781 |
Caliche; a study of the so-called desert limestone of Arizona--were biological factors concerned in its deposition?Griffin, Stuart W., 1890- January 1920 (has links)
No description available.
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782 |
The distribution of aspartate transcarbamylase in developing tobacco leavesGrady, Raymond Arthur, 1943- January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
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783 |
Consumer attitudes on filled milkEyster, Carol Irene, 1938- January 1969 (has links)
No description available.
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784 |
The exploration of color and form in eight non-objective paintingsNelson, Robert William, 1921- January 1954 (has links)
No description available.
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785 |
The errors of junior high school pupils in written compositionProffitt, Goldie Bernice January 1932 (has links)
No description available.
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786 |
Evaluation of silage by organic acid determinationParra, Ramon Armando Martinez, 1947- January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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787 |
Traduction et création chez l'écrivain-traducteurVautour, Richard T. January 1998 (has links)
In this thesis entitled Traduction et creation chez l'ecrivain-traducteur, we set out to demonstrate that faithfulness is as much a fundamental experience to the writer-translator in his creative writing task as it is in his translation task. / We shall see that the everlasting translation debate opposing faithfulness to betrayal can only find its resolution through a fresh interrogation of the notion of meaning, which is too often viewed as determined and translatable, thereby constraining the literary work. / Thus, we found it necessary to return to the experience of reading as a pursuit of a meaning that is multiple and in movement. To better understand what this reading experience means, we turned to that special reader the writer-translator is, for he is involved both in the reading and in the writing of the literary work. / In the intimate movement which leads from reading to writing, the writer-translator need not be faithful to the source language or to the target language, but faithful to what is revealed between the two, to what eludes them both. In this manner, translation becomes the pursuit of a third language, which would be as close as possible to the literary absolute of which all works, whether written by the writer-translator or by the author he translates, are translations.
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788 |
The milk composition of Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis).Chen, Ernest Chung-Hsu January 1966 (has links)
Milk was collected from five Rocky Mountam bighorn sheep living in the Jasper National Park area of Alberta. The milk was collected at 1 1/2 and 3 months post partum. The total solids, ash, fat, lactose and protein contents of the five samples were determined. The fatty acids constitution of the milk fat was estimated by gas-liquid chromatography. [...]
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789 |
Theoretical Communities of Praxis| The university writing center as cultural contact zoneMonty, Randall William 09 August 2013 (has links)
<p>The fundamental purpose of <i>Theoretical Communities of Praxis: The University Writing Center as Cultural Contact Zone</i> is to investigate the situatedness of Writing Center Studies, defining it as an autonomous (sub)discipline and interdisciplinary contact zone within the larger discipline of Rhetoric and Composition. In order to meet this objective, a “Communities of Praxis” methodological and theoretical framework, based on scholarship of Critical Discourse Analysis, ecocomposition, and Contextualist Research Paradigm, is applied in the analysis of a variety of WCS discourses. </p><p> In doing so, WCS is repositioned as a series of interrelated, triangulated contact zones that are based on collaborative interactions and illustrated through the development of heuristic maps that challenges the traditional discursive practices of local writing centers and the WCS (sub)discipline alike. By emphasizing a (sub)disciplinary identification based on embracing WCS’s place as an interdisciplinary contact zone, this dissertation demonstrates ways for all stakeholders to employ a Communities of Praxis framework in order to more effectively and more equitably consider the theoretical places and physical spaces of Writing Center Studies. </p>
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790 |
Crisis Communication-What is Your EmergencyJohnson, Kaelyn 20 September 2013 (has links)
<p> This study is a rhetorical analysis of 911 active shooter calls. Working from frame theory it examines the types of communication that occur during crisis situations. This study reviews the actual audio tapes of the Columbine Colorado School shooting, the Trolley Square Salt Lake City UT shooting and the Arizona shooting of Congresswoman Gabby Gifford. This study provides a method for investigating the communication between caller to 911 and the telecommunicators that answer 911calls. It provides a baseline of the communication activities that are occurring and this method of communication is rapidly changing with pending text-mediated communication scheduled to take effect in 911 centers in 2014.</p>
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