8,091 research outputs found
Natalie and Steven Duda at School Groundbreaking. April 2, 2000
Natalie Duda (left) and brother, Steven Duda,wait their turn to break ground for St. Luke\u27s new school. They are wearing their SEA (School Expansion Appeal) hats and tee shirts and holding their souvenir pink shovels.https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-images/1447/thumbnail.jp
Leptocera (Acuminiseta) prominens Duda 1925
Leptocera (Acuminiseta) prominens Duda, 1925 Leptocera (Acuminiseta) prominens Duda, 1925: 124. Remarks Leptocera (Acuminiseta) prominens was provisionally treated as Rudolfina by Roháček et al. (2001), who noted that Acuminiseta Duda, 1925 does not occur in the New World. This species does not fit into Rudolfina as defined here, but belongs elsewhere in the Archiceroptera complex and will be treated in a later paper.Published as part of Paiero, Steven Mark & Marshall, Stephen A., 2020, A revision of the genus Rudolfina Roháček (Sphaeroceridae: Limosininae), pp. 1-48 in European Journal of Taxonomy 593 on page 45, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2020.593, http://zenodo.org/record/365977
Natalie and Steven Duda Break Ground For New School April 2, 2000
Natalie Duda and Steven Duda use the special shovels given to all St. Luke\u27s students to break ground for the construction of their new school. Sunday, April 2, 2000.https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-images/1457/thumbnail.jp
Steven Johnson Author Talk Poster
K-State Book NetworkA poster advertising an author talk by Steven Johnson at Kansas State University on September 3, 2014. Steven Johnson's book "The Ghost Map" was the 2014-2015 common book
Steven Bialer and Patti Smith, July 1978
Musician, poet, and author Patti Smith sits on a bed in a hotel room in July 1978. The photograph was taken by Don Hamerman as part of a session for "Unicorn Times," an alternative performing arts periodical in Washington, D.C. Steven Bialer, the Design Director for "Unicorn Times," is seated on the bed next to Smith
Steven Garber
Steven Garber speaks on the importance and value of truth.
Steven Garber is the principal of The Washington Institute for Faith, Vocation & Culture, which is focused on reframing the way people understand life, especially the meaning of vocation and the common good. A consultant to foundations, corporations and educational institutions, he is a teacher of many people in many places. The author of The Fabric of Faithfulness: Weaving Together Belief and Behavior, and Visions of Vocation: Common Grace for the Common Good, he is also a contributor to the books, Faith Goes to Work: Reflections from the Marketplace, and Get Up Off Your Knees: Preaching the U2 Catalogue. He lives with his wife Meg in Virginia
Steven Yedinak Interview
LTC (RET) Steven M. Yedinak commissioned in the U. S. Army Infantry in 1963 and subsequently spent 26 years in Special Forces and Airborne Infantry. He served two combat tours in Vietnam (1966-67 & 1971-1972), and started the Mobile Guerrilla Force. He is the author of Hard to Forget: An American with the Mobile Guerrilla Force in Vietnam (Random House, 1998). He retired from the Army in 1989
Gamification is broken. An interview with Steven Poole
Steven Poole is the author of Trigger Happy (2000. New York, NY: Arcade Publish), Unspeak (2006. New York, NY: Grove Press), and You Aren’t What You Eat (2012. In press). He has written extensively on books, culture, and videogames for The Guardian and other publications
Meeting in the Pastor\u27s Office. c. 1962
Officers of the congregation meet in the office of the Pastor, c. 1962. Left to right. REAR: 1.Steven Sidlik, Teacher 2. Andy Stanko, Church Treasurer 3. Rev. S.M. Tuhy 4. Milan Jakubcin SEATED: 1. Ferdinand Duda, Sr., Secretary 2.Andrew Duda, Jr., President 3. Jim Colbert 4. Elmer Bellhorn, Principalhttps://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-images/1391/thumbnail.jp
Steven Pinker on language and thought
Educação Superior::Linguística, Letras e Artes::LinguísticaThis video presents an exclusive preview of Steven Pinker's book: the stuff of thought. The author looks at language and how it expresses what goes on in our minds and how the words we choose communicate much more than we realize. For Steven Pinker, the brilliance of the mind lies in the way it uses just two processes to turn the finite building blocks of our language into infinite meanings. The first is metaphor: we take a concrete idea and use it as a stand-in for abstract thoughts. The second is combination: we combine ideas according to rules, like the syntactic rules of language, to create new thoughts out of old one
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