... indicate the 5¢-ter-
minus of 33 clones isolated after 5¢-RACE. (B)
Primer extension analysis of fgl2 mRNA. The
left side ofthe figure is the sequence ladder
using the same primer and the pM166 ... indicates the nucleotide that
is matched to the band present in the primer
extension reaction on the right. The sequence
of the primer is 5¢-CCTCCACCGCTCGG
CAGGCAGCGAGGACGG-3¢. The lanes
on the right ... activity ofthe Sp1/
Sp3 interaction or the Sp1/Sp3/Ets-1 interaction by
approximately 90% and 80%, respectively. Mutation of
the Ets-1 binding site (mut5) also blocked the effect of
Ets-1 in the...
... soul. No one of these is
better or holier than the other; all are alike desirable, and no one
of the three body, mind, or soul can live fully if either of
the others is cut short of full life ...
have had them. Do not think of them at all. Do not tell ofthe
poverty of your parents, or the hardships of your early life; to do
any of these things is to mentally class yourself with the poor ... 2006 The Secret LLC
All rights reserved.
attention upon the common, the ordinary, the poor, and the
squalid and mean; and your mind takes the form of these things.
Then you will transmit these...
... over the Internet anonymously.
At the end ofthe day, computer crime is a lot cheaper for the bad
guy than other kinds of crime, if the bad guy has the technical
skills to pull it off. And there ... users get to the end ofthe free period, they
often do not renew. There are many reasons for this, but com-
monly people ignore the nagging pop-up balloons in the Taskbar,
and then either don’t ... over. There’s a
lot the bad guy can do to use a victim’s computer to make money,
without the victim having to know that the bad guy’s on there.
The less intrusive a bad guy is, the better off he...
... phones.
Similar to the present findings, the
results ofthebythe Statistical Office of
Finland showed that 30% ofthe elderly
women used washing machines, whereas 7%
of men used these electrical ... devices
were in perfect line with the level of
perception ofthe elderly.
From the results ofthe present study,
it is evident that the use of new technologies
by the elderly population significantly ... 5.9% of
participants reported that they were aware
of all the services and capabilities of ATMs.
The reasons to avoid using ATMs were the
difficulty of handling the keyboard, the lack
of knowledge...
... exacerbation ofthe bias may result
(Todd and Wolpin, 2003). The use of a fixed effect estimator, on the other hand, may
lead to the significant loss of degrees of freedom, reduction in the variability ... the coefficients for the interaction of both the
<12 years and 12 years of schooling, and the magnitudes of these coefficients more than
cancel out the positive reference-group effect. The ... head ofthe family unit and his wife. In each wave ofthe PSID the
respondent was asked about his/her current employment status. If the status was “working now”, then the
respondent was asked the...
... tends to mitigate the effects of adverse selection because,
when bundled, the negative correlation between the costs of these
products reduces the overall variation ofthe costs ofthe bundle with
individual ... insurance. Expected costs of
medical insurance, for example, depend on the health characteristics of
the insured. Of course, the value of such insurance to the purchaser
depends on the same characteristics. ... absence of lump-sum taxes, the government
wishes to raise revenue by means of distortive commodity taxes, and
the theory develops the conditions that have to hold for these taxes
to minimize the...
... total
consumption in the second period. The second term is the sum of the
expected utilities of two surviving individuals, while the third is the
expected utility of one survivor. The budget constraint ... postponement of eligibility for “normal” SS benefits
seems to be primarily motivated bythe long-term solvency needs of
the SS systems rather than by consumer welfare considerations. The
above analysis ... remains
constant (figure 5.2).
The reason for the difference in the pattern of optimum retirement
is straightforward. Without discounting, the importance of a marginal
increase in the length of life does not...
... bc,
while others moved more quickly up the main waterways until, at about 1000
bc, they reached the eastern edge ofthe equatorial forest in the broad area of the
great East African lakes. There they ... fatal
to cattle. Bythe first half ofthe second millennium bc, cattle were herded
close to the top ofthe Niger bend and on the southern shores of Lake Chad.
Shortly afterwards, the first strong ... Small quantities
were grown on the southern shores of Lake Chad by 1200 bc and in the north
of modern Burkina Faso shortly thereafter.
Most strikingly, bythe middle ofthe second millennium bc,domesticated
millet,...
... power.
12
And for the most part, the initiators of totalitarian rule
pursued their aims in the name of some grand moral imperative – the
Aryan domination ofthe sub-human races ofthe world or the Wnal
establishment ... themselves, at the very least in the eyes of their supporters,
as legitimate interests, arguing not just the contingent existence of their
desires but the rightness and justness of their claims ... determine their
moral justiWability or lack thereof. Whether the wartime allies did enough
to assist victims ofthe Nazi holocaust; whether America should have
dropped the atomic bomb on Japan; whether...
... in![Footnote: Instead of naming the hotels (=
mansions) ofthe great noblemen, Julia names the hotels (= inns) ofthe time. She thus
shows where the countess had studied the aristocracy.]
COUN. ... Madam, that of all the famous court gallants not one
failed to come to my door and pay his respects to me. I keep in my casket some ofthe
letters sent me, and can prove by them what offers I ... tax-gatherer are but poor lovers for a great countess like you.
COUN. They are men whom one treats kindly in the country, in order to make use of
when the need arises. They serve to fill up the...