132,180 research outputs found
Women, Soldiers, and Immigrants: Woman Suffrage in Texas
Join us as Collin College celebrates the Centennial of the 19th Amendment during Women’s History Month!
On August 26, 1919, the Susan B. Anthony Amendment was officially became the 19th Amendment of the United States Constitution barring any state from denying the right to vote “on account of sex.” Some states granted full woman suffrage before the 19th Amendment, but many American women were first able to vote in 1920. Collin College is hosting several events to commemorate the centennial of the 19th Amendment and the Texan women who were part of the fight for voting rights.
On Tuesday, March 23rd at 1-2:15p.m., Dr. Rachel Gunter of Collin College will give an talk titled “Women, Soldiers, and Immigrants: Woman Suffrage in Texas,” via Zoom. Dr. Gunter’s research focuses on woman suffrage and how it affected the voting rights of multiple groups including immigrants, African Americans, soldiers, and veterans in Texas
Goethes Faust In Seiner Ältesten Gestalt : Untersuchungen / von J. Collin
GOETHES FAUST IN SEINER ÄLTESTEN GESTALT : UNTERSUCHUNGEN / VON J. COLLIN
Goethes Faust In Seiner Ältesten Gestalt : Untersuchungen / von J. Collin (1)
Cover (1)
Titelseite (3)
Vorrede (5)
Inhalt (9)
Verzeichnis der Abkürzungen. (11)
Einleitung (13)
I. Der erste Monolog und die Erdgeistscene. A. Der Monolog. (15)
I. Der erste Monolog und die Erdgeistscene. B. Die Erdgeistscene und ... (52)
I. Der erste Monolog und die Erdgeistscene. C. Die Entstehungszeit ... (91)
2. Die satirischen Scenen. (105)
A. Die Wagner-Scene. (106)
B. Die Entstehungszeit der Wagnerscene. (126)
C. Die Schülerscene. (135)
D. Die Entstehungszeit der Schülerscene. (165)
E. Die Scene in Auerbachs Keller. (171)
F. Entstehungszeit der Scene in Auerbachs Keller. (176)
Eine Übergangsscene. (182)
3. Gretchentragödie. (184)
A) Die Scenen 1- 7. (193)
B. Entstehungszeit der Scenen 1 - 7. (212)
C. Eine einzelne lyrische Scene. (8) Gretchens Stube. (217)
D. Neunte Scene. Marthens Garten. (219)
E. Entstehungszeit der neunten Scene. (224)
F. Drei Scenen nach Gretchens Fall. (10 - 12.) (230)
a) Am Brunnen. (231)
b) Zwinger. (232)
c) Dom. (233)
F. Drei Scenen nach Gretchens Fall. (10 - 12.) (234)
G. Entstehungszeit der dreu Scenen. (10 - 12.) (235)
H. Zwei Bruchstücke einer Scene. (13). Nacht. Vor Gretchens Haus. (240)
a) Valentin, Soldat, Gretchens Bruder. b) Faust, Mephistopheles (244)
a) Valentin, Soldat, Gretchens Bruder. b) Faust, Mephistopheles (245)
J. Entstehungszeit der dreizehnten Scene. (246)
K. Die Scenen der Katastrophe. (14 - 16.) a) Faust, Mephistopheles. (249)
K. Die Scenen der Katastrophe. (14 - 16.) a) Faust, Mephistopheles. (252)
b) Entstehungszeit der vierzehnten Scene. (256)
c) Nacht. Offen Feld. (259)
d) Kerker. (260)
e) Entstehungszeit der Kerkerscene. (268)
Rückblick. (283)
Kolophon (288
Bostrycapulus latebrus Collin 2005, SP. NOV.
BOSTRYCAPULUS LATEBRUS SP. NOV. <p> <i>Synonymy</i></p> <p> <i>Crepidula aculeata</i> - Hoagland, 1977 [in part]: 364.</p> <p> <i>Crepidula</i> cf. <i>aculeata</i> - Mexico. Collin, 2003a: 541– 593. Collin, 2003b: 618–640.</p> <p> <i>Holotype:</i> FMNH 282358, shell and ethanol-preserved soft parts. Shell illustrated in Figure 11; length = 15.0 mm, width = 11.9 mm, height = 4.1 mm. Frozen tissue is also deposited at the FMNH under the same lot number.</p> <p> <i>Type locality:</i> just north of La Paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico, along the coast of Ensenada La Paz near El Comitán. Collected from rocks in the low intertidal zone.</p> <p> <i>Other material from the type locality:</i> FMNH 282193 (paratype), FMNH 282194.</p> <p> <i>Diagnosis: B. latebrus</i> can be distinguished from other species of <i>Bostrycapulus</i> by DNA sequence data and by its direct development from large eggs with embryos that retain larval features (unlike <i>B. pritzkeri</i>). The shell morphology and anatomy of <i>B. latebrus</i> do not differ from that described above for <i>B. aculeatus</i>. Diagnostic DNA sequence differences distinguishing <i>B. latebrus</i> from all other <i>Bostrycapulus</i> species are in the following positions in the COI sequences submitted to GenBank (position 1 = position 1537 of the <i>D. yakuba</i> mitochondrial genome, GenBank # X03240): 3 (g), 108 (c), 144 (g), 192 (g), 243 (a), 270 (c), 306 (g), 327 (g), 423 (c), 522 (t).</p> <p> <i>Distribution:</i> material whose identity can be verified as <i>B. latebrus</i> has only been collected near La Paz, Mexico. Shells that may be from this species occur commonly along the Pacific coast of Baja California and have been reported from as far north as southern California. However, observations of development and DNA data are necessary before their identity can be verified.</p> <p> <i>Description:</i> shell morphology and anatomy are the same as for <i>B. aculeatus</i>, although the shells of the live-collected material were all smaller than large examples of <i>B. aculeatus</i> and <i>B. odites</i>. The protoconch distinguishes this species from <i>B. calyptraeformis</i> and <i>B. odites</i>, and <i>B. pritzkeri</i>, but cannot be used to clearly distinguish it from the other species of <i>Bostrycapulus</i>. <i>B. latebrus</i> has direct development from eggs with a diameter of 488 Mm. The embryos develop into intracapsular ‘veligers’ with a very small but distinct un-pigmented velum, a small round head vesicle and a single embryonic kidney on each side. An operculum is present but is lost before hatching. Embryonic shell sculpture consists of widely spaced rows of fine granules similar to the larval sculpture of <i>C. lingulata</i> (Collin, 2000b). Embryos hatch as crawling juveniles. Maximum shell length 16 mm (<i>N</i> = 20).</p> <p> <i>Etymology:</i> The species name <i>latebrus</i> is Latin, meaning ‘hidden’ or ‘obscure’, referring to both the difficulty of distinguishing this from the other species of <i>Bostrycapulus</i> and also to the fact that shells are often so encrusted with epibionts that they are effectively hidden in the field.</p> <p> <i>Notes:</i> <i>C. californica</i> Tryon, 1886 is a <i>nomen nudum.</i> However, it may possibly have been applied to this species in the previous literature. Fossil shells with similar morphology occur in the Pliocene and Pleistocene of California, USA and Baja California, Mexico.</p>Published as part of <i>Collin, Rachel, 2005, Development, phylogeny, and taxonomy of Bostrycapulus (Caenogastropoda: Calyptraeidae), an ancient cryptic radiation, pp. 75-101 in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 144 (1)</i> on pages 97-98, DOI: 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2005.00162.x, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/5433494">http://zenodo.org/record/5433494</a>
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation
counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings
are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that
only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into
account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
Recommended from our members
Reconstruction in Collin County, Texas, 1865-1876
This is a work of local history examining the course of Reconstruction in Collin County, Texas. National and state level surveys of Reconstruction often overlook the experiences of communities in favor of simpler, broader narratives. The work proceeds chronologically, beginning with the close of the Civil War, and tells the story of Collin County as national Reconstruction progressed and relies on works of professional and non-academic historians, oral histories, census data, and newspapers to present a coherent picture of local life, work, and politics. The results exemplify the value of local history, as local conditions influenced the course of events in Collin County as much as those in Austin and Washington D.C. The story of Reconstruction in Collin County is one of anomalous political views resulting from geographical exclusion from the cotton culture of Texas followed by a steady convergence. As Reconstruction progressed, Collin County began to show solidarity with more solidly conservative Texas Counties. The arrival of railroads allowed farmers to move from subsistence agriculture to cash crop production. This further altered local attitudes toward government, labor, voting rights, and education for Freedmen. By the end of Reconstruction, Collin County had all but abandoned their contrarian social and political views of the 1850s and 1860s in favor of limited rights for blacks and Redemption. The results show the importance of local history and how Collin County’s Reconstruction experience enriches and deepens how historians view the years after the Civil War. The author recommends further research of this kind to supplement broader syntheses
Charles B. Moore Family papers, 1832-1917
Deposit slip for Mrs. C. B. Moore at the Collin County National Bank for $25.00
Recommended from our members
Charles B. Moore Family papers, 1832-1917
Deposit slip for Mrs. C. B. Moore at the Collin County National Bank for $25.00
Letter from B. R. Milam to Collin and Elizabeth McKinney
Letter from B. R. Milam to Collin and Elizabeth McKinney.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_mckinneymilamfamily/1163/thumbnail.jp
Letter from C. B. W. Allen to Collin McKinney
Letter from C. B. W. Allen to Collin McKinney.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_mckinneymilamfamily/1115/thumbnail.jp
Re-sounding images: sound and image in an audiovisual age
This dissertation examines the evolving articulation of sound and image in contemporary culture, with particular reference to film. It argues that sound and image have undergone a historical machined separation, followed by a machined fusion or recombination. The machined fusion of sound and image has enabled the creation of soundful images, which are more than simply the sum of their parts. Through the infusion of sound, images are now routinely reinforced with a performed sense of presence, where they are made to sound more real, more powerful, more authentic. Through association with the image, sounds are reinforced to the extent of becoming 'realer than real'. By tracing the history of sound and image from their initial machined separation to their subsequent machined fusion, it will be argued that a new relationship has been created that has shaped an influential new mode of communication and perception
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