137 research outputs found

    Thinking about "The tale of Maturanomiya" Princess Kayo

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    application/pdfThis thesis especially discusses the Princess Kayo about “The tale of Maturanomiya” The influence of story preceding and a variety of is seen in “The tale of Maturanomiya”. A forming of princess Kayo also is influenced from preceding story. The purpose of this thesis is to clear what influences forming princess Kayo and to clear what does the story try by handling her.  In this thesis, the influence of Naka no kimi at “Yoru no nezame” and Murasaki no ue at “The Tale of Genji’” pointed out first. These women was shouldering suffering. Because they have to do count on a man who has other women. The same thing can be said also to princess Kayo. Therefore, I pointed out it that she is is a successor of these women.  Though she was a successor in the one side that is certainly, the problem, that is, their “Suffer of the woman” is not made a focus. This reason is that the problem, “Suffer of the woman” changes in quality at this story. This problem do not focus in women’s mind but focuses a man who becomes dilemma among women. This story depicts a man assuming that it is cool.  The very important fact is Princess Kayo having been influenced another person is not only two people but also princess Shikishi. She was a woman of author(Fuziwara no Sadaie)’s yearning. The author had him accomplish the desire that ended in the yearning in the story in the reality. This story made situation fall in love by such a woman, and careless in woman’s feelings. In a word, this story of the man, by the man, for the man.  In the near future,I am going to think about the problem of two heroines of the remainder. I want to continue thinking about this story, to a total.departmental bulletin pape

    Archival Resources Reimagined: a Feminist Examination of the "Latin American Twentieth-century Pamphlets"

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    In this practicum report, I use the insights afforded by feminist scholarship and theory to analyze my experience examining the Latin American Twentieth-Century Pamphlets collection at Special Collections & University Archives, Rutgers University Libraries, a collection assembled by Robert Jackson Alexander, 1918-2010. I focus in Brazil and Guyana collections and identify political beliefs and perspectives that uncover different actors and forces in these two countries, acknowledging discriminatory structures or alternative accounts of history. I also examine the issue of organization and access tools in the management of archives and their usefulness to organize this type of collection. Finally, I present the insights on uncovered resources, along with my readings on the transnational dimensions of politics and ideologies in both collections as an area for a valuable intervention for archivists and librarians to undertake.This practicum report was submitted to fulfill the requirements for the M.A. degree in Women's and Gender Studies (2010). The Practicum Committee: Nancy Hewitt (chair), Carlos Decena, and Yana van der Meulen Rodgers

    Complete Genome Sequence of Melissococcus plutonius DAT561, a Strain That Shows an Unusual Growth Profile, Obtained by PacBio Sequencing

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    ABSTRACT Melissococcus plutonius is the causative agent of European foulbrood, and its isolates were believed to be remarkably genetically homogeneous. However, recent epidemiological and pathogenic studies have shown this pathogen to be more heterogeneous than expected. Herein, we present the whole-genome sequence of M. plutonius DAT561, a representative atypical strain. </jats:p

    <Original>Isolation and Characterization of Diazotrophic Bacteria from the Surface-Sterilized Roots of Some Legumes.

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    application/pdfA total of 251 bacteria were isolated using a nitrogen-free, malate-containing, semi-solid media (JNFb) from the surface-sterilized roots of eight species of legumes: Arachis hypogea, Astragalus sinicus, Crotalaria juncea, Glycine max, Medicago saliva, Phaseolus vulgaris, Pisum sativum, Sesbania cannabina, Trifolium incarnatum, Trifolium pratense, and Trifolium repens. Thirty-one isolated bacteria showed an acetylene reduction activity (ARA) of 2.6 to 450 nmol h^ culture^ when grown in the JNFb media. No diazotroph was isolated from Crotalaria juncea, Sesbania cannabina, and Trifolium incarnatum. Analysis of the 16S rRNA gene sequence and physiological characteristics of the 31 isolates showed that these isolates were Agrobacterium radiobacter, A. tumefaciens, Azospirillum lipoferum, Bradyrhizobium elkanii, Burkholderia cepacia, Frateuria aurantia, Klebsiella oxytoca, K. pneumoniae, Rhizobium gallicum, R. sp., Starkeya novella, and Xantobacter flavus. The isolates were classified into three groups by the pattern of ARA expression. Three representative strains of the A. lipoferum, X. flavus, and K. oxytoca groups were examined for the effect on the growth and the nitrogen content of red clover, kidney bean, and soybean. Inoculation of these plants with these strains had no effect on the growth and nitrogen content of all plants.大阪府立大学大学院農学生命科学研究科学術報告. 2003, 55, p.29-3

    Public Health Approach to Etiology of Cerebrovasular Accidents

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    Though there are many studies of cerebrovascular accidents from etiological point of view, few have been reported concerning impacts of daily life to cerebrovascular accidents from the view point of public health. The author examined the interactions between human factors and his environment in the cases of cerebrovascular accidents in two areas and one group of workers. The 227 objects were selected to discuss from the patients and the dead in two rural areas by examining answeres to questionnaires, medical records by doctors, and dath certificates. The results are as follows. 1) There was a difference of incidence of cerebrovascular accidents between those two areas it was 4.35 per 1,000 adults over 40 years in Kayo, whereas 6.20 in Yao. 2) Cerebrovascular accidents often occurred at either dinning and bath room in the evening or toilet in the midnight. 3) The impacts of climate was not clear in Yao where the climate is calm, on the conrary there were observed two peaks of incidence in summer and winter in Kayo where the climate is sever. 4) There were found more frequently cerebral hemorrahge than cerebral thrombosis among male farmers in those two areas. 5) The author pointed out that not only natural impacts but also soci-economical and cultural background to cerebrovascular accidents must be discussed, such as organization of labour and so forth. 6) There were observed the evidence that chronic CS(2) exposure resulted in high incidence of hypetention and cerebrovascular accidents

    <Original>Isolation and Characterization of Diazotrophic Bacteria from the Surface-Sterilized Roots of Some Legumes.

    No full text
    A total of 251 bacteria were isolated using a nitrogen-free, malate-containing, semi-solid media (JNFb) from the surface-sterilized roots of eight species of legumes: Arachis hypogea, Astragalus sinicus, Crotalaria juncea, Glycine max, Medicago saliva, Phaseolus vulgaris, Pisum sativum, Sesbania cannabina, Trifolium incarnatum, Trifolium pratense, and Trifolium repens. Thirty-one isolated bacteria showed an acetylene reduction activity (ARA) of 2.6 to 450 nmol h^<-1> culture^<-1> when grown in the JNFb media. No diazotroph was isolated from Crotalaria juncea, Sesbania cannabina, and Trifolium incarnatum. Analysis of the 16S rRNA gene sequence and physiological characteristics of the 31 isolates showed that these isolates were Agrobacterium radiobacter, A. tumefaciens, Azospirillum lipoferum, Bradyrhizobium elkanii, Burkholderia cepacia, Frateuria aurantia, Klebsiella oxytoca, K. pneumoniae, Rhizobium gallicum, R. sp., Starkeya novella, and Xantobacter flavus. The isolates were classified into three groups by the pattern of ARA expression. Three representative strains of the A. lipoferum, X. flavus, and K. oxytoca groups were examined for the effect on the growth and the nitrogen content of red clover, kidney bean, and soybean. Inoculation of these plants with these strains had no effect on the growth and nitrogen content of all plants

    Interpreting large-scale redshift-space distortion measurements

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    The simplest theory describing large-scale redshift-space distortions (RSD), based on linear theory and distant galaxies, depends on the growth of cosmological structure, suggesting that strong tests of general relativity can be constructed from galaxy surveys. As data sets become larger and the expected constraints more precise, the extent to which the RSD follow the simple theory needs to be assessed in order that we do not introduce systematic errors into the tests by introducing inaccurate simplifying assumptions. We study the impact of the sample geometry, non-linear processes and biases induced by our lack of understanding of the radial galaxy distribution on RSD measurements. Using Large Suite of Dark Matter Simulations of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey II (SDSS-II) luminous red galaxy data, these effects are shown to be important at the level of 20per cent. Including them, we can accurately model the recovered clustering in these mock catalogues on scales 30-200h -1Mpc. Applying this analysis to robustly measure parameters describing the growth history of the Universe from the SDSS-II data gives f(z= 0.25)σ 8(z= 0.25) = 0.3512 ± 0.0583 and f(z= 0.37)σ 8(z= 0.37) = 0.4602 ± 0.0378 when no prior is imposed on the growth rate, and the background geometry is assumed to follow a Λ cold dark matter (ΛCDM) model with the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP)+Type Ia supernova priors. The standard WMAP constrained ΛCDM model with general relativity predicts f(z= 0.25)σ 8(z= 0.25) = 0.4260 ± 0.0141 and f(z= 0.37)σ 8(z= 0.37) = 0.4367 ± 0.0136, which is fully consistent with these measurements. © 2012 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2012 RAS
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