4,995 research outputs found
Grand prix Inserm 2017
Edith Heard © Inserm / Patrick Delapierre. Le grand prix Inserm 2017 a été décernée à Edith Heard pour ses travaux sur l’épigénétique. La cérémonie annuelle des prix Inserm s’est déroulée le 30 novembre 2017 au Collège de France, en présence de Frédérique Vidal, ministre de l’Enseignement supérieur, de la Recherche et de l’Innovation, Cédric Villani, député, et Gérard Longuet, sénateur, président et premier vice-président de l’Office parlementaire d’évaluation des choix scientifiques et tech..
Professor Edith Heard - Signature
Professor Edith Heard Director-General elect European Molecular Biology Laboratory EMB
Edith Lillian Jones Collection Finding Aid
Finding aid for a collection. Collection description: Nine photographs of classmates at Peabody College for Teachers, including Jones's class photograph, a photograph of the Rowenian Literary Society, and seven photographs of individuals (two fully identified, one identified by first name); and seven postcards with views of the college and its buildings. Edith Lillian Jones, from Ruth, Ark., received an L.I. degree from Peabody College for Teachers in 1903. She died later that year.http://www.library.vanderbilt.edu/speccol/jonese.shtm
Letter from Dwight Heard to Carl Hayden
Letter from Dwight B. Heard, president and publisher of The Arizona Republican, to Carl T. Hayden about a visit by Stephen Mathe
(re) visions:EpiGeneSys
This book is an initiative of the EpiGeneSys European Network of Excellence and funded by the 7th Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development of the European Union. Coordinated by CNRS, France and Institut Curie, Paris. Under the Direction of Genevieve Almounzi and Edith Heard. Edited by Paul Harrison and Dorthe Nickel
Letter from Carl Hayden to Dwight Heard
Letter of introduction for Dwight B. Heard on the arrival of National Park Service Director Stephen T. Mather to Phoenix. Mather's visit includes trips to Roosevelt Dam and Tumacácori
Épigénétique et mémoire cellulaire
Cours – Le génome en quatre dimensions Cours 1 – Introduction historique à l’organisation du génome (le 9 mars 2020) Publications Heard E., « Épigénétique et mémoire cellulaire », Annuaire du Collège de France 2016-2017. Résumé des cours et travaux 117e année, Paris, Collège de France, 2019, p. 133-136, https://doi.org/10.4000/annuaire-cdf.13933. Heard E., Bousard A., Raposo A.C., Jakub Żylicz J., Picard C., Borges Pires V., Qi Y., Gil C., Syx L., Y Chang H. et Teixeira da Rocha S., « The rol..
Singer Edith Drake.
Singer Edith Drake. From newsclipping on back: "Edith Drake, ballard singer heard with Frank Dally's Orchestra during the popular dance programs over CBS-KOL."To order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see:
http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/reproduction/reproduction
Please cite the Order NumberScanned at 600ppi with an Epson 20000 flatbed scanner. Image then rotated, cropped, level-adjusted, and sharpened using Photoshop CS3. Converted to a JPEG2000 image upon ingest into CONTENTdm
DiscoverArchive: System Engineering Management Project
Final report from Vanderbilt University ENGM 273 student group.DiscoverArchive within Vanderbilt University’s Library system currently exists in a very basic implementation that does not necessarily encourage the fundamental purpose of the archive. This purpose is to gather and publish to a common, openly accessible online database any and all faculty and student generated research produced at Vanderbilt University. The intent of this database is to allow anyone free access to the knowledge produced in this academic and research driven environment in an effort to further the combined knowledge of the academic world.
While the aims of the system are in accordance with the founding principles of the open access movement, the reality is that the current implementation of the system is far too rudimentary to handle the volume of data that would be generated by a University wide mandate to publish to the database. In its current state, the archive relies almost entirely on the efforts of Ronee Francis, Manager of Digital Archives at Vanderbilt, to go out and search for research documents and professors to include in the archive. Once she finds a viable document, she contacts both author and publisher to obtain permissions to add it to the archive, and if those are granted she fills out a non-exclusive Vanderbilt license that is uploaded to the archive along with the PDF of the document. If documents do not exist in digital form they must first be scanned by library staff. It is easy to see that this existing methodology can only handle so much data because of the amount of time that the few people involved must spend preparing each document.Jean and Alexander Heard Librar
Mary Brunson Heard Collection - Accession 1612 - M792 (849)
This collection consists of material collected by 1911 Winthrop Alumnae, Mary S. Brunson Heard (1891-1975). The collection consists of the November 1907 and January 1911 Winthrop Journal, a letter regarding an invitation to the Senior Dance by a Mr. Baker written on Winthrop Literary Society letterhead, a Senior English composition paper titled, “Henry Griswold’s Old Home,” Senior Astronomy list, and, of particular interest are the three typescript copies of poet Anna Peyre Shackelford Dinnies reminiscence or diary of her trip from New Orleans, LA to Charleston, SC in 1851. The reminiscence would be of interest to anyone interested in researching pre-Civil War South. Anna Peyre Shackelford Dinnies (1805-1886) was a South Carolina native (Georgetown, SC) and was the daughter of Judge William Frederick Shackelford. Anna was poet and writer who often used the pen name Moina. She received her education at the Female Seminary of the Miss Ramsays (daughters of author and historian Dr. David Ramsay) in Charleston, SC. She married Dr. John Clifford Dinnies (1806-1884) in 1830 and the couple later relocated to New Orleans, Louisiana. After twenty years away she took a trip to visit her family in Charleston in 1851. She detailed her experiences on her trip with her daughter Grace Louise Dinnies Smith (1835-1854) in her essay titled, “Notes of My Trip to South Carolina in 1851.” Mary Brunson Heard transcribed the diary which was in the possession of Mrs. Boykin.
The author discusses in detail her experiences traveling through Georgia and South Carolina while describing the people and places she came across and her impressions of each. She did not have a high opinion on the Georgians she met and described them as “rude and uncultivated in manner, coarse in appearance, and rowdy in habits,” but she was thoroughly impressed by Stone Mountain describing it as “striking,” a “wonder”, and “stands alone upon the Earth.”https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/manuscriptcollection_findingaids/2747/thumbnail.jp
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