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Seventeen-year old Dennis O'Neill was a precocious talent. Widnes
coach Joe Egan put him straight into the first team after he had
signed as a professional in the summer of 1966. Not only Egan, but
other Rugby League pundits of the day regarded him as "the best
teenage prospect since Alex Murphy" In only his second season at
the age of 19, he was selected for the Lancashire side to play
Yorkshire in January 1968.The game was appropriately played at
Naughton Park, Widnes. O'Neill's sensational match winning try was
described nearly four decades later as "The Greatest Try" by a
local journalist. The description inspired the title of Anthony J.
Quinn's book. Not only with a brisk season by season narrative, but
with numerous references to contemporary press reports, the book
vividly portrays Dennis O'Neill's thrilling performances for Widnes
in the late 1960s and early 1970s. It also highlights his constant
injury problems and gives the reader an insight into events at
Widnes RLFC during that period in its history and is interspersed
with pictures and press cuttings. In addition, the author refers to
several letters and articles that were published in the local
press, commenting on the poor state of British Rugby League in
O'Neill's prime playing days.
This monograph presents an intuitive theory of trial wave functions
for strongly interacting fermions in fractional quantum Hall
states. The correlation functions for the proposed fermion
interactions follow a novel algebraic approach that harnesses the
classical theory of invariants and semi-invariants of binary forms.
This approach can be viewed as a fitting and far-reaching
generalization of Laughlin's approach to trial wave functions.
Aesthetically viewed, it illustrates an attractive symbiosis
between the theory of invariants and the theory of correlations.
Early research into numerical diagonalization computations for
small numbers of electrons shows strong agreement with the
constructed trial wave functions.The monograph offers researchers
and students of condensed matter physics an accessible discussion
of this interesting area of research.
Many scholars of sub-Saharan Africa agree that inward-oriented
development policies have hampered economic development in the
region. Quinn questions traditional explanations for the low
economic growth levels of sub-Saharan African countries by showing
that majority state ownership of enterprise is a sufficient
condition for inward-oriented policies and that this variable is a
better predictor of such policies than other current explanations
in the development literature. Supporting his observations through
compelling case studies, Quinn offers a major statement that will
be of interest to anyone concerned about African political and
economic conditions and the future welfare of African peoples
struggling to come to terms with the imperatives of a changing
global economy.
Endotoxins are potentially toxic compounds produced by
Gram-negative bacteria including some pathogens. Unlike exotoxins,
which are secreted in soluble form by live bacteria, endotoxins are
comprised of structural components of bacteria. Endotoxins can
cause a whole-body inflammatory state, sepsis, leading to low blood
pressure, multiple organ dysfunction syndrome and death. This book
brings together contributions from researchers in the forefront of
these subjects. It is divided into two sections: the first dealing
with how endotoxins are synthesized and end up on the bacterial
surface. The second discussed how endotoxins activate the Toll-like
receptor TLR4 and, in turn, how TLR4 generates the molecular
signals leading to infectious and inflammatory diseases. The way
endotoxins interact with the host cells is fundamental to
understanding the mechanism of sepsis, and recent research on these
aspects of endotoxins has served to illuminate previously
undescribed functions of the innate immune system. This volume
presents a description of endotoxins according to their genetic
constitution, structure, function and mode of interaction with host
cells.
The last few years have witnessed an explosion of both interest and
knowledge about apoptosis, the process by which a cell actively
commits suicide. The number of publications on the topic has
increased from nothing in the early 1980s to more than 10,000
papers annually today. It is now well recognized that apoptosis is
essential in many aspects of normal development and is required for
maintaining tissue homeostasis. The idea that life requires death
seems somewhat paradoxical, but cell suicide is essential for an
animal to survive. For example, without selective destruction of
"non-self" T cells, an animal would lack immunity. Similarly,
meaningful neural connections in the brain are whittled from a mass
of cells. Further, developmental cell remodeling during tissue
maturation involves programmed cell death as the major mechanism
for functional and structural safe transition of undifferentiated
cells to more specialized counterparts. Apoptosis research, with
roots in biochemistry, developmental and cell biology, genetics,
and immunology, embraces this long-ignored natural law. Failure to
properly regulate apoptosis can have catastrophic consequences.
Cancer and many diseases (AIDS, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's
disease, heart attack, stroke, etc. ) are thought to arise from
deregulation of apoptosis. As apoptosis emerges as a key biological
regulatory mechanism, it has become harder and harder to keep up
with new developments in this field.
Ethics and Empowerment is a major contribution to the ongoing
debate about the role of business in society. People expect more
meaning and empowerment at work at a time when competitive
pressures are seducing business into taking ethical short-cuts. How
is this to be reconciled? Through a thorough examination of the
issues of power, control and autonomy addressing such questions as
empowerment being a matter of justice, through case-study based
examinations of the organisational experiences of empowerment
programmes and through looking at the ethics and empowerment debate
from the wider perspective of business and social responsibility,
this book seeks to make ethics more relevant and accessible to
today's business world.
The subject for a volume on the fat-soluble vitamins needs no
justification considering the importance of this group of nutrients
and the rate of expan sion of our knowledge of its role in cell
biology, genetics, and disease. The level of our understanding has
clearly moved from knowing what fat soluble vitamins do to how they
perform their functions. Hand in hand with a knowledge of their
molecular mechanisms of action is the recognition that vitamins are
used sparingly, and regeneration processes operate in certain cases
to recycle vitamins from their metabolites. We have divided the
volume into alphabetical sections beginning with vitamin A and the
carotenoids through vitamins D, E, F, and K, and ending with
coenzyme Q. The contributors are all acknowledged experts in their
particular fields and have made significant contributions to
published research results. All have worked assiduously to deliver
the product of their labors on a restricted time scale and to
provide the most up-to date information on their respective topics.
We are truly grateful for their indulgence."
The fluid-mosaic model of membrane structure formulated by Singer
and Nicolson in the early 1970s has proven to be a durable concept
in terms of the principles governing the organization of the
constituent lipids and proteins. During the past 30 or so years a
great deal of information has accumulated on the composition of
various cell membranes and how this is related to the dif ferent
functions that membranes perform. Nevertheless, the task of
explaining particular functions at the molecular level has been
hampered by lack of struc tural detail at the atomic level. The
reason for this is primarily the difficulty of crystallizing
membrane proteins which require strategies that differ from those
used to crystallize soluble proteins. The unique exception is
bacteriorhodopsin of the purple membrane of Halobacterium halobium
which is interpolated into a membrane that is neither fluid nor in
a mosaic configuration. To date only 50 or so membrane proteins
have been characterised to atomic resolution by diffraction
methods, in contrast to the vast data accumulated on soluble
proteins. Another factor that has been difficult to explain is the
reason why the lipid compliment of membranes is often extremely
complex. Many hundreds of different molecular species of lipid can
be identified in some membranes. Remarkably, the particular
composition of each membrane appears to be main tained within
relatively narrow limits and its identity distinguished from other
morphologically-distinct membranes.
In this timely analysis, Matthew J. Quinn plots a landmark
reimagination of governance and public administration, underpinned
by sustainable development and civic republicanism. He draws on
governance literature and Foucaultâs concept of governmentality
to demonstrate the anachronism of existing bureaucratic norms and
how these have thwarted sustainability and fuelled right-wing
populism. Using international examples and the authorâs own
extensive experience in sustainability governance as a senior UK
official, the book proposes a new civic bureaucracy which fosters
societal engagement and dialogue. It sheds new light on debates
about the emerging crisis of governance, the role of public
bureaucracy and the means to embed sustainability in governance.
The Civil War Soldier and the Press examines how the press
powerfully shaped the nation's understanding and memory of the
common soldier, setting the stage for today's continuing debates
about the Civil War and its legacy. The history of the Civil War is
typically one of military strategy, famous generals, and bloody
battles, but to Americans of the era, the most important story of
the war was the fate of the soldier. In this edited collection, new
research in journalism history and archival images provide an
interdisciplinary study of citizenship, representation, race and
ethnicity, gender, disability, death, and national identity.
Together, these chapters follow the story of Civil War soldiers,
from enlistment through battle and beyond, as they were represented
in hometown and national newspapers of the time. In discussing the
same pages that were read by soldiers' families, friends, and loved
ones during America's greatest conflict, the book provides a window
into the experience of historical readers as they grappled with the
meaning and cost of patriotism and shared sacrifice. Both scholarly
and approachable, this book is an enriching resource for
undergraduate and graduate courses in Civil War history, American
History, journalism, and mass communication history.
The Civil War Soldier and the Press examines how the press
powerfully shaped the nation's understanding and memory of the
common soldier, setting the stage for today's continuing debates
about the Civil War and its legacy. The history of the Civil War is
typically one of military strategy, famous generals, and bloody
battles, but to Americans of the era, the most important story of
the war was the fate of the soldier. In this edited collection, new
research in journalism history and archival images provide an
interdisciplinary study of citizenship, representation, race and
ethnicity, gender, disability, death, and national identity.
Together, these chapters follow the story of Civil War soldiers,
from enlistment through battle and beyond, as they were represented
in hometown and national newspapers of the time. In discussing the
same pages that were read by soldiers' families, friends, and loved
ones during America's greatest conflict, the book provides a window
into the experience of historical readers as they grappled with the
meaning and cost of patriotism and shared sacrifice. Both scholarly
and approachable, this book is an enriching resource for
undergraduate and graduate courses in Civil War history, American
History, journalism, and mass communication history.
These new essays tell the stories of daring reporters, male and
female, sent out by their publishers not to capture the news but to
make the news-indeed to achieve star billing-and to capitalize on
the Gilded Age public's craze for real-life adventures into the
exotic and unknown. They examine the adventure journalism genre
through the work of iconic writers such as Mark Twain and Nellie
Bly, as well as lesser-known journalistic masters such as Thomas
Knox and Eliza Scidmore, who took to the rivers and oceans,
mineshafts and mountains, rails and trails of the late nineteenth
century, shaping Americans' perceptions of the world and of
themselves.
Basic Insights in Vector Calculus provides an introduction to three
famous theorems of vector calculus, Green's theorem, Stokes'
theorem and the divergence theorem (also known as Gauss's theorem).
Material is presented so that results emerge in a natural way. As
in classical physics, we begin with descriptions of flows.The book
will be helpful for undergraduates in Science, Technology,
Engineering and Mathematics, in programs that require vector
calculus. At the same time, it also provides some of the
mathematical background essential for more advanced contexts which
include, for instance, the physics and engineering of continuous
media and fields, axiomatically rigorous vector analysis, and the
mathematical theory of differential forms.There is a Supplement on
mathematical understanding. The approach invites one to advert to
one's own experience in mathematics and, that way, identify
elements of understanding that emerge in all levels of learning and
teaching.Prerequisites are competence in single-variable calculus.
Some familiarity with partial derivatives and the multi-variable
chain rule would be helpful. But for the convenience of the reader
we review essentials of single- and multi-variable calculus needed
for the three main theorems of vector calculus.Carefully developed
Problems and Exercises are included, for many of which guidance or
hints are provided.
The book is the first thorough overview of the first important
steps to develop a worldwide virtual observatory so that, in the
future, it could be easier to "dial-up" a part of the sky than wait
many months to access a telescope. The articles in this book
present details on the status of the first efforts to develop a
standardized framework for the virtual observatory, including steps
towards completion and deployment of technical infrastructure,
uptake by data providers worldwide, and utilization by the
scientific community.
Switched capacitor (SC) techniques are well proven to be excellent
candidates for implementing critical analogue functions with high
accuracy, surpassing other analogue techniques when embedded in
mixed-signal CMOS VLSI. Conventional SC circuits are primarily
limited in accuracy by a) capacitor matching and b) the accuracy
with which a differential amplifier can squeeze charge from one
capacitor to another between clock periods.In Switched-Capacitor
Techniques for High-Accuracy Filter and ADC Design, alternative SC
techniques are proposed which allow the achievement of higher
intrinsic analogue functional accuracy than previously possible in
such application areas as analogue filter and ADC design...
In modern physics, various fundamental problems have become topics
of ongoing debate. There was the 20th century climb to a Standard
Model, still accurate at the highest energy levels obtainable so
far. But, since the 1970's, a different approach to physics
advocates for theories such as string theory, known for their
mathematical elegance, even though they either cannot be verified
in data or contradict presently known experimental results. In
philosophy of physics, there is a gradually emerging consensus that
philosophy of physics and physics somehow contribute to a common
enterprise. But, there is little sign of progress toward consensus
about the nature of that unity. All the while, it is generally
recognized that physics is interdisciplinary. There are, of course,
differences in focus. But, implicitly at least, there are no 'sharp
dividing lines' between physics and philosophy of physics; pure and
applied physics; physical chemistry; biophysics; medical physics;
history and philosophy of physics; physics and society; physics
education; and so on. What, then, is progress in physics? The
question here is not about ideal structures, but asks about what is
going on in physics. Beginnings in discerning the presence of eight
main tasks help reveal the (pre-) emergence of a normative
omni-disciplinary basis for collaboration that, once adverted to,
promises to be constitutive of a new and increasingly effective
control of meaning. Originally discovered by Bernard Lonergan in
1965, progress in the new collaboration will not seek to eliminate
specialized expertise. It will, though, divide tasks within an
eightfold functional division of labor. This book invites attention
to data for each of the eight main tasks evident and self-evident
in existing scholarship in the community. The book also makes
preliminary efforts toward envisioning something of what functional
collaboration will look like - in physics, the Academy and Society.
Bernard Lonergan identified the need and possibility of what he
called 'generalized empirical method' in science and philosophy.
Implementation will be a future community achievement. The book
enters into details of a selection of examples in the sciences and
philosophy of science. These are provided not to engage in, or
blend the present aim with traditional philosophical debate, but as
points of entry to help reveal the possibility and need of balanced
empirical method. Taking words of Lonergan: '(Q)uestions of method
are practical. So my purpose in these (chapters) is not to
demonstrate what is necessary. It is not to forecast what is
probable. It is ... to invite you to share in the exploration of a
proposal' (Bernard Lonergan, A Third Collection (1985), 114). The
main examples are drawn from biochemistry and biology, although
heuristics envisioned will include all sciences.
In this timely analysis, Matthew J. Quinn plots a landmark
reimagination of governance and public administration, underpinned
by sustainable development and civic republicanism. He draws on
governance literature and Foucault's concept of governmentality to
demonstrate the anachronism of existing bureaucratic norms and how
these have thwarted sustainability and fuelled right-wing populism.
Using international examples and the author's own extensive
experience in sustainability governance as a senior UK official,
the book proposes a new civic bureaucracy which fosters societal
engagement and dialogue. It sheds new light on debates about the
emerging crisis of governance, the role of public bureaucracy and
the means to embed sustainability in governance.
Since its discovery in 1957, Coenzyme Q has piqued the interest of scientists from a wide range of disciplines because of its bioenergetics, vitamin-like behavior, and interactions with antioxidant vitamins E and C. Coenzyme Q: Molecular Mechanisms in Health and Disease is a comprehensive treatise on this often-studied coenzyme. International experts cover the research that led to its emergence as an exciting, new dietary supplement.
The present volume summarizes the latest developments in various areas of CoQ research. New concepts on extramitochondrial functions of CoQ are discussed in two chapters, while recent discoveries in biosynthetic pathways for CoQ based on molecular genetic approaches are presented in another chapter.
Further chapters explore the role of CoQ as an antioxidant, revealing the need for additional research in this exciting area.
This book will be of extreme interest to biochemists, biophysicists, molecular and cell biologists, as well as nutritionists and biomedical health workers.
This monograph presents an intuitive theory of trial wave functions
for strongly interacting fermions in fractional quantum Hall
states. The correlation functions for the proposed fermion
interactions follow a novel algebraic approach that harnesses the
classical theory of invariants and semi-invariants of binary forms.
This approach can be viewed as a fitting and far-reaching
generalization of Laughlin's approach to trial wave functions.
Aesthetically viewed, it illustrates an attractive symbiosis
between the theory of invariants and the theory of correlations.
Early research into numerical diagonalization computations for
small numbers of electrons shows strong agreement with the
constructed trial wave functions.The monograph offers researchers
and students of condensed matter physics an accessible discussion
of this interesting area of research.
The book is the first thorough overview of the first important
steps to develop a worldwide virtual observatory so that, in the
future, it could be easier to "dial-up" a part of the sky than wait
many months to access a telescope. The articles in this book
present details on the status of the first efforts to develop a
standardized framework for the virtual observatory, including steps
towards completion and deployment of technical infrastructure,
uptake by data providers worldwide, and utilization by the
scientific community.
The subject for a volume on the fat-soluble vitamins needs no
justification considering the importance of this group of nutrients
and the rate of expan sion of our knowledge of its role in cell
biology, genetics, and disease. The level of our understanding has
clearly moved from knowing what fat soluble vitamins do to how they
perform their functions. Hand in hand with a knowledge of their
molecular mechanisms of action is the recognition that vitamins are
used sparingly, and regeneration processes operate in certain cases
to recycle vitamins from their metabolites. We have divided the
volume into alphabetical sections beginning with vitamin A and the
carotenoids through vitamins D, E, F, and K, and ending with
coenzyme Q. The contributors are all acknowledged experts in their
particular fields and have made significant contributions to
published research results. All have worked assiduously to deliver
the product of their labors on a restricted time scale and to
provide the most up-to date information on their respective topics.
We are truly grateful for their indulgence."
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