572 resultados para Daly
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"The synagogue, by the Rev. C. Harvey": p.[259]-343.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"Ouvrage honoré d'une souscription du Ministère de l'instruction publique et des beaux-arts."
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"Foreword. Percy French: a memory", by Katharine Tynan.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Top Row: Debbi Anderson, Cherie Armstrong, Diane Arney, Grace Ball, Marie Bazil, Suzanne Bihan, Nancy Black, Ellen Bochenck, Lisa Bramble, Ann Marie Brissette, Mary Brock, Gale Brown, Nancy Buhl, Judith Burek, Dana Leigh Burn, Mari Byce
Row 2: Dianne Byrd, Diane Cary, Julie Rosanne Cherno, Susan Copland, Lisa Corso, Sharon Corzine, Elsa Cowan, Linda Crawley, Constance D Anna, Mary Daly, Julie De May, Janet Dean, Lwah Ann Dennis, Leslie Jean De Noon, Barbara Deur, Marilynn Dowdy
Row 3: Laurie B. Dreisbach, Patricia Dvorak, Mary Earle, Judith Eason, Charlene Eickholt, Kathryn Elden, Susan Bourget, B.M. Rutkowski, J.Sebring-Mammel, Joan Kessler, Gregory Hazle, Rosa Ohno, Miriam Elgent, Micky Erickson, Kathleen Evans, Cathleen Fasse, Martha Finkelstein, Edie Firshman
Row 4: Susan Fitzpatrick, Lynn foley, Barbara Fredal, Lisa Ghormley, Susan Green, Carol Grishaw, Jennifer Hayden, Susan Hewens, Brenda J. Hooker, M. Karen Harning, Jean Huneke, Rose Hunter
Row 5: Joyce Jackson, Janet James, Mary Jesse, Christy Jones, Kathy Joy, Debra kadlec, Therese Keating, Ann Marie Kelly, Carol Key, Karen Dickstein, Jill Knechtel, Robin Kruger
Row 6: Mary Beth Kyko, Catherine Lawrence, Joni Lawrence, Eun Lee, Amy Long, Kathey F. Lord, Johanna Lund, Elizabeth Mac Kinnon, Marilyn Mackovjak, Lisa Mann, rose Marentette, Carmen McDowell
Row 7: Molly Mitchell, Mary Molewyk, Sandra Musci, Susan Nevins, Janet Newman, Marcy L. Ortquist, Jeanmarie Otto, Marci Peterhans, Marquite Pierce, Janet Pierson, Rachel Plumley, Frances Potasnik, Cynthia pressprich, Susan J. Robertson, Gilbert RodriqueZ, Deborah Romano, Deborah Ross, Patricia Rouen
Row 8: Abby Scholnick, Nancy Schuster, Cynthia Schwartz, Mary Ellen Sitek, Marqaret Smith, Ann Marie Smith, Cindy Smith, Julie Smrcka, Susan St. Onge, Michelle Stafford, Brenda Stallings, Nancy Steffler, Louise Sullivan, Laure Szatkowski, Bonnie R. Temple, Patricia A. Tevlin
Row 9: Linda L. Travis, Margaret Turner, Heidi Unger, Grace M.J. Valmassoi, Sally Van fleeren, Anne VanLoon, Jan Veseth, Anne MArie Villeneuve, Cynthia vrable, Lori E. Weyland, Theresa Wish, Anne Witham, Laura Wollum, Marla Young
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Top Row: Allison Anderson, Meghan Archer, Christopher Aten, Meredith Bajor, Sarah Belleville, Kimberly Bergere, Courtney Bernier, Diana Blanks, Julie Bluhm, Melanie Bork, Karyn Braley, Kathryn Melody Briones, Christine Brouillard, Alyson Bryson
Row 2: Amy Burk, Kelly Capellari, Carmon Carlson, Krystal Cavaliere, Jeffrey Chiambretti, Christine Cho, Renee Christopher, Holli Clewis, James Conway, Kelly Courtney, Jenna Dahn, Erin Daly, Nicole DeFauw, Stefanie DeVita, Jessica DiVirgil, Debra Dombrowski, Genevieve Donnell
Row 3: Kathleen Donnelly, Jennifer El Aile, William Faulkner, Kimberly Johnson, Danielle Alameda, Margaret Wheeler, Brian D Kaminski Jr, Bridget Fil, Rochelle Weller, Leslie Allen-Huisman, Jennifer Musbach, Kathy Feig, Lori Fellows, Shana Ferguson
Row 4: Lauren Frawley, Ashton Frederick, Molly Gacetta, Stephanie Ganger, Amanda Garcia, Megan Gdowski, Chad Godfrey, Emily Halpern
Row 5: Katherine Hammons, Natalie Hecht, Danielle Hiltz, Taylor Hosner, Jennifer Huber, Holly Huling, Nathaniel Hunt, Ana-Leonor Jay
Row 6: Rachel Jeltema, Jennifer Jones, Lindsey Jones, Sarah Kaherl, Jessica Kehbein, Kendra Leidecker, Vanessa Lelli, Meghan Lemmer, Rachel Levinson, Alexandra Lindsay
Row 7: Amanda MacDonald, Joelle Marineau, Laura Mason, Andrea Masser, Michele McKinney, Charles-Robert Moultry, Kathleen Potempa, Bonnie Hagerty, Nicole Nader, Minna Navvab, Rachael Newnam, Uche Obua, Sara Oles, Ceren Onsan-Fitzpatrick
Row 8: Emily Parobek, Dorasy Paul, Rosalynne Pinga, Sarah Pope, Laura Randall, Sarah Reits, Emma Rew, Annemarie Rozwadowski, Nicole Ruhlman, Lydia Sanok, Grace Savercool, Kimberly Schmidt, Renee Schoenborn, Lisa Schuman, Kaitlyn Seltzer, Catherine Sherwood, Elizabeth Smith
Row 9: Aimee Surma, Stephanie Swinteck, Hanna Taylor, Donnie Tietsema, Andreea Toader, Stephanie Upplegger, Meghan Visnick, Scharnice Ward, Tabytha Whitley, Kimberly Wilke, Carie Wright, Kyleen Young, Kristin Zawacki, Christina Ziegler, Carlotta Zirker
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"This book gives the substance of a course of lectures prepared for students in Harvard university and in the Massachusetts institute of technology." Pref.
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Objective: To examine the relationship between self-reported tobacco smoking and urinary cotinine concentrations in the setting of a remote Aboriginal community. Methods: In a remote Northern Territory (NT) Aboriginal community the relationship between self-reported tobacco smoking and urinary cotinine concentrations was examined as part of a cross-sectional survey of cardiovascular risk factors. Current tobacco smoking was assessed as part of a questionnaire. The concentration of cotinine and cotinine/creatinine ratio (CCR) in a spot urine sample were used as a biochemical marker of nicotine exposure. Results: A total of 237 people took part in the survey, although completed questionnaires and urine results were available for 184 people. Current tobacco smoking was reported by 161 (69 [95% Cl 63 to 75]%) people, with higher rates among males (84/104, 81 [95% Cl 72 to 88]%) than females (77/129, 60 [95% Cl 51 to 68]%, p
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Objective: This paper reports key findings from an exploratory study of factors associated with women's decision to participate in mass mammography screening in Tasmania. In particular, we explored factors that contribute to the choice to participate in screening by women who are outside the primary target group, and for whom the evidence of benefit remains contentious. Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with a small sample of women aged between 40 and 49 years in rural Tasmania who had participated in mammography screening. Results: Key ideas that appeared to shape participation included the fear of breast cancer, trust in technology, and taking responsibility for health. Information provision is also an important factor in shaping participation patterns. Conclusions and implications: In order to facilitate informed consent, information provision in this area should take account of the dominant ideas that shape the decision to participate in breast cancer screening.
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Objective: To develop a physical activity directory (PAD) for Brisbane people over the age of 50 years for distribution by two methods (given or requested), and to determine its effectiveness in raising awareness and encouraging older people to participate in local physical activity options. Methods: Baseline demographic data and stage of change was collected from 224 participants who received the directory. Participants were interviewed by telephone six weeks later to determine their use of the directory on a number of dimensions. Results: Most participants interviewed at follow-up remembered reading the directory. Participants who requested the directory were significantly more likely than those who were given it to: be contemplators, read the directory, plan to ring a number, plan to attend a class, and to share the directory with others. Participants who were contemplators were significantly more likely to have participated in physical activity of their own and rang a number from the directory. The directory increased over half the participants' awareness of local physical activity options, yet only 7% reported ringing a number and 15% reported doing their own physical activity. Conclusions: The directory was more effective in raising awareness about physical activity options than encouraging people to participate in physical activity, and participants with short-term plans to be more active were more likely to have used the directory. Implications: The directory, even when linked with other services, raises awareness about physical activity options, but has minimal short-term influence on participation.
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The plant cyclotides are a fascinating family of circular proteins that contain a cyclic cystine knot motif. The knotted topology and cyclic nature of the cyclotides pose interesting questions about folding mechanisms and how the knotted arrangement of disulfide bonds is formed. In the current study we have examined the oxidative refolding and reductive unfolding of the prototypic cyclotide, kalata B1. A stable two-disulfide intermediate accumulated during oxidative refolding but not in reductive unfolding. Mass spectrometry and NMR spectroscopy were used to show that the intermediate contained a native-like structure with two native disulfide bonds topologically similar to the intermediate isolated for the related cystine knot protein EETI-II (LeNguyen, D., Heitz, A., Chiche, L., El Hajji, M., and Castro B. (1993) Protein Sci. 2, 165-174). However, the folding intermediate observed for kalata B1 is not the immediate precursor of the three-disulfide native peptide and does not accumulate in the reductive unfolding process, in contrast to the intermediate observed for EETI-II. These alternative pathways of linear and cyclic cystine knot proteins appear to be related to the constraints imposed by the cyclic backbone of kalata B1 and the different ring size of the cystine knot. The three-dimensional structure of a synthetic version of the two-disulfide intermediate of kalata B1 in which Ala residues replace the reduced Cys residues provides a structural insight into why the two-disulfide intermediate is a kinetic trap on the folding pathway.
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Biological utilisation of copper requires that the metal, in its ionic forms, be meticulously transported, inserted into enzymes and regulatory proteins, and excess be excreted. To understand the trafficking process, it is crucial that the structures of the proteins involved in the varied processes be resolved. To investigate copper binding to a family of structurally related copper-binding proteins, we have characterised the second Menkes N-terminal domain (MNKr2). The structure, determined using H-1 and N-15 heteronuclear NMR, of the reduced form of MNKr2 has revealed two alpha-helices lying over a single beta-sheet and shows that the binding site, a Cys(X)(2)Cys pair, is located on an exposed loop. H-1-N-15 HSQC experiments demonstrate that binding of Cu(I) causes changes that are localised to conserved residues adjacent to the metal binding site. Residues in this area are important to the delivery of copper by the structurally related Cu(I) chaperones. Complementary site-directed mutagenesis of the adjacent residues has been used to probe the structural roles of conserved residues. (C) 2003 Published by Elsevier Inc.