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1

Tikhomirov, V. M. "Young Bob Minlos." Moscow Mathematical Journal 19, no. 1 (2019): 3–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.17323/1609-4514-2019-19-1-3-5.

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2

Hinshelwood, Bob. "Bob Young 1935‐2019." British Journal of Psychotherapy 36, no. 1 (January 29, 2020): 147–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bjp.12527.

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3

Cummings, William C. "Bob Young and his contributions to animal bioacoustics and underwater acoustics." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 116, no. 4 (October 2004): 2565. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.4785242.

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4

MICHELS, ROBERT. "When I Was a Young Man: A Memoir by Bob Kerrey." American Journal of Psychiatry 159, no. 12 (December 2002): 2129–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.159.12.2129.

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5

Serpkenci, Ray R. "A Window on Young Bob Lusch: Reflections of an Early Student." Journal of Macromarketing 40, no. 3 (June 2, 2020): 305–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0276146720926704.

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The paper is a first-person account of Professor Robert F. Lusch’s early academic career at the University of Oklahoma during the late 1970s and early 1980s by one of his earliest students. The author describes and reflects on what some might consider a tumultuous period in marketing’s disciplinary evolution and suggests how these early years might in fact inform us of Professor Lusch’s later prolific contributions and deep impact on our discipline. Though perhaps more known for his uniquely critical thinking and his seminal contributions to the foundational elements of marketing, the author also tries to shine a light on Bob Lusch as a dedicated teacher, a tireless mentor and as a peerless educator—whose genuine care and friendship to his students knew no bounds. Though on this occasion his passing saddens us as he left us too early, the legacy of this exceptional scholar and educator will always be fondly remembered by his students and friends and will have a profound impact on all future students of marketing.
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6

Chapman, Greg. "Understanding the Scenery: the Royal National Park with Heathcote National Park - by Bob Young and Ann Young." Geographical Research 45, no. 4 (December 2007): 408–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-5871.2007.00479.x.

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7

Thomas, Quincy. "Performing White and Fine." International Review of Qualitative Research 12, no. 2 (May 2019): 165–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/irqr.2019.12.2.165.

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In this article I explore the ways my identity was shaped while I attended Bob Jones University in Greenville, South Carolina. Bob Jones University has been praised by some for its fundamentalist stands, its focus on Christian education, and its tireless pursuit of excellence. Unfortunately for me, a young African American man, this was also a place where I experienced hurtful jokes, slurs, institutional racism, and racist microaggressions. I argue that the aftereffects of these events are analogous to the effects experienced by survivors of posttraumatic stress disorder and sexual abuse victims. I call upon my memories of Bob Jones University and how my time at the university prompted myriad feelings that ran the gamut from painful to poignant.
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8

BORLAND, JEFF. "What Can a Young Labour Economist (or Any Economist) Learn from Bob Gregory?*." Economic Record 82, no. 257 (June 2006): 122–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-4932.2006.00309.x.

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9

Rose, Deborah. "The Rain Keeps Falling." Cultural Studies Review 11, no. 1 (August 12, 2013): 122–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.5130/csr.v11i1.3451.

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The force of disaster hit me in the heart when, as a young woman, I heard Bob Dylan sing ‘Hard Rain’. In a voice stunned by violence, the young man reports on a multitude of forces that drag the world into catastrophe. In the 1960s I heard the social justice in the song. In 2004 the environmental issues ambush me. The song starts and ends in the dying world of trees and rivers. The poet’s words in both domains of justice are eerily prophetic. They call across the music, and across the years, saying that a hard rain is coming. The words bear no story at all; they give us a series of compelling images, an account of impending calamity. The artistry of the poet—Bob (Billy Boy) Dylan—offers sequences of reports that, like Walter Benjamin’s storm from paradise, pile wreckage upon wreckage.
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10

Heffernan, Conor. "Building husky men: Strenuous masculinity in post-depression America." European Journal of American Culture 40, no. 2 (June 1, 2021): 105–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/ejac_00044_1.

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Examining American fitness entrepreneurs from the 1930s, this article examines efforts to reform young, and white, masculine identities through new bodybuilding systems. Centred on Mark Berry, Bob Hoffman and Charles Atlas, three of the decade’s most successful entrepreneurs, the article examines the communities, methods and discourses used to attract customers and create a highly specified form of self-fashioning. In doing so, the article highlights the masculine communities and multiplicities of masculinities operating during this decade for American weight trainers. Importantly all three entrepreneurs focused on a very specific kind of American body, and stemming from this, American masculinity. For Berry, ‘husky’ men came to represent men of physical, moral and mental standing. The ability to withstand pain in exercise, to engage in strenuous activity and gain bodyweight was presented as a metric of one’s success in the world. Likewise, Bob Hoffman focused on the ‘weight lifter’, said to be an ambitious young man capable of succeeding in multiple terrains. Finally, there was Charles Atlas, who made ‘he men’ using his system of dynamic tension. In highlighting the lengths young, white, often affluent, American men went to in order to achieve these identities, the article contributes to the growing interest in American masculinities and the fitness systems they used during times of considerable upheaval.
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11

Jacobs, J. P. "Introduction to the Supplement." Cardiology in the Young 15, S1 (February 2005): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1047951105001290.

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Florida is the fourth largest state in the United States of America. “Heart Week in Florida” is a joint collaborative project sponsored by The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and The Congenital Heart Institute of Florida. The cardiac programme of Children's Hospital of Philadelphia is one of the largest and most prestigious comprehensive cardiac programmes in the world. The Congenital Heart Institute of Florida is the largest programme providing services for patients with congenital cardiac disease in Florida. Both institutions are very grateful to Bob Anderson, and the team at Cardiology in the Young, for their support of “Heart Week in Florida”, and for the opportunity to publish this Supplement. Bob Anderson was a valued faculty member, and tremendous supporter, of both the fourth annual International Symposium on Congenital Heart Disease held at All Children's Hospital and University of South Florida, and the seventh annual Update on Pediatric Cardiovascular Disease organized by Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
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12

Jacobs, Jeffrey P. "Introduction." Cardiology in the Young 16, S1 (January 10, 2006): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1047951105002258.

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As I have described in the introductions to our previously published supplements, Florida is the fourth largest state in the USA. Our “Heart Week” is a joint collaborative project sponsored by The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and The Congenital Heart Institute of Florida. The cardiac programme at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia is one of the largest and most prestigious in the world. Our programme at the Congenital Heart Institute is the largest providing services for patients with congenital cardiac disease in Florida. Both institutions are very grateful to Bob Anderson, and the team at Cardiology in the Young, for their support of “Heart Week”, and for the opportunity to publish this particular Supplement. In February 2005, Bob was a valued faculty member, and tremendous supporter, of both the Fifth Annual International Symposium on Congenital Heart Disease held at All Children's Hospital and University of South Florida, and the Eighth Annual Update on Pediatric Cardiovascular Disease arranged by Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
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13

Drakeford, Mark. "Reviews : Young People Leaving Care : Life After the Children Act 1989 Bob Broad Jessica Kingsley, 1998; £17.95, pbk." Probation Journal 45, no. 4 (December 1998): 243. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/026455059804500416.

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14

Jacobs, Jeffrey P. "Introduction." Cardiology in the Young 14, S1 (February 2004): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1047951104006225.

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Florida is the fourth largest state in the United States of America, and the Congenital Heart Institute of Florida is the largest programme providing services for congenital cardiac surgery in Florida. Our Institute is very grateful to Bob Anderson, and the team at Cardiology in the Young, for their support of our programme, and for the opportunity to publish this Supplement. Bob Anderson was a valued faculty member, and tremendous supporter, of our third annual symposium, held at the All Children's Hospital and The University of South Florida, and devoted to echocardiographic, anatomic, surgical, and pathologic correlations of congenital cardiac disease. Our Symposium to be held in 2004, coinciding with the appearance of this supplement, will mark the third consecutive year that Bob Anderson has traveled to Saint Petersburg, Florida as a Featured Guest Speaker. In 2002, at our Second Annual Symposium, the focus of our four-day meeting was the abnormalities of the ventricular inlets and atrioventricular valves, with a full day devoted to echocardiography, followed by three single days spent discussing the tricuspid valve, the mitral valve, and the common atrioventricular valve. In 2003, at our third annual symposium, the focus of our four-day meeting was controversies concerning the hypoplastic left heart syndrome, again beginning with a full day devoted to echocardiography, followed by three single days this time discussing staged palliation by means of the Norwood sequence, replacement by cardiac transplantation, and biventricular repair. A feature of the symposium was the numerous debates. In 2003, our featured guest speakers, in addition to Bob Anderson, were Leonard L. Bailey and his wife Nancy, from Loma Linda University Medical Center, Loma Linda, California. Bob Anderson will again return in 2004, when our other featured guest speaker will also be from Great Ormond Street, namely Martin J. Elliott. The focus of our meeting in 2004 will be controversies concerning the arterial switch, the Ross procedure, and reconstructions of the right ventricular outflow tract, again beginning with a full day devoted to echocardiography, followed by three single days discussing the pulmonary valve, the aortic valve and the Ross procedure, and the arterial switch procedure, with daily debates.
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15

Furlong, Andy. "Book Reviews : □ Youth and Social Policy: Youth Citizenship and Young Careers Bob Coles UCL Press, London, 1995, 246pp £35.00 hbk, £12.95 pbk." Critical Social Policy 16, no. 46 (February 1996): 140–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/026101839601604609.

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16

Johnston, Tiffany L. "American Dionysus: Carl W. Hamilton (1886–1967), collector of Italian Renaissance art." Journal of the History of Collections 31, no. 2 (October 31, 2018): 411–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jhc/fhy026.

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Abstract For nearly a decade Carl W. Hamilton was in possession of one of the most important private collections of Italian Renaissance painting in America. A self-made millionaire from humble beginnings, the young Hamilton captivated the art dealer Joseph Duveen and Duveen’s foremost experts in Italian Renaissance painting, Bernard and Mary Berenson. By inspiring and instructing Hamilton, Duveen and the Berensons hoped to focus his wealth and ambition to create a great collection and thereby profit by both him and the glory of his achievement. Though Hamilton’s personal collection proved ephemeral, many of his most important works of art nevertheless found their way into American public collections. Furthermore, Hamilton’s formative collecting experience – which developed his prejudices and preferences, sharpened his keen negotiating skills and solidified his zeal for collecting – helped to shape two significant collections of Old Masters in the Carolinas: the Museum & Gallery at Bob Jones University and the North Carolina Museum of Art.
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17

Latremouille, Jodi Marie. "Raising a Reader: Teachings from the Four Directions." Language and Literacy 18, no. 1 (April 3, 2016): 99. http://dx.doi.org/10.20360/g2959d.

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In this two-part life writing script, I narrate and interpret my experiences as a teacher and parent of a “reluctant reader” in the early phases of learning to read. In the first part, I address the myths and panics that often overtake parents of young reluctant readers, who may fear that their children are at risk of falling behind their peers in reading. In the second part, using the Four Directions teachings taught by Elder Bob Cardinal of the Enoch Nation in a graduate holistic curriculum studies course at the University of Alberta, I interpret the process of learning to read as a relational and careful act of ceremony, which literally overflows the dominant interpretation of reading as a technical, fragmented skill of decoding. The lovely, difficult work of learning to read, when treated as a gift between generations, opens up possibilities for “renewing a common world” (Arendt, 2006, p. 196).
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18

Hall, Chris. "Kinship care: The placement choice for children and young people. Edited by Bob Broad, Russell House, Lyme Regis, 2001. 168pp. ISBN 1-898924-96-1." Child Abuse Review 11, no. 5 (2002): 332–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/car.745.

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19

Selderslaghs, Bob. "Mantle of the Expert: Drama en actieonderzoek in het kunstonderwijs." Forum+ 27, no. 1 (March 1, 2020): 36–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/forum2020.1.seld.

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Abstract Bij Mantle of the Expert wordt drama als leermiddel ingezet. Het is een onderwijsbenadering die werd ontwikkeld in het Verenigd Koninkrijk en intussen ook voet aan de grond krijgt in Vlaanderen. Het basisidee van Mantle of the Expert is dat leerlingen hun schoolcurriculum afwerken alsof ze een groep experten zijn: wetenschappers in een laboratorium, archeologen die een tombe uitgraven, een reddingsteam tijdens een natuurramp… Ze trekken de figuurlijke ‘mantel’ van een expert aan en creëren samen met hun leerkracht een fictieve wereld. Daarin worden ze gecast als een team van experten dat in opdracht van een klant een belangrijke opdracht uitvoert. Bob Selderslaghs introduceerde de methode in Vlaanderen en breidt deze door middel van participatief actieonderzoek verder uit van leermiddel naar leerdoel. Hij formuleert een aantal voorwaarden voor theatermakers en teaching artists om van jonge deelnemers volwaardige participanten te maken in een artistiek onderzoeks- en creatieproces. Mantle of the Expert uses drama as a learning tool. This educational approach was developed in the UK and is gaining a foothold in Flanders too. The main idea behind Mantle of the Expert is that pupils complete their curriculum by acting as if they are a group of experts: scientists in a laboratory, archaeologists digging up a tomb, a rescue team facing a natural disaster… They take on the mantle of an expert and create a fictional world together with their teacher. Subsequently, they are cast to perform an important task for a client. Bob Selderslaghs introduced this method in Flanders, expanding it from a learning tool to a learning objective through participatory action research. He lists several prerequisites to help theatremakers and teaching artists turn young participants into full-fledged contributors to the artistic research and creation process.
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20

Kraft, Michael G. "Book Review: Bob Jessop, Brigitte Young and Christoph Scherrer (eds), Financial Cultures and Crisis Dynamics (Routledge, London, UK and New York, NY, USA 2015) 320 pp." Review of Keynesian Economics 5, no. 1 (January 2017): 135–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.4337/roke.2017.01.10.

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21

Jacobs, Jeffrey P. "Introduction." Cardiology in the Young 16, S3 (September 2006): 1–3. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1047951106001107.

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As I have emphasized in previous supplements, Florida is the fourth largest state in the United States of America. The programme for care of children with congenital cardiac malformations at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia is one of the largest, and most prestigious and comprehensive in the world. The Congenital Heart Institute of Florida is the largest programme providing services for patients with congenital cardiac disease in Florida. “Heart Week in Florida”, the joint collaborative project sponsored by the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia together with the Congenital Heart Institute of Florida, has now become recognized as one of the major planks of continuing medical and nursing education for those working in the fields of diagnosis and treatment of heart disease in neonates, infants, children, and young adults. In 2006, however, we broke from our previous mould, since the component of our “week” organized by the group from Philadelphia was organized in Phoenix, Arizona, thanks to the support provided by our colleagues working at Children's Hospital in Phoenix. It was a huge success, diminished only slightly by the inclement weather facing those who needed to journey back from sunny Arizona and Florida to the frozen and snowy northeast coast of the United States. All institutions involved with the organization of the events of 2006, nonetheless, are very grateful to Bob Anderson, and the team at Cardiology in the Young, for their support of “Heart Week in Florida”, and for the opportunity to publish this Supplement.
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22

Anand, Shankar, Akshatha C, Libin Babu Cherian, and Ramachandra C. "Nodular Lymphocyte Predominant Hodgkin Lymphoma - A Retrospective Immunohistochemical Study of Patients in Bangalore, Karnataka." Journal of Evidence Based Medicine and Healthcare 8, no. 23 (June 7, 2021): 1966–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.18410/jebmh/2021/369.

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BACKGROUND The term Hodgkin’s lymphoma includes classical Hodgkin lymphoma (CHL) and the less common nodular lymphocyte predominant Hodgkin lymphoma (NLPHL). NLPHL is a B cell neoplasm usually characterised by nodular or follicular and diffuse proliferation of small lymphocytes with single scattered large neoplastic cells (LP/L&H/Popcorn cells). NLPHL accounts for 10 % of all Hodgkin lymphoma. METHODS This is a retrospective study. Histopathology slides and blocks of 24 cases of nodular lymphocyte predominant Hodgkin lymphoma were collected from the archives of histopathology from 2011 to 2015. The immunohistochemistry slides of the corresponding histopathology cases were also assembled. Both the slides were reviewed by three expert onco-pathologists and IHC markers were studied and compared. RESULTS Patients were mostly young between 20 and 40 years (16 / 24, 66.67 %). There was a distinct male preponderance (20 / 24, 83.3 %). Most cases involved cervical, axillary or inguinal lymph nodes, with cervical lymph nodes being the most common (13 / 24, 54 %). It was found that CD45, CD20, CD79a and PAX5 staining highlighted the LP cells in all twenty-four cases, while OCT - 2 and BOB - 1 were highlighted in twenty-three cases (95.8 %), which was statistically significant. CD3 and CD5 IHC staining on T cell rosettes and background reactive T cells were examined, and it was seen that CD3 expression was far more consistent than CD5 expression in T cell rosettes and reactive T cells. Also, it was seen that, those cases which were double positive for CD3 and CD5 constitutes only eight cases (8 / 24, 33.3 %). CONCLUSIONS CD3 is a more consistent marker than CD5 in demonstrating surrounding reactive T cells in NLPHL. CD45, PAX5, CD20, BOB - 1 and OCT - 2 are consistent immunohistochemical markers of LP cells. KEYWORDS Nodular Lymphocyte Predominant Hodgkin Lymphoma (NLPHL), Classical Hodgkin Lymphoma (CHL), Cluster Differentiation (CD), Lymphocyte Predominant Cells (LP Cells), Lymphocyte and Histiocytic Cell (L & H Cell)
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23

Nortje, Windell, and Pieter Du Toit. "A Fresh Perspective on Historical Sexual Abuse: The Case of Hewitt v S 2017 1 SACR 309 (SCA)." Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal 20 (December 18, 2017): 1–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/1727-3781/2017/v20i0a2229.

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Sexual crimes continues to be a scourge in our society. It is therefore not surprising that the prevention and criminalisation of sexual crimes in South Africa has received a large amount of attention over the last few years. Contrarily, the matter of historical sexual abuse has received only occasional consideration. Cases of historical sexual abuse present numerous challenges to all parties involved. The victims of historical sexual abuse, often children at the time, are now adults. Some of these victims might not want to relive the experience or confront the offender. On the other hand, the offender might have been rehabilitated and become a respected citizen. In Hewitt v S 2017 1 SACR 309 (SCA) the Supreme Court of Appeal heard the appeal against the sentence of Bob Hewitt, a retired tennis champion. He was convicted of committing numerous sexual offences against young girls. The first of these crimes was committed more than three decades ago. This case note analyses the decision by the SCA while it also examines historical sexual abuse more generally in South Africa as well as in England and Wales, in order to establish whether any lessons can be learned from previous cases and laws as implemented in these countries.
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Grabe, William. "Shaping an agenda through experience(s)." Language Teaching 50, no. 1 (December 21, 2016): 120–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s026144481600032x.

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After finishing a B.A. degree in History and Political Sciences from Valparaiso University, I began my post-undergraduate life going into the U. S. Peace Corps and spending three years as an English as a foreign language (EFL) teacher in lycees in Morocco. After all, in 1973, agreeing to a free summer vacation in Morocco for Peace Corps training, if nothing else, seemed like a good deal. Little did I know that an EFL/ESL (English as a second language)/applied linguistics life would begin at that point. I did learn that I liked teaching (which surprised me a bit) and the opportunities for creativity it provided (even if teaching with ‘Martin and Jillian’ (Broughton 1968) and First things first (Alexander 1972) (for those who remember). As a young teacher, I vividly remember, as a break from the routine, teaching my senior students the lyrics to ‘All Along the Watchtower,’ first the Bob Dylan version, then the Jimi Hendricks version. Sometimes we just have to take some chances. Morocco was also a great place to be in the middle of multilingualism in action: Moroccan Arabic, Berber, Modern Standard Arabic, French, Spanish, and English. For many of my students, English was their fifth language.
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25

Bailin, Miriam. "VICTORIAN READERS." Victorian Literature and Culture 44, no. 3 (August 30, 2016): 727–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1060150316000012.

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There is, perhaps, no richer archive of Victorian reading experiences than Victorian literature itself. We know how Maggie Tulliver, child of the rural Midlands in the early years of the nineteenth century, felt when reading the Imitation of Christ in the bleak aftermath of her father's bankruptcy, how the young David Copperfield felt sitting on his bed in Suffolk, “reading as if for life” in the shadow of an abusive home life (56; ch. iv), and how a besieged Jane Eyre felt reading Bewick's History of British Birds in the window-seat at Gateshead; we know because Eliot, Dickens, and Brontë trace those feelings and their significance in vivid detail. We know more: Maggie's book, is a “little, old, clumsy book. . .the corners turned down in many places” with “certain passages” marked in “strong pen and ink,” one of a job lot brought to her by Bob, the packman (301; bk. 4, ch. 3). We know that the novels available to David from the small collection on his father's shelf were largely picaresque tales from a hundred years earlier, Gil Blas, Humphrey Clinker, and Roderick Random; and that Jane was reading the second volume of Bewick's Birds with its evocative vignettes in the introductory pages, an edition whose letter-press the ten-year-old Jane “cared little for” (14; vol. 1, ch. 1).
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Jędrzejko, Paweł. "The Times They Are A-Changin’." Review of International American Studies 12, no. 2 (December 23, 2019): 5–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.31261/rias.8007.

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The article, whose central premise is to address the ellusive issue of the Zeitgeist of the "long 1968," revolves around the appeal of the singer-songwriter activism and the international, cross-cultural popularity of protest songs that defy political borders and linguistic divides. The argument opens with reference to Bob Dylan's famous song "The Times They Are A-Changing," whose evergreen topicality resulted not only in the emergence of its numerous official and unofficial covers and reinterpretations, but also generated translations into all major languages of the world, and which has provided inspiration to engaged artists, whose present-day remakes serve as a medium of criticism of the unjust mechanisms of power affecting contemporary societies. The "spirit of the 1968," which evades clear-cut definitions attempted by cultural historians and sociologists, seems to lend itself to capturing in terms of what Beate Kutschke dubs "mental" criteria, perhaps best comprehended in the analysis of the emotional reactions to simple messages of exhortative poetry or simple protest songs, which appeal to the shared frustrations of self-organized, grassroot movements and offer them both the sense of purpose and a glimpse of hope. In this sense, the Zeitgeist of '68 is similar to that of revolutionary Romanticism that united the young engaged intellectuals on both sides of the Atlantic, and whose messages reverberate in the activist songwriters' work until today. As such, the essay provides the keynote to the whole issue, which explores some of the transnational legacies of "1969."
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Sueda, Shozo, Hiroaki Kohno, and Naoto Ochi. "Young 13 Years Old Boy with Vasospastic Angina." Journal of the Japanese Coronary Association 19, no. 4 (2013): 355–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.7793/jcoron.19.509.

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Kumar, Satish. "Anonychia Congenita in a Young Boy - A Rare Entity." Journal of Advanced Research in Medicine 07, no. 01 (August 25, 2020): 20–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.24321/2349.7181.202007.

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Congenital anonychia in isolated form is a rare anomaly in which there is absence of nails of fingers and toes since birth. Other ectodermal and mesodermal defects in the body are absent. Here, we report a case of 16 year old male having rare congenital disorder anonychia in his hands and feet except in little finger of right hand, lateral two digits of right foot and thumbs of both hands with deformed nails. All other systemic examinations were normal. His parents and siblings were normal as were the second degree relatives.
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29

Michael, Nelson L., Julie A. E. Nelson, Vineet N. KewalRamani, George Chang, Stephen J. O’Brien, John R. Mascola, Barbara Volsky, et al. "Exclusive and Persistent Use of the Entry Coreceptor CXCR4 by Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 from a Subject Homozygous for CCR5 Δ32." Journal of Virology 72, no. 7 (July 1, 1998): 6040–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jvi.72.7.6040-6047.1998.

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ABSTRACT Individuals who are homozygous for the 32-bp deletion in the gene coding for the chemokine receptor and major human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) coreceptor CCR5 (CCR5 −/−) lack functional cell surface CCR5 molecules and are relatively resistant to HIV-1 infection. HIV-1 infection in CCR5 −/− individuals, although rare, has been increasingly documented. We now report that the viral quasispecies from one such individual throughout disease is homogenous, T cell line tropic, and phenotypically syncytium inducing (SI); exclusively uses CXCR4; and replicates well in CCR5−/− primary T cells. The recently discovered coreceptors BOB and Bonzo are not used. Although early and persistent SI variants have been described in longitudinal studies, this is the first demonstration of exclusive and persistent CXCR4 usage. With the caveat that the earliest viruses available from this subject were from approximately 4 years following primary infection, these data suggest that HIV-1 infection can be mediated and persistently maintained by viruses which exclusively utilize CXCR4. The lack of evolution toward the available minor coreceptors in this subject underscores the dominant biological roles of the major coreceptors CCR5 and CXCR4. This and two similar subjects (R. Biti, R. Ffrench, J. Young, B. Bennetts, G. Stewart, and T. Liang, Nat. Med. 3:252–253, 1997; I. Theodoreu, L. Meyer, M. Magierowska, C. Katlama, and C. Rouzioux, Lancet 349:1219–1220, 1997) showed relatively rapid CD4+ T-cell declines despite average or low initial viral RNA load. Since viruses which use CXCR4 exclusively cannot infect macrophages, these data have implications for the relative infection of the T-cell compartment versus the macrophage compartment in vivo and for the development of CCR5-based therapeutics.
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Gamble, Andrew. "Book reviews : Thatcherism: A tale of two nations Bob Jessop, Kevin Bonnett, Simon Bromley and Tom Ling Polity, Cambridge, 1988, viii, 219pp, £25.00 hbk. One of Us Hugo Young Macmillan, London, 1989, ix, 570pp, £16.95 hbk." Critical Social Policy 10, no. 29 (October 1990): 137–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/026101839001002915.

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31

Popple, Keith. "Bob Coles, Youth and Policy, Youth Citizenship and Young Careers, UCL Press, London, 1995, ix + 246 pp., hard £37.00 paper £12.95. - Gill Jones, Leaving Home, Open University Press, Buckingham, 1995, viii + 178 pp., hard £37.50 paper £12.99." Journal of Social Policy 25, no. 3 (July 1996): 432–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0047279400023734.

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32

Cohen, Stephen D. "Walter Wilson Stothers (1946–2009)." Glasgow Mathematical Journal 52, no. 3 (August 25, 2010): 711–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0017089510000534.

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Walter Wilson Stothers was born in Glasgow on 8 November 1946. A third (youngest) son, he had the identical name to his father. From childhood, however, he had always been known by his middle name ‘Wilson’, so that his father, a Glasgow GP, would never be referred to as ‘Old Walter’. His mother, as Jean Young Kyle, had herself graduated in Mathematics in 1927, a rare achievement for a woman at that time. After attending the local primary school 1952–1956, Wilson completed his primary education in the preparatory classes in Allan Glen's School, then a distinguished Glasgow boys school with a scientific emphasis, progressing to the secondary school in 1958 and ending by becoming Dux in 1964. He also played in the school rugby first XV. From 1964–1968 he was a student in the Science Faculty of Glasgow University. His original intention was to take Honours in Chemistry and, indeed, he won the Chemistry prize in his first year. But he excelled in all subjects, winning the Faraday medal in the Intermediate Honours (second year) class in Natural Philosophy (Physics). After that he concentrated on Mathematics and became the top student, gaining a First Class Honours degree, as well as the Cunninghame Medal and a Jack Scholarship to Peterhouse College, Cambridge (1968). Before commencing postgraduate studies he married Andrea Watson in September 1968. At Cambridge from 1968–1971 he studied for a Ph.D. in number theory under the supervision of Peter Swinnerton-Dyer and graduated in 1972 with the thesis Some Discrete Triangle Groups. By then he was becoming aware of the strange realm inhabited by mathematicians that he seemed to be entering. So when his Cambridge room-mate Bob Odoni, at a research meeting they were attending as postgrads, asked, ‘Wilson, do you realise that we are the only normal people here’, Wilson felt compelled to respond, ‘What makes you think that we are normal?’
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Desantis, CET, CBCO, Donna L., Kendall A. Leser, PhD, and James D. Blando, PhD. "Baseline assessment of a potassium iodide distribution for nuclear power plant emergencies in the Canadian-United States border region." Journal of Emergency Management 18, no. 6 (November 1, 2020): 499–509. http://dx.doi.org/10.5055/jem.2020.0494.

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Objective: This study sought to evaluate resident demographics and resident understanding of the proper use of potassium iodide (KI) pills as a countermeasure in the event of a nuclear power plant emergency. We also described expected behaviors of community members in the event of a nuclear accident. Design: The study design utilized a cross-sectional survey with a validated written questionnaire. Subjects, Participants: The study subjects were Canadian residents living within the primary emergency planning zone of the Fermi 2 nuclear power reactor. There was a 77 percent participation rate (n = 180) in Amherst Point and 61 percent for Bois Blanc Island (commonly referred to as Bob-Lo Island) (n = 57).Main Outcome Measure(s): The primary study outcome measures were the number of knowledge-based questions survey respondents correctly answered about proper KI use (Ksum) and various behavior-based survey questions in the context of the extended parallel process model (EPPM).Results: Overall, we found that residents in general had a very low overall comprehension of proper KI use. We found that most resident demographics (eg, age, gender) did not significantly impact their knowledge of proper KI use but did find that households with children under 13 years of age tended to have higher comprehension scores than households without young children. Most residents reported that if they thought they were exposed to radiation they would go to the hospital or call 911 and few residents knew their evacuation routes, few were aware of the emergency siren, none knew where the reception center was located, and most did not have an emergency kit in their home. The majority of the survey respondents did indicate that they would evacuate if told to do so by their government.Conclusions: Public health outreach is crucial for KI distribution programs because of the overall low pre-existing comprehension in communities. Also, hospitals and 911 must be prepared to deal with higher volume of residents seeking help should an accident occur.
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Shi, Lewis Zhichang, and Wei Zheng. "Early lead exposure increases the leakage of the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier, in vitro." Human & Experimental Toxicology 26, no. 3 (March 2007): 159–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0960327107070560.

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The cell type constructing the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier (BCB) is entirely different, ie, endothelia in BBB and epithelia in BCB. Nonetheless, both barriers share a common character - the tight junctions (TJ) between adjacent cells. This study investigated the consequence of lead (Pb) exposure on the tightness of BCB. In an in vitro BCB transwell model, using immortalized choroidal epithelial Z310 cells, we found that early exposure to Pb (prior to the formation of tight barrier) at 5 and 10 μM, significantly reduced the tightness of BCB, as evidenced by a 20% reduction in transepithelial electrical resistance (TEER) values ( P <0.05), and >20% increase in the paracellular permeability of [14C]sucrose ( P <0.05). Exposure to Pb after the formation of tight barrier, however, did not cause any detectable barrier dysfunction. RT-PCR and Western blot analyses on typical TJ proteins revealed that Pb exposure decreased both the mRNA and protein levels of claudin-1, with the membrane-bound claudin-1 more profoundly affected than cytosolic claudin-1. Pb exposure, however, had no significant effect on ZO1 and occludin. These data suggest that Pb exposure selectively alters the cellular level of claudin-1, which, in turn, reduces the tightness and augments the permeability of tight blood-CSF barrier. The immature barrier appears to be more vulnerable to Pb toxicity than the mature, well-developed, brain barrier, the fact possibly contributing to Pb-induced neurotoxicity among young children.
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35

Russell, Thomas (Toney) A. "Young Practitioners Forum." Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma 29 (November 2015): S23—S24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/bot.0000000000000431.

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36

Canedo, Gaby Vallejo. "Young Adult Literature in Bolivia." Bookbird: A Journal of International Children's Literature 52, no. 3 (2014): 91–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bkb.2014.0110.

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Cannada, Lisa K. "Introduction: Young Practitioners Forum Supplement." Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma 25 (December 2011): S99—S100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/bot.0b013e318237b6f6.

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38

Yamanaka, Hisashi. "Gout and hyperuricemia in young people." Current Opinion in Rheumatology 23, no. 2 (March 2011): 156–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/bor.0b013e3283432d35.

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39

Chan, Daniel S. "Femoral Neck Fractures in Young Patients." Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma 33 (January 2019): S7—S11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/bot.0000000000001366.

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Medda, Suman, Tyler Snoap, and Eben A. Carroll. "Treatment of Young Femoral Neck Fractures." Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma 33 (January 2019): S1—S6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/bot.0000000000001369.

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41

Meinberg, Eric G. "Medicolegal Information for the Young Traumatologist." Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma 26 (September 2012): S27—S31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/bot.0b013e3182644eb3.

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42

Kusnezov, Nicholas, John C. Dunn, Jeffrey M. DeLong, and Brian R. Waterman. "Sternoclavicular Reconstruction in the Young Active Patient." Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma 30, no. 4 (April 2016): e111-e117. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/bot.0000000000000483.

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43

Duffin, Matthew, and Holly T. Pilson. "Technologies for Young Femoral Neck Fracture Fixation." Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma 33 (January 2019): S20—S26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/bot.0000000000001367.

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44

Halvorson, Jason. "Reduction Techniques for Young Femoral Neck Fractures." Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma 33 (January 2019): S12—S19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/bot.0000000000001370.

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45

Mairawita, Mairawita, Trimurti Habazar, Ahsol Hasyim, and Nasril Nasir. "POTENSI TRIGONA SPP. SEBAGAI AGEN PENYEBAR BAKTERI RALSTONIA SOLANACEARUM PHYLOTIPE IV PENYEBAB PENYAKIT DARAH PADA TANAMAN PISANG." Jurnal Hama dan Penyakit Tumbuhan Tropika 12, no. 1 (February 8, 2012): 92–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.23960/j.hptt.11292-101.

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Banana blood disease (Blood Disease Bacteria, BDB) caused by Ralstonia solanacearum Phylotype IV is the most important banana disease in Indonesia. So far, information on the spread of disease by insects is very limited. The research was aimed to determine the role of insect as a disseminator of R. solanacearum Phylotype IV and to determine the amount of BDB inoculum carried by each individual insect. The experiment was conducted in May - September 2008. Samples of insects (adult insects, the young insects, larvae, eggs), nectar, and pollen were taken from a colony of Trigona spp. collected from BDB endemic area, Baso plateau (876 m asl) using purposive sampling method. Active adult insects were collected from the BDB infected banana flowers and healthy banana flowers. BDB on adult insects was isolated from the caput and abdomen, while for the young insects, larvae and pupae the isolation source were not differentiated. Each of the samples was rinsed, macerated, and cultured on medium containing Triphenyl Tetrazolium Chloride (TTC). BDB isolate characterization and identification were conducted through morphological, physiological, and pathogenicity tests. The parameter observed was the: population of BDB (cfu/ml) on each stage of insect development. The results showed that BDB can be isolated from the outside and the inside of the body of an adult, a young insect, pupa, larva also on pollen and nectar but it was not found in eggs. BDB population was higher in inside part fo the insect body in each phase of the development of the insect. From all phases, the BDB was higher in inner part of the body of adult insects which have visited infected banana flower.
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46

Kočovský, Pavel. "Preface." Pure and Applied Chemistry 82, no. 7 (January 1, 2010): iv. http://dx.doi.org/10.1351/pac20108207iv.

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The International Conference on Organometallic Chemistry Directed Towards Organic Synthesis (OMCOS) traditionally brings together chemists from industry and academia from all over the world to present and discuss the latest advances in new metal-catalyzed and -mediated reactions, novel preparations and reactions of organometallic reagents, mechanistic insight into important metal-based reactions, and new or improved methods for the synthesis of functional molecules and materials, in which the metal plays a key role.The symposium came to the UK for the first time, following the successful series of OMCOS meetings held in Fort Collins (1981), Dijon (1983), Kyoto (1985), Vancouver (1987), Florence (1989), Utrecht (1991), Kobe (1993), Santa Barbara (1995), Göttingen (1997), Versailles (1999), Taipei (2001), Toronto (2003), Geneva (2005), and Nara (2007). Since Glasgow is the hometown of Peter Pauson, who can be regarded as the founding father of the OMCOS agenda, one can even say that OMCOS came home, after so many years. The symposium was held in the modern Royal Concert Hall in the heart of Glasgow, the largest city in Scotland and the birthplace of the industrial revolution. About 500 participants attended the symposium; particularly large delegations arrived from Japan, Germany, China, and the UK.The symposium program featured 5 plenary lectures, 18 invited lectures, 15 short communications, and one OMCOS Award Lecture (sponsored by Springer Verlag). The topics spanned the broadest area of the OMCOS agenda; particularly interesting was the direct comparison of the two approaches to metathesis, as illustrated by the key players themselves, Profs. Bob Grubbs and Richard Schrock. A number of contributions were focused on C–H activation, which culminated in the lecture delivered by Prof. Keith Fagnou of the University of Ottawa, Canada, the recipient of the OMCOS Award. Those who attended the symposium, as well as the international chemistry community, were then shocked a few months later by learning that this brilliant young scientist became a victim of the swine flu; he will be remembered by all of us.About 350 poster presentations further contributed to this exciting event and highlighted the strength, diversity, and novelty with which this science is being practiced. On the basis of the assessment by a distinguished international jury, 12 posters were selected for OMCOS-15 Poster Awards, sponsored by Springer Verlag.This issue of Pure and Applied Chemistry comprises a collection of 19 papers based on the lectures delivered at OMCOS-15, thereby offering the readers a glimpse of the fascinating chemical achievements communicated at the symposium.The series will continue with OMCOS-16, which will be held in Shanghai, China, 24-28 July 2011, under the chairmanship of Profs. Shengming Ma and Kuiling Ding (www.omcos16.org).Pavel KočovskýConference Chair
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Rhea, Elizabeth M., Eileen Ruth S. Torres, Jacob Raber, and William A. Banks. "Insulin BBB pharmacokinetics in young apoE male and female transgenic mice." PLOS ONE 15, no. 1 (January 31, 2020): e0228455. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0228455.

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48

Rangachari, Devika. "Substance or Illusion?: Young Adult Literature in India." Bookbird: A Journal of International Children's Literature 47, no. 1 (2009): 18–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bkb.0.0129.

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Naidoo, Beverley. "Braving the Dark in Writing for Young People." Bookbird: A Journal of International Children's Literature 50, no. 3 (2012): 47–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bkb.2012.0100.

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50

Hillhouse, Joanne C. "Wadadli Pen and Young Writers in the Caribbean." Bookbird: A Journal of International Children's Literature 51, no. 4 (2014): 63–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bkb.2014.0020.

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