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The biradical origin of semitic rootsHecker, Bernice Varjick, 1935- 19 August 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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"An indolent and chilly folk" : the development of the idea of the "Moriori myth"Clayworth, Peter, n/a January 2001 (has links)
Throughout the nineteenth century probably the majority of Pakeha held the view that the East Polynesian ancestors of the Maori were the first people to settle in New Zealand. Over the same period there were always considerable numbers of Pakeha who held the alternative view that an earlier people were already living in New Zealand when the first East Polynesian immigrants arrived. Among Maori each hapu and iwi had their own origin traditions. Some held that their ancestors arrived to an empty land, while others believed there were other groups already here when their own ancestors arrived. The traditions of the Chatham Island Moriori indicated that they were also East Polynesian migrants, but some Pakeha speculated that the Moriori were a distinct people from the Maori.
By the early twentieth century one set of ideas on early settlement had become the orthodox view of the past among Pakeha. This view, which held sway from the 1910s until at least the 1960s, maintained that the original people of New Zealand were the �Moriori�, a people only distantly related, if at all, to the Maori. This primitive early people were supposed to have been displaced by the arrival of the more advanced East Polynesian Maori. Some of the more fortunate Moriori were absorbed into the Maori tribes, while the majority were either killed or driven into exile on the Chatham Islands. This idea of the past, sometimes called the �Moriori Myth�, has now been largely rejected by scholars, but still holds some currency in popular circles.
The current thesis examines the question of how the �Moriori Myth� developed and eventually became the orthodox view of the past. This question is investigated in the contexts of British imperial expansion, of the development of scientific ideas on race and evolution, and of the study of language and folklore as a way to decipher racial history. The current thesis is largely based on the writings of Pakeha and Maori scholars of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Letters and manuscripts, in both English and Maori, have been used, along with published books and papers. The major focus of the work is the idea that the Moriori Myth largely developed out of the Pakeha study of Maori oral history. This study of oral history led to a considerable degree of interaction between Pakeha scholars and Maori experts.
A major focus in the early part of the work is on Pakeha attempts to determine the racial identity and history of the Chatham Island Moriori. In this part of the work considerable attention has been paid to the collaborative work of the Pakeha scholar Alexander Shand and the Moriori expert Hirawanu Tapu, who worked together to record the surviving Moriori traditions.
The focus of the latter part of this thesis is on the creation by Pakeha scholars of theoretical models of the early migrations to New Zealand, based on their understandings of Maori oral traditions. It will be argued that the �Moriori Myth� was largely based on the writings of Stephenson Percy Smith, as promoted by himself and Elsdon Best, through the medium of the knowledge network formed by the Polynesian Society. Smith�s writings on the �Moriori Myth� will be shown to have been largely based on his interpretations of the writings of the Ngati Kahungunu scholar Hoani Turei Whatahoro. It will be argued that the �Moriori Myth� was in fact the creation of interactions between Pakeha scholars and Maori experts rather than the invention of any one person or group.
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Past presence : aesthetics and the creation of origin /Reynolds, Christine Sara, January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Oregon, 2008. / Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 99-101). Also available online.
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Eastern Europe and product-country images : a longitudinal analysis of the competitiveness of Eastern European products /Gooding, Elizabeth, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.B.A.) - Carleton University, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 169-176). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
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Patterns of Friendships among Mexican-origin Youth: Exploring the Role of Gender, Culture and Youth Well-beingJanuary 2011 (has links)
abstract: During adolescence, friends are a central part of adolescents' daily lives, they serve as significant sources of emotional support and companionship (Keefe & Berndt, 1996; Way & Robinson, 2003) as well as provide opportunities to negotiate interpersonal conflicts and disagreements (Laursen & Pursell, 2009). This study was designed to examine the nature and correlates of friendships, capturing the multidimensional nature of these relationships. Specifically, three goals were proposed: (a) to use a pattern-analytic approach to identify different profiles of adolescents' friendships along three dimensions: intimacy, negativity, and involvement; (b) to examine linkages between profile membership and adolescents' cultural orientations and values; and (c) to explore the relation between profile membership and adolescent well-being. Participants were 246 Mexican-origin adolescents (M = 12.50 years; SD = 0.58) who participated in home interviews and a series of nightly phone calls. Adolescents reported on their friendship qualities, their cultural orientations and values, as well as their depressive symptoms, risky behaviors, and on their current grades (GPA). Adolescents' time spent with best friends was calculated from the seven nightly phone calls. Results revealed three distinct latent profiles: Positive Engagement, Moderate Engagement, and Low Involvement. Profile membership was not linked to adolescents' cultural orientations and values. Further, associations emerged between profile membership and adolescents' GPA, but not their risky behaviors and depressive symptoms. / Dissertation/Thesis / M.S. Family and Human Development 2011
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On the origin of celestial objects : the stars, the planets, and the pulsarsPrentice, A. J. R. January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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The Historical and Theological Background of the Reformed Church in the United StatesRussom, Carl J.G. 01 January 1939 (has links)
Long ago God reverently commanded His people Israel to relate to their children and their children's children, what it was He had done for His people in the days of old. We believe this responsibility still to be incumbent not only upon the great church since that day, but upon every community of Christian people since then.
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The Formation of RNA Polymers on Primitive EarthDujardin, Alix A. January 2023 (has links)
One of the greatest scientific mysteries of all time is the Origin of Life on Earth. Life on Earth may have emerged with a unique molecule: Ribonucleic Acids (RNA). The RNA world for the origin of life is a theory that states that life started with RNA before DNA and proteins because RNA molecules can auto-replicate and store genetic information.
This thesis aims to expose how such RNA molecules could have been formed on a primitive Earth without the presence of other catalytic biomolecules such as enzymes. The model used in this thesis is the warm little ponds theory for the origin of life. RNA molecules could have been formed in these ponds thanks to wet-cold and warm-dry cycles. We used new experimental and computational technologies to try to answer this dilemma. Using a new machine, the Planet Simulator, which can mimic primitive environments by controlling five physical parameters, we found that extreme heat and low pH would destroy the building blocks of RNA. However, Molecular Dynamics computer simulations showed us that neutral pH could have led to the formation of RNA. Still, the presence of any surfaces and substrates would have decreased the polymerization rate due to the number of interactions between the RNA building blocks and the minerals substrates. We then found a new vision of where life could have come from: in super-saturated water droplets, which could have been formed by geysers or springs on primitive Earth. We tested this theory experimentally using an acoustic levitator to levitate super-saturated droplets and study them in the laboratory. Our preliminary results showed that RNA could have been formed in such droplets on primitive Earth. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
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The measurement and origin of fracture toughness in polyethyleneStrebel, Jeffrey Jerome January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
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Make It 'til You Break It : - A Study of If and How Country-of-Origin Incongruence Affects Consumer-Based Brand EquityFridjonsson, Sylvia, Mersmann, Emma January 2011 (has links)
As companies are focused on and capable of creating brand images aimed at supporting their brands, some choose to strategically associate them with specific countries or regions in hopes of attaining perceivably higher consumer-based brand equity. Although such a strategy could prove itself effective in the sense of increasing the amount of positive consumer perceptions, it might also result in harmful effects if the marketed country-of-brand origin is not in congruence with the brand‟s other country-of-origin constructs. With regards to what theory implies and what this study‟s results suggest, this thesis analyzes the effects of country-of-origin incongruence on consumer-based brand equity in the case of Lexington. What this thesis uncovers is that the country-of-origin incongruence of Lexington does not, contrary to theory, have negative consequences on its consumer-based brand equity. Yet, what is suggested is that further research should focus on whether these results are simply restricted to this study‟s exact settings or would be attained even in another setting in which consumer ethnocentrism would not play a significant role.
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