy and labor history. As one Indiana-based organizer says of the struggle being waged in a state that has earned a reputation as anti-union: If we can win here, we can win anywhere. The outcome of the battle of Indianapolis may foretell the fate of workers across the United States

    The Lion in the Sun

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