2,102 research outputs found

    CONVOCATION, FOUNDERS DAY (CLAIRE BOOTH LUCE) PART 2 #138.

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    Repository: Booth Family Center for Special Collections. For more information about this collection please email: [email protected] continuation of the Founders Day convocation with an address by U.S. Ambassador to Italy and honorary degree recipient Clare Booth Luce. In it, she expresses fears that the country is drifting away from the moral principles of the Founding Fathers and embracing "delusive, ruinous theories of government.

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from Allan Shivers to Clare Booth Luce introducing Mr. Daniel W. Kempner and asking her to provide any assistance should it be needed

    Clare Booth Luce

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    CONVOCATION, FOUNDERS DAY (CLAIRE BOOTH LUCE) PART 1 #137.

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    Repository: Booth Family Center for Special Collections. For more information about this collection please email: [email protected] in McDonough Gym. Georgetown President Edward B. Bunn, S.J., discusses the arrival and work of Jesuits in Maryland in the 17th century and the beginnings of Catholic education in the United States in his opening address: "Some historian have seen in these abortive attempts the foundations of Georgetown. I think these are the loving exaggerations of loyalty. . . Yet . . . it is undeniable that these pioneers contributed to the later foundation of Georgetown." He then introduces the three honorary degree awardees: U.S. Ambassador to Italy Clare Booth Luce; Dr. Thomas J. Tudor; and Chemistry Professor Michael X. Sullivan. President Bunn's remarks are followed by the reading of the University Charter, the award of vicennial medals for twenty years of service to the University, the presentation of students (including Leo J. O'Donovan and Antonin Scalia) who have merited academic honors, and the reading of the honorary degree citations in both Latin and English

    A Conversation with Char Booth

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    Welcome to a special audio edition of In the Library with the Lead Pipe. Ellie Collier talks to Char Booth, E-Learning Librarian at the University of California at Berkeley and author of Informing Innovation: Tracking Student Interest in Emerging Library Technologies at Ohio University, a book length research report recently published by ACRL and available [...

    Ki-67 is a PP1-interacting protein that organises the mitotic chromosome periphery

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    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

    [EB 2009, Exhibit Booth]

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    [Title supplied by cataloger]AAA Exhibit Booth and Meet the Author Session at the 2009 Experimental Biology conference

    The Booth Hill Overlook: an inspiring view

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    Title from PDF caption (viewed on June 13, 2018)."5-21-46"--Page 4.This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English

    Everhardus Booth Een Irenist?

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    AbstractEverhardus Booth an irenicist? Eleven years ago F.G.M. Broeyer wrote an article in which he claims that Utrecht preacher Everard Booth's translation of William Perkins' A Reformed Catholike was not intended to be an anti-Roman polemic, but rather was of an irenic nature, and that Booth himself was an irenicist. The author of this article demonstrates that this view is refuted by what Perkins himself says in his dedication to William Bowes and in his preface. Further, according to Broeyer, the translation was a carefully considered initiative by Booth himself and was deliberately intended to foster religious peace in Utrecht. However, these views are in direct conflict with a note written to Booth by Richard Schilders, the publisher of the translation. Finally, we should not overlook the significance of an earlier translation by Booth, in which the very title demonstrates its strongly anti-Romanist nature. Conclusion: Booth's translation of Perkins' tract as well as Booth himself has nothing to do with irenicism.17 </jats:sec
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