4,780 research outputs found
The Middle Jurassic vertebrate assemblage of Skye, Scotland
Susan E. Evans, Paul M. Barrett, Jason Hilton, Richard J. Butler, Marc E. H. Jones, Ming-Mei Liang, Jolyon C. Parish, Emily J. Rayfield, Denise Sigogneau-Russell and Charlie J. Underwoo
Database for: Excavations at Tall Jawa, Jordan: Volume 3, The Iron Age Pottery
This is a Microsoft Access database of imagery, drawings, and photos accompanying Excavations at Tall Jawa, Jordan: Volume 3, The Iron Age Pottery by P.M. Michèle Daviau. The text and database present a detailed typology of the Iron Age pottery excavated from 1989 to 1995. Together, they represent an in-depth analysis of the forming techniques employed to make each type of vessel from bowls to colanders, cooking pots to pithoi.
The digital archive is a work in progress by the author. The archive currently holds the collection for Excavation Field D. Upon completion, it will include seven collections, each one consisting of a database of diagnostic sherds and vessels as well as the images of these pots as .tiff files. Databases are related to excavation fields and are designed for meaningful searches: A, B, C-east, C-west, A-east (associated with C-west), D and E
A Primer on Textualism & Originalism With Judge Barrett
Monday, August 27th 12:30 P.M.
McCartan Courtroom
Please join us for a lecture by Seventh Circuit Judge & Notre Dame Law Professor Amy Coney Barrett. Chick-fil-A will be served!https://scholarship.law.nd.edu/ndls_posters/1321/thumbnail.jp
Vaudeville and radio entertainer Pat Barrett.
Vaudeville and radio entertainer Pat Barrett. From the back: 'Has Only Unlicensed Station in U.S.' Station EZRA is the only 'station' in the United States that is not licensed by the Federal Communications Commission. But then, of course, the oversight may be due to the fact that it operates only in the mind of Uncle Ezra and his listeners who hear his homely small town philosophy each Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at 7:45 p.m., EST, over an NBC-WEAF network. The inside dope is that Uncle Ezra is really Pat Barrett, an old time vaudeville and stage star, and Station EZRA is entirely mythical."To order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see:
http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/reproduction/reproduction
Please cite the Order NumberScanned at 600ppi with an Epson 20000 flatbed scanner. Image then rotated, cropped, level-adjusted, and sharpened using Photoshop CS3. Converted to a JPEG2000 image upon ingest into CONTENTdm
Graduate Recital in Voice
Korey Barrett, bass-baritone, presented his graduate voice recital on Thursday, April 19, 2001 at 6:00 p.m. in Davis Hall of the Gallagher-Bluedorn Performing Arts Center on the University of Northern Iowa campus. The recital was given in collaboration with pianist Nino Sanikidze and included works by Schubert, Liszt, Debussy and Rorem. This abstract discusses musical and historical features of the recital pieces
Vaudeville and radio entertainer Pat Barrett.
Vaudeville and radio entertainer Pat Barrett. From the back: "'Anglin' Uncle Ezra' Uncle Ezra (Pat Barrett) has no more use for worms than he has for rattlesnakes, and he believes anyone who would use a worm while fishing is in the same class as the venomous viper. He's a fly fisherman. He makes all his own flies, teaches some of his friends the art of 'tying flies,' and has a collection of more than 2,000. Here he is with his fishing hat which also serves as a repository for a few choice examples of his skill. Uncle Ezra broadcasts each Monday, Wedensday and Friday over an NBC-WEAF network at 7:15 p.m., EST, and is heard each Saturday with the Alka Seltzer National Barn DAnce troupe at 9:30 p.m., EST."To order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see:
http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/reproduction/reproduction
Please cite the Order NumberScanned at 600ppi with an Epson 20000 flatbed scanner. Image then rotated, cropped, level-adjusted, and sharpened using Photoshop CS3. Converted to a JPEG2000 image upon ingest into CONTENTdm
Robinson Lecture features early works by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Robinson Lecture features early works by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
By Craig A. Garaas-Johnson, News & Feature\u27s Editor
Almost every aspiring high school poet knows the lines from Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s Sonnet 43, “How do I Love thee? Let me count the ways.” Students can learn much more about this fascinating poet on Tuesday, February 15, beginning at 3:30 p.m. in the East Asian Room of the Chester Fritz Library (fourth floor), where Dr. Sandra Donaldson will lecture on her life-long work on Browning.
Dr. Sandra Donaldson, a Chester Fritz Distinguished Professor in the College of Arts and Sciences Department of English and an affiliate of the Women Studies Program, has devoted her scholarly life to the study of Victorian poet, Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
Her presentation for the Robinson Lecture will explore Barrett Browning’s self-image as a young writer through three of her writing exercises, which she composed as a teenager. In the three exercises, the poet writes in French to Socrates, Homer, and Pindar.
Professor Elwyn B. Robinson, whose career spanned 35 years at UND, was a distinguished member of the History faculty. The Robinson Lecture series began in 1991 on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of Robinson\u27s publication, A History of North Dakota. The Lecture is designed to recognize the scholarly accomplishments of UND faculty and staff.
The event will also feature musical selections from a UND choral group with a reception to follow the presentation
New material of Valdosaurus canaliculatus (Ornithischia: ornithopoda) from the Lower Cretaceous of southern England
Until recently, the Wealden ornithopod dinosaur Valdosaurus canaliculatus (Galton, 1975) was known only from the holotype femora and a set of unassociated referred postcranial specimens. All of this material has been recovered from the Wessex Formation (Barremian) of the Isle of Wight, UK and the Grinstead Clay Member (middle–upper Valanginian) of West Sussex, UK. Here, we provide a detailed description of four additional associated specimens from the Isle of Wight that include almost complete hindlimbs, as well as associated pelvic and axial elements. These new finds substantially increase the amount of material available for the taxon and allow the first definitive associations between the diagnostic femora and other elements of the skeleton. Comparisons with dryosaurid taxa and contemporary Wealden ornithopods indicate that Valdosaurus can be distinguished by a unique combination of femoral character states. Phylogenetic analysis supports the monophyly of Dryosauridae and indicates that Valdosaurus forms a clade with Elrhazosaurus and Dysalotosaurus to the exclusion of Dryosaurus. It is likely that Valdosaurus was more abundant in Wealden faunas than has generally been assumed
IoWoman, March/April 2004, Vol. 34, no. 2
Newsletter for the Iowa Commission on the Status of Wome
IoWoman, March/April 2004, Vol.34, no.2
Newsletter for the Iowa Commission on the Status of Wome
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