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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Discovery and characterization of KNOX proteins lacking a homeodomain, produced by alternative splicing of KNAT1-like genes in gymnosperms and angiosperms

Sheth, Mili 17 November 2008 (has links)
Homeobox genes encode homeodomain (HD) proteins which function as transcription factors and play an important role in plant and animal development by controlling cell specification and pattern formation. (Knotted1 in Arabidopsis thaliana) KNAT1-like mRNAs referred to as PtKN1(HD+) and mRNA sequences which lack HD region referred as PtKN1(hd-) were cloned from embryos of loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.). Production of PtKN1(hd-) mRNAs is developmentally regulated and their encoded protein is abundant in mature pine embryos. Both forms of PtKN1 are produced by the same gene which has 5 exons; the regulatory dynamic is between cleavage-polyadenylation or termination within intron 3 to produce PtKN1 mRNA lacking HD sequences and splicing of exon 3 to exon 4 which excludes the 3'UTR/exon3 sequence to create an mRNA which encodes a HD. KNAT1 mRNA in Arabidopsis which lacks HD sequences was identified and characterized. While KNAT1 has been studied for many years, this is the first report of a KNAT1 mRNA lacking HD. KNAT1 mRNA lacking HD sequences was identified for the RS1 gene of maize, a monocotyledon. This is the first report of splicing of KNAT1 genes to produce mRNAs lacking HD sequences. The phenomenon appears to be ubiquitous as it is observed in gymnosperms, and both dicotyledonous and monocotyledonous angiosperms.
32

Subsistence, butchery, and commercialization in Knox County, Tennessee

Windham, Rachel Jeannine, January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Tennessee, Knoxville, 2003. / Title from title page screen (viewed Mar. 29, 2004). Thesis advisor: Walter E. Klippel. Document formatted into pages (ix, 135 p. : ill. (some col.)). Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 115-127).
33

The influence of Henry Knox on the formation of American Indian policy in the Northern department, 1786-1795

Dyer, Weston A. January 1970 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to assess the influence that Henry Knox had on the formation and the inplementation of American Indian policy during the period from 1786 to 1795. Henry Knox was Secretary of War under the Confederation government from 1786-1789. In 1786 his office was given statutory authority to deal with the Northern and Southern tribes on the frontier. In 1789 he was appointed Secretary of War in George Washington's cabinet with increased authority to deal with the Indians. This work deals only with the tribes and the territory in the Northern Department for a number of reasons. First, the geographical area involved is smaller and the tribes more varied than in the Southern Department. Second, in the Northern Department there was not the conflict of federal-state interests that complicated the acquisition of lands and the pacification of the Indians. Third, there can be seen in the Northern Department a continuation of British Indian policy as adopted and ramified by the United States, An examination of Indian treaties concerning this area and the concept of the Indians' right of soil brings into focus the problems that the United States faced when dealing with the tribes on the frontier.The research was planned to answer two questions. What were the vestiges of British and French Indian policy that were adopted by the American government in the period from 1786-1789? Second, what was Henry Knox's role in formulating Confederation and Federal Indian policy? Did he act as the sole agent for the formation of Indian policy or did he take his direction from George Washington and/or the Congress?The first part of the work develops the relationship between George Washington and Henry Knox. It traces the career of Knox during the American Revolution and emphasizes the close bond between Knox and Washington. It also examines the role that Henry Knox played in the negotiations with New England tribes before he became a member of the Confederation government,The second stage of the study concerns itself with British Indian policy from 1763-1775. It develops those threads of imperial control that were adopted and modified by American government with the outbreak of the American Revolution. Special consideration is given to the various demarcation lines, treaties, and organs of Indian control that marked British imperial rule.The involvement of Henry Knox in Indian policy began in 1786 with the reorganization of the Indian Department. The work examines the conditions on the frontier that Knox inherited from his predecessor. The treaties of Forts Stanwix, McIntosh and Finney are examined in detail to emphasize the unrest on the frontier from both Indians and whites. In this setting the efforts of Henry Knox to formulate consistent and just Indian policy is studied. The first stage of Henry Knox's career as a Cabinet Officer comes to an end with the formation of the Federal government. From 1789-1795, Henry Knox served as Secretary of War in the new government. He was given more authority by the administration to guide the conduct of Indian policy. This study deals at length with the problems that Knox encountered in his dealings with the Indians on the frontier and with the Cabinet members in Washington's government. The military defeats of Josiah Harmar and Arthur St. Clair at the hands of the Indians during this period are traced and evaluated as to their consequences on Knox's effectiveness as an administrator. The final solution to the Indian problem in the Northwest comes with Anthony Wayne's victory at Fallen Timbers in 1794. Knox's contributions to this effort and his legacy to future Indian policy are evaluated in the final portion of this study.
34

Alistair Knox : an integrated approach to landscape + architecture /

Lee, Clare. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis(M.Arch.)--University of Melbourne, Faculty Of Architecture, Building and Planning.
35

The church as a mentoring community for university students

Scott, Daniel D. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Westminster Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, 1995. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves [194]-219).
36

The church as a mentoring community for university students

Scott, Daniel D. January 1995 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Westminster Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, 1995. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves [194]-219).
37

The church as a mentoring community for university students

Scott, Daniel D. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Westminster Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, 1995. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves [194]-219).
38

Music and (post)colonialism : the dialectics of choral culture on a South African frontier

Olwage, Grant January 2004 (has links)
This thesis explores the genesis of black choralism in late-nineteenth-century colonial South Africa, attending specifically to its dialectic with metropolitan Victorian choralism. In two introductory historiographic chapters I outline the political-narrative strategies by which both Victorian and black South African choralism have been elided from music histories. Part 1 gives an account of the "structures" within and through which choralism functioned as a practice of colonisation, as "internal colonialism" in Britain and evangelical colonialism in the eastern Cape Colony. In chapter 1 I suggest that the religious contexts within which choralism operated, including the music theoretical construction of the tonic sol-fa notation and method as "natural", and the "scientific" musicalisation of race, constituted conditions for the foreign mission's embrace of choralism. The second chapter explores further such affinities, tracing sol-fa choralism's institutional affiliations with nineteenth-century "reform" movements, and suggesting that sol-fa's practices worked in fulfilment of core reformist concerns such as "industry" and literacy. Throughout, the thesis explores how the categories of class and race functioned interchangeably in the colonial imagination. Chapter 3 charts this relationship in the terrain of music education; notations, for instance, which were classed in Britain, became racialised in colonial South Africa. In particular I show that black music education operated within colonial racial discourses. Chapter 4 is a reading of Victorian choralism as a "discipline", interpreting choral performance practice and choral music itself as disciplinary acts which complemented the political contexts in which choralism operated. Part 1, in short, explores how popular choralism operated within and as dominant politicking. In part 2 I turn to the black reception of Victorian choralism in composition and performance. The fifth chapter examines the compositional discourse of early black choral music, focussing on the work of John Knox Bokwe (1855-1922). Through a detailed account of several of Bokwe's works and their metropolitan sources, particularly late-nineteenth century gospel hymnody, I show that Bokwe's compositional practice enacted a politics that became anticolonial, and that early black choral music became "black" in its reception. I conclude that ethno/musicological claims that early black choral music contains "African" musical content conflate "race" and culture under a double imperative: in the names of a decolonising politics and a postcolonial epistemology in which hybridity as resistance is racialised. The final chapter explores how "the voice" was crucial to identity politics in the Victorian world, an object that was classed and racialised. Proceeding from the black reception of choral voice training, I attempt to outline the beginnings of a social history of the black choral voice, as well as analyse the sonic content of that voice through an approach I call a "phonetics of timbre".
39

Amanda Knox: A Content Analysis of Media Framing in Newspapers Around the World

Freyenberger, Deidre 01 May 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Newspaper coverage can have a positive or negative impact on the image of an individual. This study examined the framing of Amanda Knox in newspapers published worldwide during the 4 years Knox was imprisoned in Italy. An American foreign exchange student, Knox was studying in Italy when her roommate was murdered. A content analysis of 500 major world newspapers was conducted. The study’s purpose was to determine the tone, story placement, and page placement of each mention of Amanda Knox. Newspaper articles associated with the topic were retrieved from the LexisNexis database and analyzed. The results showed that mentions of Amanda Knox were more negative in the United Kingdom and Ireland (25.9%). Story placement of Amanda Knox was more prominent in newspapers of Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, South Korea, and China. Page placement of Amanda Knox mentions was more prominent in Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, South Korea, and China (14%).
40

Middle to Late Ordovician δ<sup>13</sup>C and <sup>87</sup>Sr/<sup>86</sup>Sr stratigraphy in Virginia and West Virginia: implications for the timing of the Knox unconformity

Umholtz, Nicholas Moehle 14 November 2014 (has links)
No description available.

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