136,675 research outputs found

    Hill, C G, 418123

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/392265Surname: HILL. Given Name(s) or Initials: C G. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 418123. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 55295.210035 Item: [2016.0049.24558] "Hill, C G, 418123

    Evolution of the G+C content frontier in the rat cytomegalovirus genome

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    Within the 230138 bp of the rat cytomegalovirus (RCMV) genome, the G+C content changes abruptly at position 142644, constituting a G+C content frontier. To the left of this point, overall G+C content is 69.2%, and to the right it is only 47.6%. A region of extremely low G+C content (33.8%) is found in the 5 kb immediately to the right of the frontier, in which there are no predicted coding sequences. To the right of position 147501, the G+C content rises and predicted coding sequences reappear. However, these genes are much shorter (average 848bp, 50% G+C) than those in the left two-thirds of the genome (average 1462bp, 70% G+C). Whole genome alignment of several viruses indicates that the initial ultra-low G+C region appeared in the common ancestor of the genera Cytomegalovirus and Muromegalovirus, and that the lowering of G+C in the right third has been a subsequent process in the lineage leading to RCMV. The left two-thirds of RCMV has stop codon occurrences at 67.5% of their expected level, based on a modified Markov chain model of stop codon distribution, and the corresponding figure for the right third is 78%. Therefore, despite heavy mutation pressure, selective constraint has operated in the right third of the RCMV genome to maintain a degree of gene length unusual for such low G+C sequences

    HILL, Benjamín G. (Gral.) y HILL Benjamín R.

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    Cartas del Gral. Benjamín G. Hill al Gral. PEC, Secretario de Industria y Comercio. Lo felicita por su nombramiento. Recomienda al Gral. Héctor López, Ing. Iheo Montgomery, A. Gutiérrez Mayagoitia, Corl. Eduardo V. Jara, Corl. Miguel Rodríguez Galeana, Prof. Rafael Márquez, Ing. Francisco Moreno. Carta del Gral. Benjamín G. Hill al Gral. PEC. Le envía un ocurso de Manuel Borboa y otros vecinos del Distrito del Fuerte, relativo a los problemas que han tenido en el ferrocarril para transportar sus productos agrícolas. Carta del Gral. Benjamín G. Hill al Gral. PEC. Le manda un ocurso de la Compañía Placeres de Oro de Michoacán S. A. en que piden permiso para introducir maquinaria (sin derechos de importación) para una draga. Oficio firmado por E. Estrada, Subsecretario de Guerra y Marina, al Presidente Obregón. Le da sus condolencias por la muerte del Gral. Benjamín G. Hill y expresa el deseo del ejército de que sea el Gral. PEC el que lleve el mando de la columna que hará los honores. Orden extraordinaria para organizar el desfile y la columna del desfile para los honores del extinto Gral. Benjamín G. Hill. Cartas y telegramas de condolencias por la muerte del Gral. Benjamín G. Hill, envíadas al Gral. PEC por el Gral. Paz Faz Riza, jefe de la guarnición de Puebla, los diputados P. Martínez Noriega y J. Gormo de San Luis Potosí, José G. Parras, Gobernador de Morelos, Gral. Lázaro Cárdenas, Donaciano Carreón, Domingo Valdés Llano. Telegrama de Gregoria Pozos Vda. de Hill al Gral. PEC. Le pide que intervenga ante la Contraloría a fin de que se acepte un poder notarial para cobrar la pensión que se le concedió por la muerte de su hijo Benjamín Hill. Telegrama de Benjamín R. Hill, Comandante de Resguardo en Tijuana B. C., al Gral. PEC. Le pide intervenga ante el Presidente Rodríguez para que no sea removido de su puesto pues estáa trabajando con honradez y atendiendo su salud

    Don't Let the Deal Go Down; (Key C, cycles of fifths progression A-D-G-C-, EADG tuning)

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    Fiddle tune played by Elijah Hill with guitar by Paul Hill and recorded by family members in Henry County, Indiana about 1965

    La Prosa Anglosassone / Old English Prose

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    Old English Prose is the fifth issue of the journal Germanic Philology, sponsored by the Italian Association of Germamic Philology (AIFG) and edited by P. Lendinara, C. Di Sciacca, J. Hill, L. Lazzari, and L. Vezzosi. The multifaceted volume consists of eleven original contributions by both established scholars and emerging Anglo-Saxonists, ranging from the ‘Alfredian’ translations to encyclopedic notes, from the anonymous Blickling and Vercelli homilies to Ælfric, from source-studies to Old English word-formation and syntax. Contents: M. Cesario, ‘Romancing the wind: The role of gales in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle’; R. Cioffi, ‘Ne opige nan man to ðissere leasunge: Un controverso caso di intercessione mariana al momento del giudizio’; G. Cocco, ‘From wea to wela: Shipwreck as a foreshadowing of Christian salvation in the Old English Apollonius of Tyre’; G.D. De Bonis, ‘Le Omelie Blickling nella produzione omiletica anglosassone’; K. Dekker, ‘The organisation and structure of Old English encyclopaedic notes’; M. Godden, ‘Alfredian prose: Myth and reality’; J. Hill, ‘Augustine’s tractates on John and the homilies of Ælfric’; O. Khalaf, ‘A study on the translator’s omissions and instances of adaptation in the Old English Orosius: The case of Alexander the Great’; L. Pezzarossa, ‘Reading Orosius in the Viking Age: An influential yet problematic model’; H. Sauer, ‘Vercelli Homilies and word-formation’; L. Vezzosi, ‘Relative clauses in Old English prose: A stylistic choice’

    Dispelling the Myths Behind First-author Citation Counts

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    We conducted a full-scale evaluative citation analysis study of scholars in the XML research field to explore just how different from each other author rankings resulting from different citation counting methods actually are, and to demonstrate the capability of emerging data and tools on the Web in supporting more realistic citation counting methods. Our results contest some common arguments for the continued use of first-author citation counts in the evaluation of scholars, such as high correlations between author rankings by first-author citation counts and other citation counting methods, and high costs of using more realistic citation counting methods that are not well-supported by the ISI databases. It is argued that increasingly available digital full text research papers make it possible for citation analysis studies to go beyond what the ISI databases have directly supported and to employ more sophisticated methods

    An Open Framework for Integrating Widely Distributed Hypermedia Resources

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    The success of the WWW has served as an illustration of how hypermedia functionality can enhance access to large amounts of distributed information. However, the WWW and many other distributed hypermedia systems offer very simple forms of hypermedia functionality which are not easily applied to existing applications and data formats, and cannot easily incorporate alternative functions which would aid hypermedia navigation to and from existing documents that have not been developed with hypermedia access in mind. This paper describes the extension to a distributed environment of the open hypermedia functionality of the Microcosm system, which is designed to support the provision of hypermedia access to a wide range of source material and application, and to offer straightforward extension of the system to incorporate new forms of information access

    Unifying Distributed Processing and Open Hypertext through a Heterogeneous Communication Model

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    A successful distributed open hypermedia system can be characterised by a scaleable architecture which is inherently distributed. While the architects of distributed hypermedia systems have addressed the issues of providing and retrieving distributed resources, they have often neglected to design systems with the inherent capability to exploit the distributed processing of this information. The research presented in this paper describes the construction and use of an open hypermedia system concerned equally with both of these facets

    C-1957: Richmond, Utah, Archie G. and May J. Hill residence. Lots 5-6 Block 24 Plat A. Built 1904

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    C-1957: Richmond, Utah, Archie G. and May J. Hill residence. Lots 5-6 Block 24 Plat A. Built 190
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