965 resultados para Companion to the almanac, or, Year-book of general information


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Description based on: June 1907.

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Also includes: highlights of the events of the previous year; and, summaries of political platforms.

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Vols. for 1904-5-1907-8 called also: 1st issue-3rd issue; 1918- called also: 26th issue- continuing the numbering of its previous title.

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Issue for 1902 forms v. 8 of the series; 1903-12 form v. 5; 1918-25, v. 4. 1927 incorrectly numbered 1928 on t.p.

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Vol. 1 published in Scio, Ohio; v. 2-12, in Chicago; v. 13-19, in Baltimore; v. 20-23 in Washington.

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This essay considers a specific digital ‘archive’ of early Australian children’s literature, known as the Children’s Literature Digital Resources (CLDR), which is located in AustLit: The Australian Literature Resource ( http://www.austlit.edu.au ). We examine what the CLDR collection can tell us about Australia’s history. To narrow the scope, we focus on how Australia was constructing itself as a nation with its own character, or national identity, in texts written for children from the latter part of the nineteenth century up until the end of World War II. Our approach is to consider how early Australian children’s literature included in the CLDR collection rhetorically constructs nation and place, and in so doing constructs an Australian identity for its implied readers.

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Development of vaccine strategies against human papillomavirus (HPV), which causes cervical cancer, is a priority. We investigated the use of virus-like particles (VLPs) of the most prevalent type, HPV-16, as carriers of foreign proteins. Green fluorescent protein (GFP) was fused to the N or C terminus of both L1 and L2, with L2 chimeras being co-expressed with native L1. Purified chimaeric VLPs were comparable in size (∼55 nm) to native HPV VLPs. Conformation-specific monoclonal antibodies (Mabs) bound to the VLPs, thereby indicating that they possibly retain their antigenicity. In addition, all of the VLPs encapsidated DNA in the range of 6-8 kb. © 2007 Springer-Verlag.