952 resultados para Carr, William
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Front row: Lloyd Carr, William Carr, Chuck Winters, Remy Hamilton, Steve King, Rod Payne, Jarrett Irons, Damon Denson, Thomas Guynes, Mark Bolach, Mike Vanderbeek, Clarence Thompson, Woodrow Hankins.
2nd row: Paul Peristeris, Mike Hynes, Jeff Springer, Brent Blackwell, Brian Griese, Mike Elston, Glen Steele, Zach Adami, John Partchenko, Ben Huff, Earnest Sanders, Rob Swett, Matt DeYoung, Bryan Williams
3rd row: Todd Brooks, Colby Keefer, Joe Ries, Scott Dreisbach, Jerome Tuman, Mark Campbell, Jon Jansen, Juaquin Feezell, Seen Parini, Chris Floyd, Chris Howard, Anthony Williams, Tyrone Butterfield.
4th row: Eric Mayes, Andre Weathers, Marcus Ray, Kraig Baker, Chris Singletary, Rasheed Simmons, Clint Copenhaver, Noah Parker, Nate Miller, Sam Sword, Bove Crispin, Jay Feely.
5th row: Darren Petterson, Terrence Quinn, Clarence Williams, Daydrion Taylor, DiAllo Johnson, James Hall, Aaron Shea, Chris Ziemann, Jeff Potts, Steve Frazier, Josh Williams, David Bowens, Charles Woodson, Scott Parachek.
6th row: Tate Schanski, Kenneth Jackson, Jeff Smokevitch, Jason Vinson, Tai Streets, Tom Brady, Chad Carpenter, Pat Kratus, Rob Renes, Brent Washington, Kevin Bryant, J.R. Ford, Jeff Del Verne, Russell Shaw.
7th row: LeAundre Brown, Jason Foster, Dhani Jones, Tom Hendricks, David Brandt Paul Tannous, Grady Brooks, Jason Kapsner, Jeff Backus, Steve Hutchinson, Eric Wilson, Corey Sargent, Jerry Johnson, John Anes, Marcus Knight.
8th row: Chris Kurpeikis, Jason Cole, Jason Carr, Eric Dean, Patrick Bolger, Rick Turner, Jason Cummings, Chad Henman, Ryan Parini, Ian Gold, Aaron Wright, Eric Warner, Andy Sachler, Chris Roth, Dan Williams, Bob Bland, Brian Hagens, Bill Priestap, Matt Hamilton.
9th row: Todd Jager, Derek Stebbins, Paul Schmidt, Mike Gittleson, Paul Barry, Vance Bedford, Brady Hoke, Jim Herrmann, Greg Mattison, Mike DeBord, Fred Jackson, Bobby Morrison, Stan Parrish, Erik Campbell, Scott Draper, Jon Falk, Phil Bromley, Steve Connelly, Harold Goodwin, Scot Loeffler.
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Left to right: Res. of Geo. W. Hoy, Manchester, Mich.; Res. of G.R. Palmer, Manchester, Mich.; Res. of J.D. Van Duyn, Exchange St. Mich.; Res. of W.H. Pottle, Exchange Place, Manchester, Mich., cash dealer in dry goods, small wares, gents furnishing goods &c.; Res. & brick yard of Wm S. Carr, Manchester, Mich.; C.Lehn, dealer in groceries, provisions, notions &c., Manchester, Mich.; Wm. Kirchgesser, prop'r of Manchester City Bakery & wholesale & retail dealer in crackers, fine ornamental cakes, confectionery &c., Manchester, Mich.; Store & Res., Bridgewater Station, by Henry Guthardt & Sons. Publication information: Chicago, Ill. : Everts & Stewart, 1874.
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Subsequently issued under title: The Craven dialect.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"February 1997."
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First published: London, 1804.
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Several studies have demonstrated an association between polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and the dinucleotide repeat microsatellite marker D19S884, which is located in intron 55 of the fibrillin-3 (FBN3) gene. Fibrillins, including FBN1 and 2, interact with latent transforming growth factor (TGF)-β-binding proteins (LTBP) and thereby control the bioactivity of TGFβs. TGFβs stimulate fibroblast replication and collagen production. The PCOS ovarian phenotype includes increased stromal collagen and expansion of the ovarian cortex, features feasibly influenced by abnormal fibrillin expression. To examine a possible role of fibrillins in PCOS, particularly FBN3, we undertook tagging and functional single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis (32 SNPs including 10 that generate non-synonymous amino acid changes) using DNA from 173 PCOS patients and 194 controls. No SNP showed a significant association with PCOS and alleles of most SNPs showed almost identical population frequencies between PCOS and control subjects. No significant differences were observed for microsatellite D19S884. In human PCO stroma/cortex (n = 4) and non-PCO ovarian stroma (n = 9), follicles (n = 3) and corpora lutea (n = 3) and in human ovarian cancer cell lines (KGN, SKOV-3, OVCAR-3, OVCAR-5), FBN1 mRNA levels were approximately 100 times greater than FBN2 and 200–1000-fold greater than FBN3. Expression of LTBP-1 mRNA was 3-fold greater than LTBP-2. We conclude that FBN3 appears to have little involvement in PCOS but cannot rule out that other markers in the region of chromosome 19p13.2 are associated with PCOS or that FBN3 expression occurs in other organs and that this may be influencing the PCOS phenotype.
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Prior in vitro studies, utilizing 31Pn uclear magnetic resonance (31PN MR) to measure the chemical shift (CT) of 0-ATP and lengthening of the phosphocreatine spin-spin (7"') relaxation time, suggested an assessment of their efficacy in measuring magnesium depletion in vivo. Dietary magnesium depletion (Me$) produced markedly lower magnesium in plasma (0.44 vs 1. I3 mmol/liter) and bone (1 30 vs 190 pmol/g) but much smaller changes in muscle (41 vs 45 pmol/g, P < 0.01), heart (42.5 vs 44.6 prnol/g), and brain (30 vs 32 pmollg). NMR experiments in anesthetized rats in a Bruker 7-T vertical bore magnet showed that in M e $ rats there was a significant change in brain j3-ATP shift (16.15 vs 16.03 ppm, P < 0.05). These chemical shifts gave a calculated free [Mg"] of 0.71 mM (control) and 0.48 mM (MgZ+$). In muscle the change in j3-ATP shift was not significant (Me$ 15.99 ppm, controls 15.96 ppm), corresponding to a calculated free M P of 0.83 and 0.95 mM, respectively. Phosphccreatine Tz (Carr-Purcell, spin-echo pulse sequence) was no different with M e $ in muscle in vivo (surface coil) (M$+$ 136, control 142 ms) or in isolated perfused hearts (Helmholtz coil) (control 83, M e $ 92 ms). 3'P NMR is severely limited in its ability to detect dietary magnesium depletion in vivo. Measurement of j3-ATP shift in brain may allow studies of the effects of interaction in group studies but does not allow prediction of an individual magnesium status.
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THE UVI working group acknowledges the contribution of Vitamin D to bone health as stated in our paper. However, we concluded that an optimal level of Vitamin D for humans has not yet been established with any certainty...
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Research background: Cungelela is an intercultural music project undertaken in collaboration with William ‘Dura Danje’ Leisha and Shem ‘Curan Danje’ Leisha. The project contributes to cultural maintenance for Australian First Nations peoples, and is informed by prior work in this area by scholars including Peter Dunbar-Hall, Chris Gibson and Karl Neuenfeldt. These existing studies have discussed the complexities of intercultural collaboration, and the types of cultural politics that are involved when Indigenous and non-Indigenous musicians and scholars work together on projects of cultural significance. Critical race theory has also informed the creative work, as a means of interpreting the implicit and explicit discourses of race that arise through intercultural creative practice. The project asked the research question, in what ways can collaborative music making contribute to intercultural understanding and support cultural maintenance for Australian First Nations people affected by the Stolen Generations? Research contribution: This project has identified that collaborative production of recorded popular music can produce shared affective, embodied and transformative forms of knowledge about the impact of the Stolen Generations on Australian First Nations peoples. Research significance: The compact disc was presented by Aunty Anne Leisha as part of an invited presentation at the World Indigenous Nations Higher Education Consortium in New Mexico, 2013. The work also formed part of a refereed conference presentation at the 2013 conference of the International Association for the Study of Popular Music held at the University of Oviedo, Gijon, Spain.