172,068 research outputs found

    Arnott, M C, NX45925

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/369115Surname: ARNOTT Given Name(s) or Initials: M C Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX45925 Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 35461179157 Item: [2016.0049.01442] "Arnott, M C, NX45925

    Eva K. and Arnott Olsen

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    Eva and her husband Arnott stand on the stairs in front of a house. Mrs. Olsen died July 18, 1953.7 x 11 c

    Trepanation: history, discovery, theory / R. Arnott, S. Finger, and C. U. M. Smith

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    Trepanation: history, discovery, theory / R. Arnott, S. Finger, and C. U. M. Smit

    Arnott (Peter). Greek scenic conventions in the fifth century B. C.

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    Jouan François. Arnott (Peter). Greek scenic conventions in the fifth century B. C.. In: Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, tome 42, fasc. 2, 1964. Histoire (depuis la fin de l'Antiquité) — Geschiedenis (sedert de Oudheid) pp. 599-601

    City Tolls – One Element of an Effective Policy Cocktail

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    Stadtverkehr, Verkehrsstau, Straßenbenutzungsgebühr, Stadtverkehrspolitik, Urban transport, Traffic jam, Road pricing, Urban transport policy

    38. Arnott (Peter). Greek scenic conventions in the fifth century B. C. Oxford University Press, Clarendon Press ; 1962

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    Roux Georges, Roux Jeanne. 38. Arnott (Peter). Greek scenic conventions in the fifth century B. C. Oxford University Press, Clarendon Press ; 1962. In: Revue des Études Grecques, tome 76, fascicule 359-360, Janvier-juin 1963. pp. 254-255

    Should we recommend e-cigarettes to help smokers quit?

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    Smokers want to vape, it can help them quit, and it’s less harmful than smoking, say Paul Aveyard and Deborah Arnott. But Kenneth C Johnson argues that smokers who vape are generally less likely to quit and is concerned about youth vaping as a gateway to smoking, dual use, and potential harms from long term use. </p

    Capparis diversifolia Wight & Arnott K 1834

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    &lt;i&gt;Capparis diversifolia&lt;/i&gt; Wight &amp; Arnott (1834: 27). Fig. 1 &lt;p&gt; &lt;b&gt;Lectotype&lt;/b&gt; (first step designated by Jacobs 1965):&mdash; INDIA, &lt;i&gt;s.loc.&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;s&lt;/i&gt;. &lt;i&gt;d&lt;/i&gt;. Wight &amp; Arnott &lt;i&gt;952&lt;/i&gt;, K000247306 (K, image!) and K000247307 (K, image!). Second-step lectotype, designated here K000247306 (K, image!); Isolectotypes K 000247307 (K, image!), G00237950 (G, image!), E00174093 (E, image!).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; &lt;b&gt;Distribution:&mdash;&lt;/b&gt; INDIA and SRI LANKA (Sundararaghavan 1993, Maurya &lt;i&gt;et al&lt;/i&gt;. 2020).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; &lt;b&gt;Notes:&mdash;&lt;/b&gt; While searching for the type specimen of &lt;i&gt;Capparis diversifolia&lt;/i&gt;, we came across three specimens, two deposited at K, and one at G. The G specimen (G00237950) has annotations of De Candolle as &ldquo;Herb. Wight. Propr. 952, &lt;i&gt;Capparis diversifolia&lt;/i&gt; W. &amp; A., Prod. by R.Wight and Arn. pg. 27, Peninsula Ind. Orientalis, 1836&rdquo;, and two labels indicating &ldquo;HERBIER DE CANDOLLE&rdquo;, and &ldquo;TYPUS&rdquo;. Further, a determinavit by Jacobs (1960) indicating &ldquo;Isotype of &lt;i&gt;Capparis diversifolia&lt;/i&gt; W. &amp; A.&rdquo;. Whereas the two specimens housed at K (K000247306 and K000247307) have Wight &amp; Arnott&rsquo;s annotation, collection number &lsquo; &lt;i&gt;952&lt;/i&gt; &rsquo; and species number &lsquo; &lt;i&gt;95&lt;/i&gt; &rsquo; in &ldquo; &lt;i&gt;Prodromus Florae Peninsulae Indiae Orientalis&lt;/i&gt; &rdquo; without mention of any locality. Further, a determinavit slip by Jacobs (1961) indicated both of them as &lsquo;Type&rsquo; and the same is cited as holotype in his treatment (Jacobs 1965). Much later, Noltie (2005) indicated a specimen (WC952, image!) housed in E as syntype bearing annotations by Wight &amp; Arnott as &ldquo;Herb. Wight. Propr. n 952, &lt;i&gt;Capparis heterophylla&lt;/i&gt; W &amp; A, Peninsula Ind. orientalis&rdquo; and by Jacobs as &ldquo; &lt;i&gt;Capparis diversifolia&lt;/i&gt; W. &amp; A., Type, in Blumea 12:448 (1965) &rdquo; and stated that &ldquo;a specimen ex herb. Arnott with HWP label annotated by Arnott &lt;i&gt;Capparis heterophylla&lt;/i&gt; W&amp;A [WC] &lt;i&gt;n. 952&lt;/i&gt;. Contemplating all, the citation of &lsquo;Holotype&rsquo; by Jacobs (1965) has to be considered the first step lectotype of &lt;i&gt;C. diversifolia&lt;/i&gt; as per Art. 9.17, and a correctable error following Art. 9.10 (Turland &lt;i&gt;et al&lt;/i&gt;. 2018). Hence, we designate K000247306 here as a second-step lectotype for &lt;i&gt;C. diversifolia&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;Published as part of &lt;i&gt;Maurya, Satish, Datar, Mandar N. &amp; Choudhary, Ritesh Kumar, 2021, Lectotypification of four names in the genus Capparis (Capparaceae), pp. 125-132 in Phytotaxa 500 (2)&lt;/i&gt; on page 125, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.500.2.5, &lt;a href="http://zenodo.org/record/5424505"&gt;http://zenodo.org/record/5424505&lt;/a&gt

    Millettia splendens Wight & Arnott 1834

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    Millettia splendens Wight & Arnott (1834: 263) FIGURE 2, C & D Lectotype ( designated here):— INDIA. Neelgheries, Ballsar, s.d., Wight 998 (K000848703), digital image!; isolectotypes CAL0000012590, E00174565, K000848704, M0233439 and P 02141868 (digital images!) Distribution:— India, endemic (Kerala and Tamil Nadu). Notes:— Wight & Arnott (1834) described Millettia splendens based on the collection Wight 998. The collection locality and date are not mentioned in the protologue. Six specimens of M. splendens collected by Wight were traced (CAL0000012590, E00174565, K000848703, K000848704, M0233439 and P 02141868). Of these, K000848703 is chosen here as the lectotype as it well exhibits the diagnostic characters of the species mentioned in the protologue. The exact collection locality, Ballsar, Neelgheries is written on this sheet in Wight’s hand. In the specimens deposited at CAL and M, the collection number was labelled as ‘807’, which was probably a mistake happened during remounting. Wight Cat. n. 807 is Alysicarpus nummularifolius DC. (1825: 353) and 802 to 809 are pertaining to different species of Alysicarpus. The specimens in CAL and K are examined by Dunn during the revisionary studies of the genus Millettia and labelled as ‘typus’.Published as part of Balan, Anoop Puthuparampil, Predeep, Sreevilas Vasudevan & Prakashkumar, Raveendran Pillai, 2021, Lectotypification of two names in Indian Millettia (Fabaceae-Papilionoideae), pp. 225-230 in Phytotaxa 494 (2) on page 227, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.494.2.5, http://zenodo.org/record/542340

    Royal Commission on Human Relationships

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    This controversial Royal Commission from the 1970s found that many Australian families were failing to protect their most valuable members, and helped change the shape of public discussion around families, gender and sexuality. This is the first time a digitised version of the Royal Commission on Human Relationships\u27 five-volume final report has been made publically available. The Royal Commission was initiated in 1974, following a failed attempt by the Whitlam government to reform abortion law. The terms of reference were: To inquire into and report upon the family, social, educational, legal and sexual aspects of male and female relationships, so far as those matters are relevant to the powers and functions of the Australian Parliament and Government, including powers and functions in relation to the Territories: To give particular emphasis to the concept of responsible parenthood, to have regard to experience in other countries and to include in your inquiry the following aspects of the said matters: (a) the extent of relevant existing education programs, including sex education programs, and their effectiveness in promoting responsible sexual behaviour and providing a sound basis in the fundamentals of male and female relationships in the Australian social environment; (b) the extent of relevant existing programs in medical schools and their adequacy to provide comprehensive medical training in contraceptive techniques, in the physical, psychological and sexual problems experienced by women in adapting to marriage and before, during and after menstruation and in matters relating to pregnancy, fertility control, spontaneous and induced abortions and childbirth and to encourage acceptance by the medical profession of its responsibilities in the field of contraceptive counselling; (c) the provision, adequacy and effectiveness of existing family planning facilities, educational and activational information on family planning and methods of evaluation of all family planning techniques; (d) the social, economic, psychological and medical pressures on women in determining whether to proceed with unplanned or unwanted pregnancies, having regard to: (i) the adequacy of housing, child-minding centres, pre-school centres, domestic assistance for families and working mothers, assistance to single parent families, other forms of assistance for mothers employed in industry, and adoption procedures; (ii) the disabilities of families with handicapped children; and (iii) the social status of women in the community; the social, psychological and medical results of termination of, or and failure to terminate such pregnancies; (e) the adequacy and effectiveness of existing medico-legal determinations in relation to termination of pregnancy, the incidence of such terminations, the factors influencing their occurrence, the adequacy of medical training in an evaluation of methods of termination, consultative rights of the family or other persons concerned and the adequacy and effectiveness of pregnancy support services; and (f) any other matters in relation to the family, social, educational, legal and sexual aspects of male and female relationships to which the attention of the Commission is directed by the Prime Minister in the course of the inquiry. To make recommendations as to measures that are desirable with respect to the foregoing matters under existing or future laws of the Australian Parliament or of the Territories (including laws providing for grants to the States) and to indicate whether these measures should be implemented through existing bodies or through government instrumentalities to be created. The final report, presented to Governor-General John Kerr in 1977, contained over 500 recommendations relating to "contraception (access and use), unwanted pregnancies, childbirth, attitudes to sexuality, sexual knowledge, sex education, domestic violence, rape and the police and courts’ treatment of rape victims, the changing roles of women, child care, child abuse, and homosexuality – especially discrimination faced by gays and lesbians." The report was highly controversial when released and many of its recommendations were not acted on. However, the Royal Commission had a lasting influence. It was said to have brought taboo topics like abortion, rape and child abuse into public discussion, and to have opened up conversations about private life to this day. &nbsp; --------------- &nbsp; Part of the Policy History Collection. Digitisation of this report has been supported by the National Library of Australia. &nbsp; Reproduced with permission of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet
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