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Topic: Radicals UK


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In the News (Sun 29 Nov 09)

  
  Walter Trout and the Radicals - Home Page
Joey and the Radicals have had an amicable split, realizing creative differences had come between them in recent years and months.
We wish Joey all the best for his future drumming career, and thank all the fans for their support.
Walter and the Radicals returned to Mumbai, India Feb. 3rd and 4th 2007 for a great concert.
www.waltertrout.com   (707 words)

  
 Radical Republicans
However, the Radical Republicans were able to get the Reconstruction Acts passed in 1867 and 1868.
Reverend George F. Noyes, was a supporter of the Radical Republicans and on 4th July, 1862, preached a sermon to the Union Army based at Fredericksburg, Virginia.
And as a consequence, the radicals, who are wild upon negro franchise, will be completely foiled in their attempts to keep the Southern States from renewing their relations to the Union.
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk /USASradical.htm   (3123 words)

  
 Radicals (UK) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Radicals were a parliamentary political grouping in the United Kingdom in the early to mid 19th century, who helped to transform the Whigs into the Liberal Party.
The parliamentary radicals were distinctly middle class; their radicalism consisted in opposition to the political dominance and economic interests of the traditional British elites, rather than to any affinity to socialism.
Demand for parliamentary reform increased by 1864 with agitation from John Bright and the Reform League.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Radicals_(UK)   (413 words)

  
 BBC NEWS | UK | Campus radicals 'growing problem'
But a number of Muslim sources have told the BBC that radicalisation at certain universities is on the increase and those seen as vulnerable to indoctrination are being targeted.
He said that the group would discuss the latest news from the Middle East and the UK, but that it was nearly always in terms of confrontation, fostering an atmosphere of hatred.
Radical Islamist groups in the UK, while deeply critical of the government, have nearly always distanced themselves from al-Qaeda.
news.bbc.co.uk /2/hi/uk_news/5411172.stm   (906 words)

  
 A Tale of 2 Radicals Part 1
A free radical is an atom or compound which contains an unpaired electron.  All free radicals contain an odd number of electrons and nowadays the term "radical" is often used in place of "free radical".
He noted that "the radical so formed is apparently stable, for it can be kept both in solution and in the dry crystalline state for weeks".
Radicals of this type, which do not combine at even relatively high concentrations, are now called persistent radicals.
www-users.york.ac.uk /~chem77/pages/Tale_of_2_Radicals.htm   (485 words)

  
 [No title]
It is believed that free radicals might damage the DNA of sperm, and antioxidants can ameliorate this negative effect and lower lipoperoxidation.
The appropriate level of free radicals in the sperm head is necessary and important in fertilization of oocytes.
When addressing the reduction of free radicals it is essential to recognize the importance of Oligomeric Proanthocyanidins (OPC's) as the most powerful antioxidant known in scientific studies.
www.lycos.com /info/antioxidants--free-radicals.html?page=3   (497 words)

  
 The Hydroxyl Radical; Sources and Measurement.
It has been known for over 30 years that the hydroxyl radical is the main driving force behind the daytime reactions of hydrocarbons in the troposphere.
In the FAGE technique, samples of the air to be analysed are introduced into the analytical chamber through a pin hole nozzle, expanding the gas to a pressure of a few torr.
After the expansion zone, the sample enters the excitation zone where hydroxyl radicals are excited by a laser, (@ 308 nm), the excited hydroxyl radicals relax to the ground state emitting fluorescent radiation (@ 308 nm).
www.chem.leeds.ac.uk /Atmospheric/Field/oh.html   (451 words)

  
 Free Radicals & Antioxidants
But in other cases, as when free radicals bring about cell damage in disease processes, it is far from useful and we naturally want to try to do something to stop it.
This vitamin dissolves in fat and that is especially important because by far the most significant free radical damage in the body is damage to the membranes of cells and to low-density lipoproteins, and these are made of fat molecules.
Since free radical oxidant action is a necessary part of the body's functioning, both for the destruction of bacteria and for other important purposes, it is only reasonable to suppose that undue interference with it, by excessive dosage of an antioxidant like vitamin E, is likely to be harmful.
www.dsrf.co.uk /Reading_material/Free_radicals/freerads3.htm   (3277 words)

  
 Alzheimer's: Fighting Back
UK researchers are working at the cell level to discover the pathways of the disease and how to counter it
Free radicals, Butterfield explains, are molecules with one or more unpaired electrons, an imbalance that causes them to be extremely unstable and reactive.
Armed with the first theory that put Alzheimer's disease into an understandable and verifiable framework, Butterfield, Mattson and Markesbery (Carney left UK for a job in private industry) subsequently found that the beta peptide causes nerve cell damage by inducing a free-radical-mediated process called "lipid peroxidation" in the nerve cell membrane.
www.rgs.uky.edu /odyssey/fall98/alzheimers.html   (3142 words)

  
 hydrogen bromide and alkenes - the peroxide effect
The chain is initiated by free radicals produced by an oxygen-oxygen bond in the organic peroxide breaking.
A bromine radical joins to the ethene using one of the electrons in the pi bond.
When the bromine radical joins to the propene, it attaches so that a secondary radical is formed.
www.chemguide.co.uk /mechanisms/freerad/alkenehbr.html   (774 words)

  
 Telegraph | News
Radical Islamic leaders in London issued a thinly-veiled threat yesterday that the United States and Britain could face a terrorist onslaught akin to the September 11 attacks if they go to war on Iraq.
Sheikh Omar Bakri Muhammad, a preacher from north London, said he and other radicals would issue a fatwa, or religious edict, telling Muslims how to respond to the "evil" of an attack.
They include Sheikh Abu Hamza al-Masri, another north London preacher and a veteran of the war against the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, Muhammad al-Masari, the Saudi opposition leader living in exile in London, and Yasser al-Siri, an Egyptian dissident released from custody in London last month when extradition proceedings by America were dropped.
www.telegraph.co.uk /news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2002/08/14/nmula14.xml   (687 words)

  
 UK Muslim radicals deliver 'holy war' warning: Report   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Radical Islamic leaders in Britain have issued what a British newspaper described as a thinly veiled threat that the US and Britain may face terrorist attacks similar to those of September 11 if they go to war against Iraq.
Sheikh Omar Bakri Muhammad, a preacher from north London, told the Daily Telegraph he and other radicals would issue a religious edict telling Muslims how to respond to the "evil" of an attack on the regime of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.
The Telegraph said Bakri was due to give a press conference along with several other radicals, some of whom have been accused of links with Osama bin Laden, accused of masterminding the September 11 suicide airliner attacks on New York and Washington, and with his Al- Qaeda network.
www.hvk.org /articles/0802/117.html   (251 words)

  
 UK Radicals warned of treason risk - Military Photos
He said Muslims had previously accepted a "covenant of security" which meant they should not resort to violence in the UK because they were not under threat there.
It should also be noted that bomb disposal assets from the UK armed forces were used domestically during these incidents.
If what you're trying to get at is that the US overreacts and the UK is the more level headed one then all it is is two measured responses for two different types of attacks.
www.militaryphotos.net /forums/showthread.php?t=52803   (1277 words)

  
 Ray Robison: Pointing out the obvious to the oblivious:
Security experts have contended for many years that the UK is a safe haven for radical Islamic terror networks, which exploit British freedoms to further their goals.
Among the factors contributing to the ease with which these groups operate is the UK’s liberal immigration policy, the many flaws in the border control system, and freedom from the obligation to carry identity cards.
At the same time, prosecution in the UK, with its large and influential Muslim community, is fraught with risks of internal strife, or accusation of racism.
rayrobison.typepad.com /ray_robison/2006/08/july_7_2005isla.html   (1822 words)

  
 Radicals and Ions
These recommendations constitute a comprehensive documentation of nomenclature for organic radicals, ions, and radical ions based primarily on principles given in subsection C-0.8 of the IUPAC Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry (ref 1) and illustrated in various subsections of Sections A, B, C, and D of those Rules.
Two innovations are introduced: (1) the prefix "ylo-" to indicate the presence of a radical center in a substituent group; and (2) the suffix "-uide" to describe an anion formally derived by the addition of a hydride ion to a parent hydride.
Delocalised radicals and ions are not treated in these recommendations except where such delocalization is included in usual structural considerations.
www.chem.qmul.ac.uk /iupac/ions   (546 words)

  
 Explaining the methane - bromine free radical substitution mechanism
To show that a species (either an atom or a group of atoms) is a free radical, the symbol is written with a dot attached to show the unpaired electron.
The chain continues because for every bromine radical that goes in at the beginning, a new one is generated at the end.
The over-all process is known as free radical substitution, or as a free radical chain reaction.
www.chemguide.co.uk /mechanisms/freerad/ch4andbr2tt.html   (920 words)

  
 Gray Cancer Institute: CRC Free Radicals in Cancer Research Group
Free radicals are often highly reactive, short-lived, and damaging: they are the active agents in radiotherapy.
The focus of one part of this research is a cellular protein (a 'caspase') that acts as a key switch in cellular self-destruct mechanisms.
Radiotherapy generates radicals in cellular DNA and adjacent molecules that lead to cell death.
www.graylab.ac.uk /groups/molmec.html   (651 words)

  
 THE RADICAL LEFT
The American radicals are mounting a Presidential campaign that is a mountain of lies.
Their lying about anything and everything is typical of the radicals of the left and right that have destroyed their countries.
I am saying that the radical left scares the living hell out of me because the history of these kinds of radicals is a history of destruction and revolution.
www.parida.com /radicals04.htm   (1099 words)

  
 Radical - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Radical Republican, a member of an influential group of American politicians during the Civil War reconstruction
Radicals (UK), parliamentary progressives who were predecessors of the UK Liberal Party
Free Radicals (band), a jazz-funk musical group from Houston, TX This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Radicals   (227 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Free Radicals in Biology and Medicine: Books: Barry Halliwell,John Gutteridge,John M.c. Gutteridge   (Site not responding. Last check: )
There are new chapters on antioxidant defence systems in bacteria, plants, and animals; the detection of free radicals; the role of antioxidants in aging, nutrition, disease, and therapy; and a new appendix on molecular biology.
Free radicals and other reactive species are now implicated in a wide range and number of diseases and the third edition covers their role in hypertension, diabetes, lung damage, cystic fibrosis, nervous system disorders, viral infections, and cancer.
This edition includes chapters on antioxidant defense systems in bacteria, plants, and animals; the detection of free radicals; oxidative stress and its consequences to the cell; the role of antioxidants in aging, nutri tion, disease, and therapy, and a new appendix on molecular biology.
www.amazon.com /Radicals-Biology-Medicine-Barry-Halliwell/dp/0198500459   (1510 words)

  
 UK gathering explores Christianity and anarchism
Jesus Radicals’ spokesperson Keith Hebden told Ekklesia on Friday that the popular perception of anarchism as a matter of lawlessness, beards and bombs is way out of date.
As well as pointing to a surprising strand of Christian thought on the matter, he says that “like the democratic tradition, anarchism is not one thing but a spectrum of ideas”, of which some are amenable to followers of Jesus and others are definitely not.
Jesus Radicals, also a website (http://uk.jesusradicals.com/), has supporters in the USA too, including two Mennonites from the Anabaptist peace church tradition.
www.ekklesia.co.uk /content/news_syndication/article_06064anarchy.shtml   (819 words)

  
 Scotsman.com News - Latest News - Blacklist bars radicals from UK   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Blacklist bars radicals from UK British embassies around the world have drawn up a list of up to 100 radicals who are not welcome in the UK, Home Secretary Charles Clarke confirmed.
If any of them attempts to enter the UK, their application will passed up to a government minister for a decision.
Letters from UK servicemen exhort a rare moment of revelry with the enemy
news.scotsman.com /latest.cfm?id=1907272005   (382 words)

  
 Nitrogen (One atom N only)
; they are radicals derived from hydroxylamines by removal of the hydrogen atom from the hydroxy group, and are in many cases isolable.
The synonymous terms "nitroxyl radicals" and "nitroxides" erroneously suggest the presence of a nitro group; their use is not desirable.
C=NOH derived from condensation of aldehydes or ketones with hydroxylamine.
www.chem.qmul.ac.uk /iupac/class/oneN.html   (1748 words)

  
 Counterterrorism legislation: a question of reaction?: Free Muslims Coalition   (Site not responding. Last check: )
New anti-terrorism laws on both sides of the Atlantic suggest that moves made by the UK government to clamp down on UK-based radicals are slowly moving the UK towards what many consider a more American-style approach to counterterrorism.
However, some critics maintain that both the US and the UK have been slow to acknowledge the threat posed by domestically-based Islamic extremism, one that Mediterranean countries have been forced to confront much earlier because of their proximity to North Africa and the Middle East.
Under the Act, prosecutions against terrorists are conducted centrally, in Paris, but unlike in the UK and US, acts of terrorism are prosecuted as criminal offences punishable with increased sentences.
www.freemuslims.org /news/article.php?article=1230   (292 words)

  
 VH1.com : New Radicals : Biography - Urge Music Downloads
A pop-rock group that was formed in the late '90s but was heavily influenced by the rock and soul of the 1970s, the New Radicals are the creation of singer/producer/songwriter
It was in L.A. that he formed the New Radicals, which signed with MCA in 1997 and soon got to work on Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too--a 1970s-minded CD that came out in October 1998.
Alexander did all of the producing and arranging and most of the songwriting on the promising album, which was the group's sole release -- after scoring the hit "You Get What You Give," he disbanded the New Radicals to focus on production work.
www.vh1.com /artists/az/new_radicals/bio.jhtml   (227 words)

  
 Indymedia UK - armchair radicals consciences to be pacified by anti-sweatshop campaign   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Indymedia UK - armchair radicals consciences to be pacified by anti-sweatshop campaign
armchair radicals consciences to be pacified by anti-sweatshop campaign
not to suggest theres a load of armchair radicals hanging about here("office swivel chair" would be more exact)...
www.indymedia.org.uk /en/2002/05/31460.html   (324 words)

  
 news 2003 - Walter Trout and the Radicals
John Mayall is acknowledged as the father of British blues, having baptized a whole generation of white, British musicians and an audience who might otherwise have never discovered the blues.
Special news for UK and Dutch WTR fans who regularly come to the Wilbarston concert in England.
Walter Trout and the Radicals are going to be recording a new DVD on May 13 and 14 at the Paradiso in Amsterdam and it will be all new material recorded live in front of the audience.
www.waltertrout.com /news_history_2003.htm   (1968 words)

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