118,862 research outputs found
Note: George G. Booth to Ida M. Tarbell, August 20, 1900
Handwritten note regarding J.L. Scripps' Life of Lincol
William Booth Taliaferro correspondence, 1859
74 items. Unfinished letter of [?] to Rufus J. Colley (bears legal notes concerning estate of William H. Roy), Francis M. Boykin, Jr., Upperville Male Academy, John Haw, Thomas H. Ellis, P.M. Tabb & Son, order from Henry A. Wise to Gibson to call on Superintendent of Arsenal at Harper's Ferry for amunition, John Blair Hoge to Wise, S. Bassett French to Jno. B. Hoge, Morton Marye, Sister to William Booth Taliaferro, H.H. Dent, Medical Report of R. A. Straith, David S. Watson, J. Lucins Davis, William Munford to J.M. Rowan, Alfred M. Barbour (issuing ammunition and bursting of guns), E. W. Balch, William Booth Taliaferro to Wise, James L. Kemper, Alexander Galt Taliaferro, William B. Hartley, Robert F. Getty (E.G. Otis Yonkers Examiner Reporter), W. (leter to Wise, anti-hanging John Brown), William Munford to H.L. Bowen (transmitting denial of Bowen's request by William Booth Taliaferro), George W. Munford, J.A. Vadenbousch to William Booth Taliaferro, S. Bassett French (for William Booth Taliaferro) to M.M. Anderson, L.H. King to [?] Wargh concerning credentials of E.G Otis, Capt. to [?] (promise to rescue him), Chas. G. Stone to J.L. Davis (publication), John Scott, J. Lucinus, William, R.D., Edmund Mason, William H. anthony Henry C. Allen--conditions at Charlestown Jail, Powhatan Robinson page (for William Booth Taliaferro) to John B. Hoge, William Booth Taliaferro per O. Jennings Wise to William Sherrard, Ap.P. Shutt, E.G. Otis to his wife (including description of Mt. Vernon), Draft of William Booth Taliaferro to Haw, William Booth Taliaferro (per I. Jennings Wise to [?] Moore), William Booth Taliaferro to [?] Clarke, (Congressman) A. W. Boteler to William Booth Taliaferro, Edward Graham to William Booth Taliaferro, Pohatan Robinson Page, J.R. Chambliss, H. H. Mays, J.D. Bright, James C. Van Dyke, Henry M. Phillips to Charles J. Faukner, P. Ranchfoss, Ro[bert] Tyler, ?Francis B, Jones, W.B. Stanard [at Bendover], J.W. Ware, William H. Richardson, A.K. Syester, J.W. Rowan, Bond of B.R. Gaine to Warner Throckmorton Toliaferro (executor of William H. Roy
Ki-67 is a PP1-interacting protein that organises the mitotic chromosome periphery
Copyright @ 2014 Booth et al. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.When the nucleolus disassembles during open mitosis, many nucleolar proteins and RNAs associate with chromosomes, establishing a perichromosomal compartment coating the chromosome periphery. At present nothing is known about the function of this poorly characterised compartment. In this study, we report that the nucleolar protein Ki-67 is required for the assembly of the perichromosomal compartment in human cells. Ki-67 is a cell-cycle regulated protein phosphatase 1-binding protein that is involved in phospho-regulation of the nucleolar protein B23/nucleophosmin. Following siRNA depletion of Ki-67, NIFK, B23, nucleolin, and four novel chromosome periphery proteins all fail to associate with the periphery of human chromosomes. Correlative light and electron microscopy (CLEM) images suggest a near-complete loss of the entire perichromosomal compartment. Mitotic chromosome condensation and intrinsic structure appear normal in the absence of the perichromosomal compartment but significant differences in nucleolar reassembly and nuclear organisation are observed in post-mitotic cells
Booth, G H, 2743
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/372618Surname: BOOTH
Given Name(s) or Initials: G H
Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 2743
Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 194183536
Item: [2016.0049.04943] "Booth, G H, 2743
Booth, G H, 37389
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/372620Surname: BOOTH
Given Name(s) or Initials: G H
Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 37389
Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 34519183538
Item: [2016.0049.04945] "Booth, G H, 37389
Portrait of Second Lieutenant G. Booth
This is a portrait of Second Lieutenant G. Booth, Infantry. When this was taken, Booth was a recent graduate of the Officer Candidate Course at the Infantry School. He is wearing his summer service uniform and angled to the left; he is looking at the camera with a slight smile. This portrait was likely taken in a photography studio
Portrait of Second Lieutenant G. Booth
This is a portrait of Second Lieutenant G. Booth, Infantry. When this was taken, Booth was a recent graduate of the Officer Candidate Course at the Infantry School. He is wearing his summer service uniform and angled to the left; he is looking at the camera with a slight smile. This portrait was likely taken in a photography studio
Booth, Evangeline C.
The collection consists of a single item. It is a form letter, typed, on Salvation Army letterhead, dated November 1897, and signed by Evangeline Booth in her capacity as Field Commissioner. The letter demonstrates Booth's and the Salvation Army's approach to raising money for charitable works in the 1890s
Andrew D. Booth – Britain’s Other “Fourth Man”
International audienceAndrew Donald Booth (1918-2009) was the leader of a team of computer pioneers at Birkbeck College in the University of London, UK. Booth worked with limited resources, both human and financial, and concentrated on building smaller machines. This paper presents an outline of his career in the UK which, the author believes, has not received the attention it deserves in comparison to a number of his UK contemporaries
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