Showing 5451 - 5500 of 5831 Items

Mémoire et souvenir dans l'imaginaire antillais - Maryse Condé et Fabienne Kanor: Identité et existence noire aux Antilles et en France

Date: 2020-01-01

Creator: Elijah B Koblan-Huberson

Access: Open access

L’histoire d’un peuple est en grande partie liée à sa mémoire, aux souvenirs et commémorations des évènements passés et des ancêtres.En raison de la colonisation et ses conséquences, les habitants des îles de la Guadeloupe et de la Martinique vivent un malaise vis-à-vis de la mémoire en tant que peuple antillais.Par conséquent, il est important de se demander comment, après la déshumanisation effectuée par l’extermination des premiers habitants, les Caraïbes et les Arawaks, l’esclavagisation des Africains, et la colonisation des territoires antillais, une nouvelle conceptualisation de la mémoire peut mener à une nouvelle conceptualisation de l’existence et de l’identité pour l’être humain antillais qui provient de ceux qui ont été esclavagisés. Pour répondre à la question nous examinerons les romans de Maryse Condé et de Fabienne Kanor.


TAKs, thylakoid membrane protein kinases associated with energy transduction

Date: 1999-04-02

Creator: Shaun Snyders, Bruce D. Kohorn

Access: Open access

The phosphorylation of proteins within the eukaryotic photosynthetic membrane is thought to regulate a number of photosynthetic processes in land plants and algae. Both light quality and intensity influence protein kinase activity via the levels of reductants produced by the thylakoid electron transport chain. We have isolated a family of proteins called TAKs, Arabidopsis thylakoid membrane threonine kinases that phosphorylate the light harvesting complex proteins. TAK activity is enhanced by reductant and is associated with the photosynthetic reaction center II and the cytochrome b6f complex. TAKs are encoded by a gene family that has striking similarity to transforming growth factor β receptors of metazoans. Thus thylakoid protein phosphorylation may be regulated by a cascade of reductant-controlled membrane-bound protein kinases.


Bowdoin College - Medical School of Maine Catalogue (1905-1906)

Date: 1906-01-01

Access: Open access

Bowdoin College Bulletin no. 4


Enemy Combatants and Unitary Executives: Presidential Power in Theory and Practice During the War on Terror

Date: 2020-01-01

Creator: Rohini Kurup

Access: Open access

In the wake of the September 11 attacks, the Bush administration decided that suspected terrorists and those determined to have aided terrorists would be detained and classified as “enemy combatants.” This was a largely new category of prisoners who were neither prisoners of war protected under international law nor civilians. They included noncitizens and citizens—those captured on foreign battlefields and on American soil. They would be detained by the United States, held indefinitely without charge or access to a lawyer, and subject to trial by military commission. The administration’s enemy combatant policies were based on a theory of inherent executive power—that the Constitution gave the president vast and exclusive powers, which allowed him to act unilaterally without Congressional interference or judicial review. This thesis charts the development of and challenges to the enemy combatant policies to understand how they were conceived and what their implications are to the American political system. I argue that by appealing to a theory of inherent executive power to create the policies, the administration subverted traditional checks on presidential power and undermined the rule of law. Ultimately, the dismantling of some of the enemy combatant policies, largely a result of court rulings that challenged the administration’s premise of power, signified a reining in of executive authority. Yet, many aspects of the administration’s counterterrorism apparatus remained past Bush’s years in the White House, leaving a legacy of expanded presidential power for future presidents.


Miniature of Isolation of Cell Adhesion Mutations in <i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i>
Isolation of Cell Adhesion Mutations in Arabidopsis thaliana
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      Date: 2020-01-01

      Creator: Frances DeCamp Hobart Zorensky

      Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



        Report of the President, Bowdoin College 1924-1925

        Date: 1925-01-01

        Access: Open access



        Report of the President, Bowdoin College 1936-1937

        Date: 1937-01-01

        Access: Open access



        The role of behavioral diversity in determining the extent to which central pattern generators are modulated

        Date: 2020-01-01

        Creator: Jacob Salman Kazmi

        Access: Open access

        Neuromodulation may be a substrate for the evolution of behavioral diversity. The extent to which a central pattern generator is modulated could serve as a mechanism that enables variability in motor output dependent on an organism’s need for behavioral flexibility. The pyloric circuit, a central pattern generator in the crustacean stomatogastric nervous system (STNS), stimulates contractions of foregut muscles in digestion. Since neuromodulation enables variation in the movements of pyloric muscles, more diverse feeding patterns should be correlated with a higher degree of STNS neuromodulation. Previous data have shown that Cancer borealis, an opportunistic feeder, is sensitive to a wider array of neuromodulators than Pugettia producta, a specialist feeder. The observed difference in modulatory capacity may be coincidental since these species are separated by phylogeny. We predict that the difference in modulatory capacity is a product of a differential need for variety in foregut muscle movements. This study examined two members of the same superfamily as P. producta, the opportunistically feeding snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio) and portly spider crab (Libinia emarginata). Using extracellular recording methods, the responses of isolated STNS preparations to various neuromodulators were measured. Initial qualitative results indicate that the STNS of C. opilio is sensitive to all of these neuromodulators. Additionally, previous data on the neuromodulatory capacity of L. emarginata was supported through similar electrophysiological analysis of the isolated STNS. As a first step in determining the mechanism of differential sensitivity between species, tissue-specific transcriptomes were generated and mined for neuromodulators.


        Miniature of Metabolic inhibitors reshape <i>Helicobacter pylori</i> glycosylation
        Metabolic inhibitors reshape Helicobacter pylori glycosylation
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            Date: 2020-01-01

            Creator: Owen Templeton Tuck

            Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



              Bowdoin College Catalogue (1910-1911)

              Date: 1911-01-01

              Access: Open access

              Bowdoin College Bulletin no. 32


              The 10kb Drosophila virus 28S rDNA intervening sequence is flanked by a disect repeat of 14 base pairs of coding sequence

              Date: 1980-08-25

              Creator: Peter M.M. Rae, Bruce D. Kohorn, Robert P. Wade

              Access: Open access

              Most repeat units of rDNA in Drosophila virilis are interrupted in the 28S rRNA coding region by an intervening sequence about 10 kb in length; uninterrupted repeats have a length of about 11 kb. We have sequenced the coding/intervening sequence junctions and flanking regions in two independent clones of interrupted rDNA, and the corresponding 28S rRNA coding region in a clone of uninterrupted rDNA. The intervening sequence is terminated at both ends by a direct repeat of a fourteen nucleotide sequence that is present once in the corresponding region of an intact gene. This is a phenomenon associated with transposable elements in other eukaryotes and in prokaryotes, and the Drosophila rDNA intervening sequence is discussed in this context. We have compared more than 200 nucleotides of the D. virilis 28S rRNA gene with sequences of homologous regions of rDNA in Tetrahymena pigmentosa (Wild and Sommer, 1980) and Xenopus laevis (Gourse and Gerbi, 1980): There is 93% sequence homology among the diverse species, so that the rDNA region in question (about two-thirds of the way into the 28S rRNA coding sequence) has been very highly conserved in eukaryote evolution. The intervening sequence in T. pigmentosa is at a site 79 nucleotides upstream from the insertion site of the Drosophila intervening sequence. © 1980 IRL Press Limited.


              Disruption of Thylakoid-associated Kinase 1 Leads to Alteration of Light Harvesting in Arabidopsis

              Date: 2001-08-24

              Creator: Shaun Snyders, Bruce D. Kohorn

              Access: Open access

              To survive fluctuations in quality and intensity of light, plants and algae are able to preferentially direct the absorption of light energy to either one of the two photosystems PSI or PSII. This rapid process is referred to as a state transition and has been correlated with the phosphorylation and migration of the light-harvesting complex protein (LHCP) between PSII and PSI. We show here that thylakoid protein kinases (TAKs) are required for state transitions in Arabidopsis. Antisense TAK1 expression leads to a loss of LHCP phosphorylation and a reduction in state transitions. Preferential activation of PSII causes LHCP to accumulate with PSI, and TAK1 mutants disrupt this process. Finally, TAKs also influence the phosphorylation of multiple thylakoid proteins.


              Under the Surface: Surrealist Photography

              Date: 2014-01-01

              Creator: Andrea Rosen

              Access: Open access

              "Accompanies an exhibition of the same name at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art, February 27 through June 1, 2014." Foreword by Frank H. Goodyear III; essay: Conceal and reveal : layering techniques in surrealist photography by Andrea Rosen.


              Report of the President, Bowdoin College 1947-1948

              Date: 1948-01-01

              Access: Open access



              When to approach novel prey cues? Social learning strategies in frog-eating bats

              Date: 2013-10-23

              Creator: Patricia L. Jones, Michael J. Ryan, Victoria Flores, Rachel A. Page

              Access: Open access

              Animals can use different sources of information when making decisions. Foraging animals often have access to both self-acquired and socially acquired information about prey. The fringe-lipped bat, Trachops cirrhosus, hunts frogs by approaching the calls that frogs produce to attract mates.We examined howthe reliability of self-acquired prey cues affects social learning of novel prey cues. We trained bats to associate an artificial acoustic cue (mobile phone ringtone) with food rewards. Bats were assigned to treatments in which the trained cue was either an unreliable indicator of reward (rewarded 50% of the presentations) or a reliable indicator (rewarded 100% of the presentations), and they were exposed to a conspecific tutor foraging on a reliable (rewarded 100%) novel cue or to the novel cue with no tutor. Bats whose trained cue was unreliable and who had a tutor were significantly more likely to preferentially approach the novel cue when compared with bats whose trained cue was reliable, and to bats that had no tutor. Reliability of self-acquired prey cues therefore affects social learning of novel prey cues by frog-eating bats. Examining when animals use social information to learn about novel prey is key to understanding the social transmission of foraging innovations. © 2013 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society.


              Bowdoin College - Medical School of Maine Catalogue (1913-1914)

              Date: 1914-01-01

              Access: Open access

              Bowdoin College Bulletin no. 49


              Bowdoin Orient, v. 56, no. 14

              Date: 1926-10-20

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 54, no. 20

              Date: 1924-12-18

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 58, no. 28

              Date: 1929-03-22

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 59, no. 17

              Date: 1929-12-11

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 60, no. 2

              Date: 1930-04-23

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 59, no. 25

              Date: 1930-03-05

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 57, no. 23

              Date: 1928-01-18

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 57, no. 21

              Date: 1927-12-22

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 57, no. 1

              Date: 1927-04-13

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 59, no. 4

              Date: 1929-05-08

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 58, no. 26

              Date: 1929-03-06

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 56, no. 23

              Date: 1927-01-12

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 59, no. 14

              Date: 1929-11-06

              Access: Open access

              Alumni Day Number


              Bowdoin Orient, v. 65, no. 21

              Date: 1936-02-26

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 66, no. 15

              Date: 1936-12-09

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 67, no. 5

              Date: 1937-05-12

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 68, no. 5

              Date: 1938-05-11

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 61, no. 16

              Date: 1931-11-18

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 65, no. 17

              Date: 1935-12-18

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 67, no. 7

              Date: 1937-06-19

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 67, no. 19

              Date: 1938-01-19

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 68, no. 1

              Date: 1938-04-13

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 61, no. 4

              Date: 1931-05-06

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 60, no. 22

              Date: 1931-02-11

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 60, no. 11

              Date: 1930-10-15

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 62, no. 11

              Date: 1932-10-12

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 68, no. 9

              Date: 1938-09-22

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 63, no. 17

              Date: 1933-12-13

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 65, no. 7

              Date: 1935-06-20

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 64, no. 22

              Date: 1935-02-27

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 61, no. 17

              Date: 1931-12-02

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 61, no. 9

              Date: 1931-09-30

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 62, no. 25

              Date: 1933-03-08

              Access: Open access



              Bowdoin Orient, v. 62, no. 21

              Date: 1933-01-18

              Access: Open access