Mark halasi biography

  • Halasi temple shimoga
  • Ramtirth temple halsi history
  • Kadam history
  • Federated Department of History | Faculty Emeriti

    • Zeynep Çelik (B. Arch. Istanbul Technical University; M. Arch. Rice University; PhD. University of California, Berkeley; Doctor Honoris Causa, Bosporus University, 2013) is distinguished professor of architecture at the New Jersey Institute of Technology and the Department of Federated History at the NJIT and Rutgers-Newark. Her publications include The Remaking of Istanbul: Portrait of an Ottoman City in the Nineteenth Century (1986—winner of the Institute of Turkish Studies Book Award, 1987), Displaying the Orient: Architecture of Islam at Nineteenth Century World’s Fairs (1992), Streets: Critical Perspectives on Public Space (1993—co-editor), Urban Forms and Colonial Confrontations: Algiers under French Rule (1997), Empire, Architecture, and the City: French-Ottoman Encounters, 1830-1914 (2008—winner of the Society of Architectural Historians Spiro K


      Functional genomic analysis of primary multiple myeloma samples elucidated predictive biomarkers for drugs and molecular pathways mediating therapeutic response, which revealed a rationale for sequential therapy to maximize patient outcomes.

      Abstract

      Several therapeutic agents have been approved for treating multiple myeloma, a cancer of bone marrow–resident plasma cells. Predictive biomarkers for drug response could help guide clinical strategies to optimize outcomes. In this study, we present an integrated functional genomic analysis of tumor samples from patients multiple myeloma that were assessed for their ex vivo drug sensitivity to 37 drugs, clinical variables, cytogenetics, mutational profiles, and transcriptomes. This analysis revealed a multiple myeloma transcriptomic topology that generates “footprints” in association with ex vivo drug sensitivity that have both predictive and mechanistic applications. Validation of the transcriptomic footprints for the anti-CD38 m

      Halasi

      Former capital of Kadambas in Karnataka, India

      Halasi (Kannada: ಹಲಸಿ, also Halsi or Halshi, in earlier times also called Halasige or Palasige) is a town in Khanapur Taluk, Belgaum District in Karnataka, India. It is 14 km from Khanapur and about 25 km from Kittur. As known from inscriptions, the ancient name of the town was Palāśikā.[1] A centre of the early Kadamba Dynasty (c. 500), it was a minor capital of the Goa Kadambas (980-1025).[2] The town is notable for a series of medieval temples. The most famous are the Varāha Narasiṃha temple and Suvarṇeśvara temple in the town, and a third temple of Rāmeśvara. On a hill about 1.9 km. south-west of the town is a pilgrimage place known as Rāmatītha.

      Palāśikā

      [edit]

      Of the ancient settlement of Palāśikā no architectural remains have been found, but A. Sundara has noted traces of brick structures near the Kalleśvara temple (also known as Kalameshwar) on the west side of the town.[

    • mark halasi biography