353 resultados para Dion Crisóstomo
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Autor tomado de final de texto
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Port. con esc. xil. de la ciudad de Valencia
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Port. con grab. xil. de los tres Estamentos
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Port. con esc. real xil
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Cartel con orla tip. y esc. xil. de los Despuig
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Sign. : *-***4, A-Z4, 2A-2Z4, 3A-3M4
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Sign.: A10
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Sign.: A14
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A pesquisa tem por objetivo trabalhar o evento da Revolta de Jeú, em conjunto com a Estela de Dã, tendo como ponto de partida para tal, a exegese da perícope de 2 Reis 10-28,36. A história Deuteronomista apresenta o ato da Revolta de Jeú como sendo um feito demasiadamente importante, na restauração do culto a Javé em Israel, a partir de um contexto onde o culto a outras divindades, em Israel Norte, estava em pleno curso. No entanto, a partir da análise conjunta da Estela de Dã, que tem como provável autor o rei Hazael de Damasco, somos desafiados a ler esta história pelas entrelinhas não contempladas pelo texto, que apontam para uma participação ativa de Hazael, nos desfechos referentes a Revolta de Jeú, como sendo o responsável direto que proporcionou a subida de Jeú ao trono em Israel, clarificando desta forma este importante período na história Bíblica. Para tal análise, observar-se-á três distintos tópicos, ligados diretamente ao tema proposto: (1) A Revolta de Jeú e a Redação Deuteronomista, a partir do estudo exegético da perícope de 2 Reis 10,28-36, onde estão descritas informações pontuais sobre período em que Jeú reinou em Israel; (2) Jeú e a Estela de Dã, a partir da apresentação e análise do conteúdo da Estela de Dã, tratando diretamente dos desdobramentos da guerra em Ramote de Gileade, de onde se dá o ponto de partida à Revolta de Jeú; e por fim (3) O Império da Síria, onde a partir da continuidade da análise do conteúdo da Estela de Dã, demonstraremos a significância deste reino, além de apontamentos diretamente ligados ao reinado de Hazael, personagem mui relevante no evento da Revolta de Jeú.
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High-density mutational spectra have been established for exon 3 of the gene encoding adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (APRT) of the Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell line derivative D422 and closely related and/or modified lines by using the mutagen ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS). The total number of selectable sites (GC-->AT transitions yielding a selectable APRT- phenotype) was estimated at 31 based on our own accumulated data base of 136 sequenced exon 3 mutations and on literature reports. D422 and two other APRT hemizygous lines each yielded very similar spectra and showed two populations of mutable sites: (i) 24 "baseline" sites that followed the Poisson distribution and therefore were equally susceptible to mutation and (ii) two hotspots, one comprising a cluster at nucleotides 1293-1309 and the other at nucleotide 1365. Collectively, the latter sites were about 10-fold more frequently mutated than the others. CHO cells are mer- as they lack the repair enzyme O6-methylguanidine methyltransferase (EC 2.1.1.63). In modified repair-proficient CHO cells, the distribution of mutations among all of the 31 sites was random, with only 3 of the 19 GC-->AT transitions in the above hotspots. To determine whether the distribution was locus-dependent, two independent lines carrying single copies of transfected APRT genes were generated from a derivative of D422 carrying a deletion in the endogenous APRT gene. Nucleotides 1293-1309 were again no longer preferentially mutated, but the site at nucleotide 1365 was still a hotspot. We conclude that mutational spectra in mer- cells are at least in part locus dependent and that some sequences are particularly susceptible to EMS mutagenesis and perhaps also to methyltransferase repair.
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Back Row: coach Tommy Amaker, director of basketball operations Kirsten Green, asst. coach Chuck Swenson, asst. coach Charles E. Ramsey, Lester Abram, Brent Petway, Amadou Ba, Chris Hunter, Courtney Sims, Graham Brown, John Andrews, asst. coach Andrew Moore, strength coach Jim Plocki, academic advisor Support Angie Heath, equip. mngr. Bob Bland.
Front Row: trainer Eric Broekhuizen, mngr. Michael Oh, Sherrod Harrell, Daniel Horton, Colin Dill, Bernard Robinson Jr., J.C. Mathis, Dion Harris, Dani Wohl, Manager Matt Duprey, admin. asst. Lucien St. Gerard.
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Back Row: Lester Abram, Brent Petway, Amadou Ba, Chris Hunter, Courtney Sims, Graham Brown, and John Andrews.
Front Row: Sherrod Harrell, Daniel Horton, Colin Dill, Bernard Robinson Jr., J.C. Mathis, Dion Harris, and Dani Wohl.
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Back Row: Colin Dill, Brett Petway, Chris Hunter, Courtney Sims, Amadou Ba, Graham Brown, J.C. Mathis
Front Row:Dani Wohl, Daniel Horton, Sherrod Harrell, Lester Abram, John Andrews, Dion Harris, Ashtyn Bell
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Back Row: head coach Tommy Amaker, director of basketball operations Kirsten Green, asst. coach Chuck Swenson, asst. coach Charles Ramsey, John Andrews, Brent Petway, Courtney Sims, Chris Hunter, Amadou Ba, Graham Brown, Ronald Coleman, asst. coach Andrew More academic advisor Angie Beck, strength coach Jim Plocki, equip. mngr. Bob Bland.
Front Row: administrative asst. Lucien St. Gerard, Dani Wohl, Dion Harris, Sherrod Harrell, J.C. Mathis, Lester Abram, Daniel Bell, sr. mngr. Matt Duprey.
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Back Row: John Andrews, Brent Petway, Courtney Sims, Chris Hunter, Amadou Ba, Graham Brown, Ronald Coleman
Front Row: Dani Wohl, Dion Harris, Sherrod Harrell, J.C. Mathis, Lester Abram, Daniel Bell