15,419 research outputs found

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

    No full text
    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

    Mata

    No full text
    Mata is a system for medical image data management. It allows for a highly modular image management workflow supporting large file sizes. The name Mata derives from &#39;medicine&#39; and &#39;data&#39;. The work has been described in Wollatz, L., Scott, M., Johnston, S. J., Lackie, P. M. &amp; Cox, S. J. (2018) &#39;Curation of Image Data for Medical Research&#39;, Proc. 14th Int. IEEE Conf. eScience</span

    Peter M. Mach

    No full text
    abstract: Peter was 12 years old when he heard gunshots and bombing at his village. “Lost Boys Found” is an ongoing, interdisciplinary project that is collecting, recording and archiving the oral histories of the Lost Boys/Girls of Sudan. The collection is a work-in-progress, seeking to record the oral history of as many Lost Boys/Girls as are willing, and will be used in a future book.Age: 28Region: Upper NileThis picture and bio was donated to the Lost Boys Found project from The Arizona Lost Boys Cente

    Celebration of the Gund Foundation International Law Center: Case Western Reserve University School of Law, October 18, 1991

    No full text
    Addresses of participants in the Celebration, including Dean Peter M. Gerhart, Case Western Reserve President Agnar Pytte, Frederick K. Cox, and Geoffrey Gun

    Joseph Bimeler letter to Peter Kaufmann, June 8, 1844

    No full text
    Letter from J. M. Bimeler (by Christian Weibel) to Peter Kaufmann, acknowledging receipt of Bibles and spelling books and ordering more Bibles. He repeats his statement from his letter of April 31, 1844, of a preference for Bibles that embrace the Apocrypha. The letter also requests a catalog of books on hand at Kaufmann's establishment. Led by Joseph Bimeler (sometimes spelled Bäumeler) in 1817, a group of Lutheran separatists left Germany and eventually established the small community of Zoar in Tuscarawas County, Ohio. The group formed the Society of Separatists of Zoar, in which each person donated his or her property to the community as a whole, and in exchange for their work, the society would provide for them. After decades of economic prosperity, the unity of the village declined, and by 1898 the Zoarites disbanded the society. Peter Kaufmann was a German immigrant and intellectual. He arrived first in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1820; in 1826 he became professor of languages at the Harmony Society town of Economy, Pennsylvania. In 1827, Kaufmann led the establishment of Teutonia, a utopian community in Columbiana County, Ohio, and published its weekly titled "Teutonia: The Herald of a Better Time." Following this he moved to Canton, Ohio, where he became translator and editor of "Der Vaterlandsfreund und Geist der Zeit" under Solomon Sala. Additionally, Kaufmann wrote a number of books on education, as well as a German almanac. He was also an influential Democrat, counting President Van Buren among his friends, and knew Ralph Waldo Emerson

    Cox et al. reply

    No full text
    Reply to comments on: Cox PM, Huntingford C, Williamson MS. (2018). Emergent constraint on equilibrium climate sensitivity from global temperature variability. Nature 553(7688): 319-32

    Monozygotic twins with distinct forms of idiopathic inflammatory myositis

    No full text
    © The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Rheumatology. All rights reserved.Vidya Limaye, Jenny Walker, Michael Ahern, Peter Bardy, Sally Cox, Peter Roberts-Thomson, Sue Lester and Peter Blumberg

    Peter Logan: Victorian Fetishism [Audio interview]

    No full text
    Peter Logan is the author of Nerves and Narratives: A Cultural History of Hysteria in Nineteenth-Century British Prose (1997) and, more recently, Victorian Fetishism: Intellectuals and Primitives (2009). On May 15, 2012, Fred Rowland interviewed Peter Logan to discuss Victorian Fetishism, which details the development of ideas about the primitive and how these concepts set the boundaries of culture in Victorian Britain. Drawing from Lucretius, Vico, and Auguste Comte, Peter Logan explains how fetishism – the defining feature of culture’s absence – figured in the works of literary and cultural critic Matthew Arnold, realist novelist George Eliot, and anthropologist Edward Tylor.Temple University. College of Liberal ArtsTemple University. LibrariesEnglishLearning and Research ServicesAudacityAudacit

    Der Wahrheitssucher : su Peter Weiss, Dante e l’utopia

    No full text
    The contribution outlines the utopian dimension of the work and aesthetics of the German-Jewish-Swedish author Peter Weiss (1916-1982), focusing mainly on his "DC-Projekt", the plan of a political rewriting of Dantes' Divine Comedy for the modern stage (1960s). The contribution contends that the medieval poet, called "the truthsearcher" in the posthumous drama "Inferno", is the key figure of the author's utopian concern in his lifelong alternation of autobiographical, poetical and political issues
    corecore