383 research outputs found

    El personaje masculino en las novelas de Rosa Montero

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    Ronda del guinardo : reafirmación de un mundo narrativo

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    Fil: Amell, Samuel. Ohio State Universit

    Conversación con Antonio Buero Vallejo

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    “The Little Girl That Had No Tongue”: A Short Story by George MacDonald

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    Orts 43, 1997

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    We have attempted to catch up on our publishing schedules. This issue is only one month late and number 44 should be on time. The brief period since Orts 42 however has meant that we have received few contributions, and the issue lacks the \u27lighter\u27 material necessary to balance two serious reviews. Please be sure to send us any material you have for the next issue

    Cell Rearrangement and Directional Migration in Pronephric Duct Development

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    The morphology of the directed migration of the pronephric duct rudiment of three vertebrates, the salamander, chick and sturgeon, has been examined by scanning electron microscopy. Of particular interest in this paper are the morphology of the duct tip, the role of cell rearrangement, and the relation of duct extension to somite segmentation. The duct rudiments of all three species have motile cell processes (lamellipodia and filopodia) largely confined to their posterior tips. The salamander and sturgeon embryos extend their duct rudiments by extensive cell rearrangements. A short, wide rudiment is elongated to form a long, thin one. The chick duct rudiment stays about the same width and apparently gains volume by cell proliferation. The salamander duct rudiment\u27s posterior tip is always two somites behind the last formed somite. Both the sturgeon and chick embryo\u27s duct rudiments lie well posterior of the last segmented somite adjacent to segmental plate mesoderm. There is still a close coupling, however, between the posterior progression of the duct rudiments and the advancing wave of somite segmentation
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