349,325 research outputs found

    Martha\u27s Vineyard quilt, by Vaudis E. Mangum Hall

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    Image of Martha\u27s Vineyard quilt created circa 1948-1949 by Vaudis E. Mangum Hall. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Vaudis E. Mangum Hall as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-1994. Vaudis E. Mangum Hall was born into a quilting family. She started to sew at a very young age. This quilt was made as she awaited the birth of her first daughter, Kathy Leigh Hall, born December 30, 194

    Morning Glory quilt, by Vaudis E. Mangum Hall

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    Image of Morning Glory quilt created in 1949 by Vaudis E. Mangum Hall. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Vaudis E. Mangum Hall as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-1994. Vaudis E. Mangum Hall was born into a quilting family. She started to sew at a very young age. This quilt was made as she awaited the birth of her first daughter, Kathy Leigh Hall, born December 30, 194

    Appliquéd Silk Flowers quilt, by Eliza Melissa Hall

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    Image of Appliquéd Silk Flowers quilt created by Eliza Melissa Hall, date of creation unknown. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Hall\u27s granddaughter, Pearl Jackson Cordon, as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-1994. A Utah pioneer of 1852, Eliza Melissa Hall was born in 1829 in Mayville, New York. She married Mark Hall in 1847 in Greencastle, Indiana. They had 10 children. She died in 1913 in Ogden, Uta

    Callograptus J. Hall 1865

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    Callograptus J. Hall, 1865 Type species. Callograptus elegans J. Hall, 1865.Published as part of Rickards, R. B., Chapman, A. J., Wright, A. J. & Packham, G. H, 2003, Dendroid and Tuboid Graptolites from the Llandovery (Silurian) of the Four Mile Creek Area, New South Wales, pp. 305-330 in Records of the Australian Museum 55 (3) on page 319, DOI: 10.3853/j.0067-1975.55.2003.138

    E J Holloway

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/264231Photograph of E J Holloway, Secretary of the (Victorian) Trades Hall Council. April 1926. Comments: Addenda to 1st Accession. Inscription: Inscription on back of photograph "With best wishes to our old comrade from the offices of the Trades Hall Council, E.J. Holloway".202596 Item: [1988.0062.00015] "E J Holloway

    Edward J. Hickox Basketball Hall of Fame card

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    This is an Edward J. Hickox inductee card created by the Basketball hall of fame. It is metal and has a portrait engraving and a brief history on his career

    Autoritratto e filosofia. Intervista a J. Hall

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    After a brief introduction, which indicates the contents of this monograph issue of “Logoi” (III, 8, 2017), James Hall presents some key questions about the cultural (and broadly philosophical) dimension of self-portrait. First whether and for what extent we can really think of a ‘chronological’ structure of the history of art (and culture). Secondly which model can help us to place diacronically and synchronously the production of self-portraits; then whether there is really an influence of philosophy on art (and of art on the philosophy). So the relationship between serious and ironic, male and female, face and mask, sacredness and dissection in the self-portrait history. Finally, the question of narcissism, between myth, philosophy and everyday life. It is no laking precise references to famous (and less famous) self-portraits from the Middle Ages to the current SelfieDopo una breve introduzione, James Hall presenta alcune questioni-chiave relative alla dimensione culturale (e latamente filosofica) dell’autoritratto. Innanzitutto se e in che misura si possa realmente parlare di una strutturazione ‘cronologica’ della storia dell’arte (e della cultura); quale modello di lettura del mondo possa aiutarci a collocare diacronicamente e sincronicamente la produzione degli autoritratti; se ci sia realmente un’influenza della filosofia sull’arte (e dell’arte sulla filosofia del proprio tempo). Quindi il rapporto tra serio e (auto)ironico, tra genere maschile e femminile, tra volto e maschera, tra sacralità e dissacrazione nella storia dell’autoritratto. Infine la questione del narcisismo, tra mito, filosofia e realtà quotidiana. Non mancano riferimenti precisi ad autoritratti famosi (e meno famosi) dal medioevo fino all’attualità dei Selfie

    Seasonal-variation in faunal distribution within the sediments of a Canadian Shield stream, with emphasis on responses to spring floods

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    PT: J; CR: BISHOP JE, 1973, FRESHWATER BIOL, V3, P147 BOTTOMLEY DJ, 1984, J HYDROL, V75, P1 BRONMARK C, 1984, VERH INT VEREIN LIMN, V22, P1986 BURBANCK WD, 1967, CHESAPEAKE SCI, V8, P14 COLEMAN MJ, 1970, LIMNOL OCEANOGR, V15, P31 CUSHING CE, 1963, T AM FISH SOC, V92, P216 DILLON PJ, 1978, J FISH RES BOARD CAN, V35, P809 GODBOUT L, 1982, HYDROBIOLOGIA, V97, P87 HALL R, 1982, WATER AIR SOIL POLL, V18, P273 HALL RJ, 1980, ECOLOGY, V61, P976 HALL RJ, 1984, CAN J FISH AQUAT SCI, V41, P1132 HALL RJ, 1988, IN PRESS CAN J FISH, V45 HYNES HBN, 1970, ECOLOGY RUNNING WATE HYNES HBN, 1974, LIMNOL OCEANOGR, V19, P92 HYNES HBN, 1976, OIKOS, V27, P307 HYNES HBN, 1983, HYDROBIOLOGIA, V100, P93 JEFFREY KA, 1986, HYDROBIOLOGIA, V134, P43 JEFFRIES DS, 1979, J FISH RES BOARD CAN, V36, P640 JEFFRIES DS, 1983, 83S DAT REP MCLAY CL, 1968, AUST J MAR FRESHWATE, V19, P139 MORRIS DL, 1979, FRESHWATER BIOL, V9, P573 POOLE WC, 1976, HYDROBIOLOGIA, V50, P151 REICE SR, 1984, VEHR INT VEREIN LIMN, V22, P1906 REUSS JO, 1985, J ENVIRON QUAL, V14, P26 REYNOLDS B, 1986, J HYDROL, V87, P167 SCULLION J, 1983, HYDROBIOLOGIA, V107, P261 SEIP HM, 1985, CAN J FISH AQUAT SCI, V42, P927 SHIOZAWA DK, 1986, CAN J ZOOL, V64, P1655 WILLIAMS DD, 1974, FRESHWATER BIOL, V4, P233 WILLIAMS DD, 1976, OIKOS, V27, P265 WILLIAMS DD, 1984, ECOLOGY AQUATIC INSE, P430 WOTTON RS, 1979, OIKOS, V32, P368; NR: 32; TC: 25; J9: CAN J FISHERIES AQUAT SCI; PG: 9; GA: Q9561Source type: Electronic(1

    Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame Pre-Opening Day Program

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    The following document describes the planned program for the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame from 2:00 to 5:00 on Saturday, February 17, 1968 for their pre-opening day celebration. The invites to this event were generally slim with only those people having a direct impact on the creation of the building being invited to the event. The program begins with a welcoming statement before offering a list of suggestions over how to spend the time in the Hall of Fame. These suggestions include a description of some of the different areas of the Hall of Fame and what they offer, like the paneled Founders Wall and the Honors Court. The end of the program explains some of the opening events to look for including guided tours, a movie, and refreshments. Finally, the Basketball Hall of Fame offers a thank you to those who have contributed to and are interested in the opening of the Basketball Hall of Fame.The original Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame was constructed on the Springfield College Campus due to the college’s deep connection to the sport of basketball; from Dr. James Naismith, who invented the game while he was a faculty member at the school in 1891; to Dr. Edward Hickox, the driving force behind the Hall’s creation; and the innumerable members of the faculty who have sat on national rules committee. The Basketball Hall of Fame had a difficult beginning, taking nine years to build due to the difficulties of procuring funds. Ground breaking for the Hall occurred in September 1959, but it did not open to the public until February 18, 1968. The total estimated cost of the building was put at 1,156,400.In1963only1,156,400. In 1963 only 195,000 had been raised but just over a year later $251,749.11 was contributed by the Greater Springfield Area and the building began to get back on track. In 1959 when the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame construction began the first group of players, coaches, and contributors to the sport were inducted into the Hall of Fame. This first group of inductees included five with ties to Springfield College; Dr. James Naismith, Amos Alonzo Stagg, Luther H. Gulick, Edward J. Hickox, and Naismith’s First Team from Springfield College, then known as the International YMCA Training School. By the time the Hall of Fame opened in 1968 it already had 43 inductees. When the Hall of Fame first opened to the public in 1968 it had over 1000 visitors on the first day and just over a year later it had had a total of 16,500 visitors. With the ever-growing popularity of the sport of basketball, inductees into the Hall of Fame, and visitors, the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame began to outgrow its Springfield College home. In 1985 the Hall of Fame opened in a new location in Springfield and the original Hall of Fame building ownership was transferred to Springfield College. Renovations on the building began in 1987 and the building was rededicated as the Allied Health Sciences Center in April of 1989

    Cobham Hall

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    'COBHAM HALL Drawn in Lithotint by J. D. Harding Published by Chapman & Hall Octr.. 1st 1843'. Accompanied by notes
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