2,860 research outputs found
Featured Speaker: Dwayne Reed
Dwayne Reed is an educator, speaker, author, and rapper. Catapulted by his blockbuster video Welcome to the Fourth Grade, Mr. Reed has been featured on Good Morning America, World News Tonight, BBC News, The Jimmy Kimmel Live Show, and in The Washington Post and Time Magazine. Mr. Reed, an EIU graduate, will share about his teaching journey to guide you on yours
Cytoplasmic N-Terminal Protein Acetylation Is Required for Efficient Photosynthesis in Arabidopsis
The Arabidopsis atmak3-1 mutant was identified on the basis of a decreased effective quantum yield of photosystem II. In atmak3-1, the synthesis of the plastome-encoded photosystem II core proteins D1 and CP47 is affected, resulting in a decrease in the abundance of thylakoid multiprotein complexes. DNA array-based mRNA analysis indicated that extraplastid functions also are altered. The mutation responsible was localized to AtMAK3, which encodes a homolog of the yeast protein Mak3p. In yeast, Mak3p, together with Mak10p and Mak31p, forms the N-terminal acetyltransferase complex C (NatC). The cytoplasmic AtMAK3 protein can functionally replace Mak3p, Mak10p, and Mak31p in acetylating N termini of endogenous proteins and the L-A virus Gag protein. This result, together with the finding that knockout of the Arabidopsis MAK10 homolog does not result in obvious physiological effects, indicates that AtMAK3 function does not require NatC complex formation, as it does in yeast. We suggest that N-acetylation of certain chloroplast precursor protein(s) is necessary for the efficient accumulation of the mature protein(s) in chloroplasts
Jere Nash Interview with Jack Reed
Interview conducted by author Jere Nash with Tupelo businessman Jack Reed in the process of writing Mississippi Politics: The Struggle for Power, 1976-2006. Reed chaired a special education study commission in 1980 and ran as a Republican candidate in the 1987 gubernatorial race. Topics covered include William Winter; education; Tupelo, Mississippi; George McLean; School integration; Mississippi Economic Council; civil rights; Bill Allain; special education study commission; highway program; Reed running for governor in 1987; Republican Party; efforts to recruit Reed to run for governor again in 1991; Kirk Fordice; Roger Wicker; and current work on education
... Reed hazing report
Began with 2020.Submitted to the Legislative Assembly as required by ORS 350.259.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
Reading: Ishmael Reed
In this audiovisual recording from Thursday, March 20, 1975, as part of the 6th Annual UND Writers Conference: “Spirit of Place,” Ishmael Reed reads a selection of poems and an excerpt from Flight to Canada. The poems Reed reads include “Feral Pioneers,” “There\u27s a Whale in my Thigh,” “I am a Cowboy in the Boat of Ra,” “Betty\u27s Ball Blues,” “Monsters From the Ozarks,” “Beware: Do Not Read This Poem,” “Dualism,” “The Difference Between My Heart & Your Intellect,” “[In San Francisco They are Taking Up a Collection],” “Caledonia,” “Sky Diving,” “\u27Sputin,” “Untitled,” “Return of Julian the Apostle to Rome,” “Sky Diving Part Two,” “If I Had a Nickel,” “The Author Reflects on His 35th Birthday,” “Mystery First Lady,” “Jacket Notes,” and “Skirt Dance.
History professor John Tomsich retires from Reed. By Edward Segel.
https://rdc.reed.edu/v1/resources/42169571-3507-4dd0-bb53-b5b5b9cbd82f/thumb/128.jpgNote on the retirement of John Tomsich, at Reed from 1962 and author of an American history classic, A Genteel Endeavor. Tomsich, an admired lecturer in Humanities 210 and 220, expanded his interests into the history of science and technology
Jere Nash Interview with Clarke Reed (Part 3 of 3)
Interview conducted by author Jere Nash with Clarke Reed, a former chair of the Mississippi Republican Party, in the process of writing Mississippi Politics: The Struggle for Power, 1976-2006. Topics covered include an account of an airplane accident; Mississippi Republican Party; Haley Barbour; 1976 presidential race in Mississippi for Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan; role of the party chair in Mississippi; Thad Cochran; Kirk Fordice; Reed\u27s background; Reed as chair of Mississippi Republican Party; the South in the Republican Party; Governor\u27s Mansion; and Wildlife Mississippi
Reed Whittemore papers
Reed Whittemore (b. 1919) is a poet and emeritus professor of English at the University of Maryland, where he taught from 1967 to 1984. He also served twice as the Poetry Consultant for the Library of Congress. The author of a major biography of William Carlos Williams, he has also written numerous volumes of poems and essays. Whittemore's papers include correspondence, manuscripts, drafts, notes, galleys, proofs, scrapbooks, diaries, published materials, newspaper and magazine clippings, audiotapes, and photographs documenting his life, literary work, and teaching. Significant correspondents represented in the collection include Arthur Mizener and John Pauker
Reed College: A study in educational history
https://rdc.reed.edu/v1/resources/bb3a44a7-9867-41e4-b0b3-f553f29249b7/thumb/128.jpgThis thesis examines the founding of Reed College as a problem in the history of education during the Progressive era. The author studies the intentions of the men influential in the college's early years, and the nature of the institution itself as it functioned. She concludes that this approach to educational history is more fruitful than the traditional attempt to classify a college or university as "progressive," and suggests that this approach be generally employed in studying the history of education in the early twentieth century
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