3,893 research outputs found
Letter, Albert Hafner to Elizabeth Chandler, May 3, 1893
A letter from Albert Hafner to his fiancée Elizabeth Chandler in Massachusetts. He responds regarding the letter Chandler received from another woman indicating he was in love with someone else. He tells Chandler there has never been another woman besides her. He recounts that when he was ill and suffering from many financial losses, he worried Chandler would leave him, but his friends consoled him and affirmed otherwise. As matters worsened, Hafner says he hoped Chandler would offer him love and support, but she did not offer him the compassion he wanted. At this, he insinuates others might have seen an opportunity to fill her place. Hafner swears his heart remained with Chandler all the same and the only concern preventing him from marrying her was his lack of wealth. Recently, Chandler\u27s messages have becoming loving and supporting once again, and Hafner implies others might wish to intercept these affections, using the phrase dogs in the manger. However, he says he cannot tell if the message was meant kindly or maliciously, and he says the author\u27s need to speak for him proves that he never voiced any wish to stray from Chandler. Hafner says the future is entirely in Chandler\u27s hands, and since her last letter indicated her wish to call off the engagement, he agrees to respect her wishes and return her photos, Gifts, and letters. Hafner expresses surprise at the extent of her temper, saying he can picture her destroying all of their furniture in a fit of rage. Hafner tells Chandler that now that they\u27ve broken up, he is all alone and without a single friend. He gives Chandler his blessing to find another worthy man and marry him. He announces that he will be on his way to Tallahassee when the letter reaches her and will skip his stop in St. Augustine now that he will not be meeting her there.https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/hafner/1102/thumbnail.jp
Letter, A. Hafner to Elizabeth Chandler, May 3, 1893
A letter from Albert Hafner to his fiancée Elizabeth Chandler in Massachusetts. He responds regarding the letter Chandler received from another woman indicating he was in love with someone else. He tells Chandler there has never been another woman besides her. He recounts that when he was ill and suffering from many financial losses, he worried Chandler would leave him, but his friends consoled him and affirmed otherwise. As matters worsened, Hafner says he hoped Chandler would offer him love and support, but she did not offer him the compassion he wanted. At this, he insinuates others might have seen an opportunity to fill her place. Hafner swears his heart remained with Chandler all the same and the only concern preventing him from marrying her was his lack of wealth. Recently, Chandler\u27s messages have becoming loving and supporting once again, and Hafner implies others might wish to intercept these affections, using the phrase dogs in the manger. However, he says he cannot tell if the message was meant kindly or maliciously, and he says the author\u27s need to speak for him proves that he never voiced any wish to stray from Chandler. Hafner says the future is entirely in Chandler\u27s hands, and since her last letter indicated her wish to call off the engagement, he agrees to respect her wishes and return her photos, Gifts, and letters. Hafner expresses surprise at the extent of her temper, saying he can picture her destroying all of their furniture in a fit of rage. Hafner tells Chandler that now that they\u27ve broken up, he is all alone and without a single friend. He gives Chandler his blessing to find another worthy man and marry him. He announces that he will be on his way to Tallahassee when the letter reaches her and will skip his stop in St. Augustine now that he will not be meeting her there.https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/hafner/1102/thumbnail.jp
Motiv homofobije in transfobije v romanih Suzane Tratnik in Zuzane Brabcové
Diplomsko delo obravnava problematiko homofobije in transfobije, ki se kaže skozi negativen in diskriminatoren odnos do gejev, lezbijk, biseksualcev ter transspolnih oseb na podlagi njihove spolne identitete, spolnega izraza in spolne usmerjenosti. Opravljena je tudi literarna analizira motiva homofobije in transfobije v dveh sodobnih romanih, in sicer slovenske avtorice Suzane Tratnik z naslovom Ime mi je Damjan ter češke pisateljice Zuzane Brabcové Leto biserov. Analiza romanov se osredotoča predvsem na raziskovanje, kako se v besedilih kaže motiv homofobije in transfobije, kdo ga izraža ter na kakšen način se z njim spopadajo literarni junaki.In my diploma work I present problems of homophobia and transphobia. Both phenomena manifest themselves in a negative and discriminatory attitude towards gay, lesbian, bisexual and transsexual persons as a consequence of their gender identity, gender expression and sexual orientation. I have thus included a literary analysis of the motifs of homophobia and transphobia in two contemporary novels into my diploma work. The first novel is My Name Is Damjan (Ime mi je Damjan) by a Slovene author Suzana Tratnik and the second novel is The year of pearls (Leto biserov) by a Czech author Zuzana Brabcová. In analysing the two novels, I have mostly concentrated on researching how the motifs of homophobia and transphobia are depicted in the novels, who they are expressed by and how literary characters deal with them
List of butterflies (Lepidoptera) of the Knin areas and its surroundings
We present here a detailed list of butterflies (Lepidoptera) of the Knin area and surroundings, written by the deceased Ivan Hafner and his collaborators from 1934 to 1938. In the list, Hafner included some findings from other areas in Dalmatia (southern Croatia) as well. This is a very important faunistic contribution to the knowledge of Croatian butterflies. The author used the current systematics and the nomenclature of that period. It contains 804 species with 428 so called macrolepidoptera and 376 microlepidoptera. Up to then, the area of Knin had not been investigated from the lepidopterological stand point. For such a relatively small area, the number of about 800 recorded species is really worth attention
List of butterflies (Lepidoptera) of the Knin areas and its surroundings
We present here a detailed list of butterflies (Lepidoptera) of the Knin area and surroundings, written by the deceased Ivan Hafner and his collaborators from 1934 to 1938. In the list, Hafner included some findings from other areas in Dalmatia (southern Croatia) as well. This is a very important faunistic contribution to the knowledge of Croatian butterflies. The author used the current systematics and the nomenclature of that period. It contains 804 species with 428 so called macrolepidoptera and 376 microlepidoptera. Up to then, the area of Knin had not been investigated from the lepidopterological stand point. For such a relatively small area, the number of about 800 recorded species is really worth attention
Petra Heidrich's research work in the context of the development of South Asian Studies at the ZMO (1992-2000)
"The aim of this paper is to remember Petra Heidrich, a friend and colleague of Annemarie Hafner, who died much too soon. Special attention is given to Petra Heidrich’s scientific work, which can be subsumed under the theme of »Agrarian and Peasant Studies and Transformation of Traditional Social Structures and Reform Movements in the 19th and 20th Centuries in India«. At the same time, the paper seeks to honour the contribution Petra Heidrich made to the prosperity of the ZMO during its founding stages and initial positioning. Starting from these memories, Annemarie Hafner tries to develop conceptual suggestions on how, from today’s viewpoint, the research field of agrarian and peasant studies can be revived, as they currently lie fallow in the landscape of German social historical research, and in particular, within South Asian Studies." (author´s abstract
Carbon input and partitioning in subsoil by chicory and alfalfa
Input of organic matter into soil creates microbial hotspots. Due to the low organic matter content in subsoil, microbial hotspots can improve nutrient availability to plants. Therefore, carbon (C) input of root biomass and rhizodeposition and the microbial utilization of root C by alfalfa and chicory, both deep-rooting taprooted preceding crops, was determined. Three replicate plots of alfalfa and chicory grown on a Haplic Luvisol were (CO2)-C-13 pulse labeled after 110 days of growth. C-13 was traced in plant biomass, rhizosphere, bulk soil and in microbial biomass after 1 and 40 days. C stocks and delta C-13 signature were quantified in 15 cm intervals down to 105 cm depth. Alfalfa plant biomass was higher and root biomass was more homogeneously distributed between top- (0-30 cm) and subsoil (30-105 cm) compared to chicory. C input into subsoil by alfalfa, including roots and rhizodeposited C, was 8 times higher (3820 kg C ha(-1)) into subsoil compared to chicory after 150 days of growth. Microbial biomass in subsoil increased with alfalfa but decreased with chicory. Despite their general ability to build biopores, taprooted preceding crops differ in creating microbial hotspots in subsoil. Higher C input and microbial growth in subsoil under alfalfa cultivation can improve physico-chemical and biological properties, and so enhance root growth and consequently the water and nutrient uptake from subsoil compared to chicory
In vitro models of human granuloma formation to analyze host-directed therapies
Contributed to book by PC Karakousis, R Hafner, ML Gennaro (editors) (2021), in Advances in Host-Directed Therapies Against Tuberculosis
[Freundschaftsbuch von Carl Eduard Cramer (1831-1901)] : 78 Porträts / 20 F. Hafner s/m l. C. Cramer z. fr. Erinneg
Dedikationssilhouette nach rechts von Friedrich Hafner, gewidmet Carl Eduard Cramer (1831-1901)Anonyme/r Künstler/inOben Mitte Zeichen einer studentischen Verbindung. Beim Dargestellten könnte es sich um Friedrich Hafner (1830-1913) handeln, der Mitglied der Zofingia und zu dieser Zeit an der Universität Zürich immatrikuliert war, vgl. die Angaben zu Hafner in der Matrikeledition der Universität Zürich (http://www.matrikel.uzh.ch [Stand: 22.03.2017])Aus der Sammlung Carl Eduard Cramer Exemplar der Zentralbibliothek Zürich, Graphische Sammlung und Fotoarchi
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