Publications by authors named "Margulies L"

Leah Margulies was Director of the Infant Formula Program at the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility in New York City (NYC) from 1975 to 1985. She is a founder of the International Nestle Boycott, Corporate Accountability (formerly INFACT), and one of the founders of the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN). She was hired at UNICEF in 1982 to set up the legal office for implementation of the International Code of Marketing Breastmilk Substitutes, as part of the Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative.

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Leah Margulies was Director of the Infant Formula Program at the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility in NYC from 1975 to 1985. She is a founder of the International Nestlé Boycott, Corporate Accountability (formerly INFACT), and one of the founders of the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN). She was hired at UNICEF in 1982 to set up the legal office for implementation of the International Code of Marketing Breast-Milk Substitutes, as part of the Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative.

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The use of dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) in pediatrics is increasing. It is safe, readily available, and easily performed, but there is little information on reproducibility. The aim of this study is to evaluate the reproducibility of whole body DXA scans in children.

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We observed the in situ growth of a grain during recrystallization in the bulk of a deformed sample. We used the three-dimensional x-ray diffraction microscope located at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility in Grenoble, France. The results showed a very heterogeneous growth pattern, contradicting the classical assumption of smooth and spherical growth of new grains during recrystallization.

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The mechanical properties of polycrystalline materials are largely determined by the kinetics of the phase transformations during the production process. Progress in x-ray diffraction instrumentation at synchrotron sources has created an opportunity to study the transformation kinetics at the level of individual grains. Our measurements show that the activation energy for grain nucleation is at least two orders of magnitude smaller than that predicted by thermodynamic models.

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Texture evolution governs many of the physical, chemical, and mechanical properties of polycrystalline materials, but texture models have only been tested on the macroscopic level, which makes it hard to distinguish between approaches that are conceptually very different. Here, we present a universal method for providing data on the underlying structural dynamics at the grain and subgrain level. The method is based on diffraction with focused hard x-rays.

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The divalent organic cation, methyl green (MG), undergoes a slow transformation (6 h) to a monovalent cation, carbinol (MGOH(+)) upon dilution of its solution (10 mM), or in a buffer at neutral pH. Adsorption isotherms of MG on montmorillonite were determined by two procedures, both of which yield a final pH of suspensions between 7 to 7.4.

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The increasing use of all types of cellular telephones requires the formulation of new standards to ensure the immunity of electronic medical equipment to electromagnetic radiation. It will be many years before all hospital medical equipment conforms to new and higher standards. Until that time, the medical, security, maintenance, and other staff will need to be ever vigilant regarding restrictions on the use of wireless equipment within the hospital, to prevent potential danger to the lives of the patients.

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Analysis of melanoma cell lines with abnormalities in HLA Class I antigen expression has identified two serological phenotypes caused by distinct molecular defects. One is characterized by lack of HLA Class I antigen expression which is not induced by IFN-gamma or by incubation at 25 degrees C for 24 hrs. This phenotype reflects structural changes in the beta(2)m gene which interfere with its transcription and/or translation or result in the synthesis of a defective beta(2)-mu polypeptide unable to associate with HLA Class I heavy chains.

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During the past year, there has been increased understanding of the ocular manifestations of various cardiovascular and hematologic disorders. Carotid and vertebral artery lesions may lead to significant and varied ophthalmic pathology. Disorders of blood pressure may influence the intraocular pressure and play a role in the progression of glaucoma.

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The past year's important advancements in the ocular manifestations of cardiovascular and hematologic diseases are reviewed. Systemic changes related to blood pressure and carotid artery disease are commonly manifested on the ophthalmic examination. Ocular ischemic changes have been observed in patients with unusual aortic or congenital cardiac disorders.

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The p53 mutant Val135 is widely considered to have a wild-type (wt) phenotype at 32.5 degrees C, but not at 37 degrees C. The ability of wt murine p53 and its Val135 mutant to modulate transcription from the muscle-specific creatine kinase promoter (-3.

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A series of surface-modified clays containing nanophase (np) iron oxide/oxyhydroxides of extremely small particle sizes, with total iron contents as high as found in Mars soil, were prepared by iron deposition on the clay surface from ferrous chloride solution. Comprehensive studies of the iron mineralogy in these "Mars-soil analogs" were conducted using chemical extractions, solubility analyses, pH and redox, x ray and electron diffractometry, electron microscopic imaging, specific surface area and particle size determinations, differential thermal analyses, magnetic properties characterization, spectral reflectance, and Viking biology simulation experiments. The clay matrix and the procedure used for synthesis produced nanophase iron oxides containing a certain proportion of divalent iron, which slowly converts to more stable, fully oxidized iron minerals.

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Three Harwich P sublines with different P-element activity potential were used to investigate the influence of P-derived chromosomes on snw mutability and vg suppression and to relate the induction of these dysgenic traits to the number and structure of P elements. Destabilization of the snw allele, a measure of P transposase activity, was differentially influenced by the major autosomes. Chromosome 2 of the standard Harwich subline, Hw, induced only 60% of the level of mutability relative to chromosome 3, whereas chromosome 3 of the weakest Harwich subline, Hf, induced only 50% of the mutability relative to chromosome 2.

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Constitutive up-regulation of interleukin-6 (IL-6) gene expression is observed in many neoplastic cell lines. The contribution of mutations in p53 to the up-regulation of the IL-6 promoter was evaluated in transient transfection experiments. In HeLa cells, wild-type (wt) human or murine p53 preferentially repressed the IL-6 promoter.

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The interaction of X-ray-induced and transposon-induced damage was investigated in P-M hybrid dysgenesis in Drosophila melanogaster. The X-ray dose-response of 330-1320 rad was monitored for sterility, fecundity and partial X/Y chromosome loss among F2 progeny derived from the dysgenic cross of M strain females xP strain males (cross A) and its reciprocal (cross B), using a weaker and the standard Harwich P strain subline. The synergistic effect of P element activity and X-rays on sterility was observed only in cross A hybrids and the dose-response was nonlinear in hybrids derived from the strong standard reference Harwich subline, Hw.

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X-rays and deficiencies in DNA repair had a synergistic effect on genetic damage associated with P-element mobility in Drosophila melanogaster. These interactions, using sterility and fecundity as endpoints, were tested in dysgenic males deficient in either excision or post-replication DNA repair. Three sublines of the Harwich P strain were used for the construction of hybrid males.

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Irradiation of Bacillus thuringiensis var. kurstaki HD1 at 300-350 nm for up to 12 hr using a photochemical reactor results in a rapid loss of its toxicity to larvae of Heliothis armigera. Photoprotection of the toxic component was obtained by adsorption of cationic chromophores such as acriflavin (AF), methyl green, and rhodamine B to B.

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An unusually high level of P-M hybrid dysgenesis in Drosophila melanogaster is characteristic of hybrid offspring originating from both, A (M female x P male) and B (P female x M male) crosses of a subline of the Harwich P strain, termed Hs. The novel properties induced by mobility of P elements carried by Hs paternal chromosomes include: very high (over 95%) gonadal dysgenesis (GD) in both sexes at the low restrictive temperature of 21 degrees C, and highly premature sterility when males are reared at 18 degrees C and aged at 21 degrees C. Although all three major chromosomes of the Hs subline contributed to this atypical pattern of gonadal dysgenesis, chromosome 3 had the largest effect.

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Genetic traits associated with P-M hybrid dysgenesis in Drosophila melanogaster were synergistically affected by X-rays. The interaction between damages induced by these two mutator systems was evident when sterility and X/Y chromosome loss were used as endpoints. No interaction was detected in partial chromosome loss, monitored by the loss of BS and y+ markers.

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The possible interaction between X-ray- and transposon-induced chromosome damage was monitored in the P-M system of hybrid dysgenesis in Drosophila melanogaster. One- to two-day-old F1 dysgenic males originating from a cross between M strain females and P strain males were irradiated with 5.5 Gy (550 rad) or used as controls to monitor X-Y translocations and transmission ratio distortion.

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The combined effect of transposon mobility and X-rays on X-linked recessive lethals and dominant lethals was measured in the germ line of F1 male hybrids in the P-M system of hybrid dysgenesis. X-Linked lethal mutation rate was measured in the chromosome derived from the P-strain father of the M X P cross. Mutations induced in irradiated dysgenic males were compared to those of unirradiated males, as well as to irradiated nondysgenic males derived from M X M crosses.

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The combined effect of X-irradiation and transposon mobility on the frequencies of X-linked recessive lethals and dominant lethals was investigated in female hybrids in the P-M system of hybrid dysgenesis. X-linked lethals were measured in G2 hybrid dysgenic females whose X chromosome was derived from the M X P cross. To test for additivity or synergism, the mutation rate in irradiated dysgenic females was compared to that of unirradiated females as well as to irradiated nondysgenic hybrid females derived from M X M crosses.

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Light absorption and reflectance by smectite clays containing various adsorbed ions were measured in the UV, VIS, and NIR ranges and compared to Martian dust and surface soil spectra. Structural iron in the octahedral sheet of smectites is responsible for a characteristic absorption feature in the UV at 240-260 nm, resulting from an O2 --> Fe3+ charge transfer that is similar to one observed in the Martian spectrum. Adsorbed iron affects, via crystal field absorptions, the reflectance of montmorillonite in the VIS and NIR (to 1.

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