40,245 research outputs found

    Peter W. Cox editorial on the proposed Maine-Vermont-Texas compact for the dispo

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    Peter W. Cox editorial on the proposed Maine-Vermont-Texas compact for the disposal of low-level nuclear waste

    Continuum piece by Peter W. Cox on Frank M. Coffin, the 1960 candidate for gov

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    Continuum piece by Peter W. Cox on Frank M. Coffin, the 1960 candidate for governor, who, six years earlier, had helped stage a rebirth of the Democratic Party in Maine. Following the national trend, Democrats have broken into single-issue constituencies, and this year they have failed to put up a credible candidate for governor. Cox says that broad-based parties with clearly defined, differing philosophies are needed to enrich the political debate

    Continuum piece by Peter W. Cox responding to a March 5 cover storyby Ken Chut

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    Continuum piece by Peter W. Cox responding to a March 5 cover storyby Ken Chutchian, who took issue with the Natural Resources Council of Maine for not attacking the Maine Department of Environmental Protection after the NRCM documented the agency\u27s poor record in controlling toxins

    Peter Cox discusses tourism, which was the subject of a May conference at Bowdoi

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    Peter Cox discusses tourism, which was the subject of a May conference at Bowdoin College, sponsored by the the Maine Center of Economic Policy [Cover story, May 28]. The conference showed that Maine people are ambivalent about the business, which tends to pay low wages and has high environmental impacts. Cox praises Maine\u27s new, tourism-based transportation plan as a good step in the direction of minimizing the adverse impacts of the tourism, but concludes that since Americans are wedded to personal mobility, the problems associated with tourism will probably never be solved

    Author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012 /

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    Title from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Portraits of author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia

    Routledge Companion to Cycling Studies

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    This is an Accepted Manuscript of a book chapter published by Routledge in Routledge Companion to Cycling Studies on 14/12/2022, available online: https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Companion-to-Cycling/Norcliffe-Brogan-Cox-Gao-Hadland-Hanlon-Jones-Oddy-Vivanco/p/book/9780367683993Any academic study uses underlying assumptions about the object of study, appropriate methods and analytical tools. This chapter explores some of the key questions and approaches that have arisen in cycling studies over the last two decades, ranging from realist to constructivist analysis. It offers a brief introduction to some of the most important strands of social theory applied to cycling studies. In particular, the chapter traces the politics of knowledge as it applies to cycling studies and the implications of contrasting perspectives as they relate to practical application

    Christine Cox

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    Christine moved to Darwin in 1946 with her parents and three other siblings. She went to Darwin Primary School and Higher Primary School. In 1958 she began a typist in training course where she met Harry Cox a policeman they were married in the Darwin Uniting Church in December 1961 and Chris worked at the Darwin Post Office. In 1965 they were transferred to Daly Waters. Chris became a bush coppers' wife and post mistress at Daly Waters. Moved again to Avon Downs for three years from April 1967 and had to put up with loneliness when Harry went on long patrols but, found it harder to deal with a plague of rats which lasted many months. Next to Adelaide River and then out to Maningrida for several years before being transferred back to Adelaide River where they were welcomed back and quickly absorbed themselves in community activities Chris became the watermelon lady for her work on refreshment stalls at the school and sporting gatherings. Back to Darwin and Chris threw herself into the activities of the Darwin Garden Club and made a video record of the flora of the Palmerston area, capturing the flora legacy before residential development radically changed the environment.AuthorTypis

    Cox Peter R. — Demography

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    C A. Cox Peter R. — Demography. In: Population, 15ᵉ année, n°4, 1960. p. 713

    Cox Peter R. - Demography

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    C A. Cox Peter R. - Demography. In: Population, 8ᵉ année, n°1, 1953. pp. 166-167

    Cox Peter R. - Demography

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    C A. Cox Peter R. - Demography. In: Population, 8ᵉ année, n°1, 1953. pp. 166-167
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