9,112 research outputs found
Richard A. Ellis to John Philip Trinkaus, November 1, 1973
Letter to Trinkaus thanking him for his guest lecture at Brown University on "Morphology & Morphogenesis"Typed letter1-pageCorrespondenc
Philip Toyne at Alternative Energy meeting, 1989
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/276410Philip Toyne at Alternative Energy meeting, 1989, held in the Collingwood Town Hall to a packed audience.200711
Item: [1999.0081.00459] "Philip Toyne at Alternative Energy meeting, 1989
Philip Chol Gai
abstract: In 1987, Philip escaped the war before it reached his village. He was tending to the cattle and the goats when he saw smoke and fire coming from the war.
“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: 26Region: Upper NileThis picture and bio was donated to the Lost Boys Found project from The Arizona Lost Boys Cente
A policy for Australia. Philip Methven
tag=1 data=A policy for Australia. Philip Methven
tag=2 data=Methven, Philip
tag=3 data=Asia-Pacific Defence Reporter,
tag=4 data=XIX
tag=5 data=8/9
tag=6 data=February/March 1993
tag=7 data=13-19.
tag=8 data=DEFENCE
tag=10 data=The five power defence arrangements and military co-operation among the ASEAN states, the author proposes the development of further bilateral and intra-regional initiatives.
tag=11 data=1993/5/3
tag=12 data=93/0132
tag=13 data=CABThe five power defence arrangements and military co-operation among the ASEAN states, the author proposes the development of further bilateral and intra-regional initiatives
Motion and mobility in the realist novels of Philip K Dick
This essay explores the ways that ideas of motion and mobility support readings of Philip K Dick's early novels that take full account of the changing geographical context. They are set during a period of rapid suburban expansion, the building of the interstate and the spread of automobility through car ownership, and their characters frequently exist in a state between continuity through conformity and the potential for change. The open ended forms of the novels reflect a world around Dick that was still under construction, and where alternative realities can be glimpsed between incomplete materialities
Philip Shawcross
Philip Shawcross has a BA Honours degree from the University of Manchester, a teaching degree and a Masters from the University of Toulouse and a BTS in Translation. He worked as a training consultant within Aeroformation (Airbus Training) from 1972 to 1986 and the Air France Group from 1976 to 2008. He developed his first Aviation English course in 1974 and, with Fiona Robertson, co-founded ICAEA in 1991, being president from 2007 to 2013. He is the author of English for Aircraft (Editions Belin) and Flightpath (CUP). He is still involved in courseware development and teacher training.https://commons.erau.edu/icaea-workshop-images/1006/thumbnail.jp
Philip Strong letter to Reuben Wood, January 27, 1852
Legal correspondence written by Philip Strong to Governor Reuben Wood regarding a warrant to arrest Peyton Polly, dated January 27, 1852.
Reuben Wood was governor of Ohio from 1850 through 1853, and was closely involved with the Peyton Polly case and attempts to secure the Polly family's release. Peyton Polly and his family were freedmen living in Lawrence County, Ohio, when they were kidnapped on June 6, 1850, and sold back into slavery in Kentucky and Virginia
Brother Patrick Ellis Celebrates at His Inauguration Dinner
Brother Patrick Ellis celebrates his presidential inauguration in a dinner with Brother Philip Nelan and Brother Daniel Burkehttps://digitalcommons.lasalle.edu/thisworkisours_case4/1021/thumbnail.jp
The curious case of Albert Ellis: a psychobiographical case study
Although much has been written on the life and work of American psychologist Albert Ellis, none of the literature adopts a specific psychobiographical framework and no instrumental case studies on the life of Ellis exist. The primary aim of this psychobiographical case study is to provide a psychobiographical exploration and description of aspects of Albert Ellis’ life within his sociohistorical context. More specifically, Ellis’ upbringing with an immigrant past and the role this has played relating to Ellis’ curiosity towards issues of sex and women. The findings of this psychobiographical case study will also be conveyed to inform on the role that culture and cultural diversity has on how an individual experiences and deals with conflict in their life. A specific area of interest in this study is the culture of the twentieth century, with a special focus on the relationship individuals had with sex, as well as examining the lived experience of immigrants during this time. Aspects of Albert Ellis' life within the sociohistorical context of the twentieth century is illustrated by using certain psychological techniques to the available biographical data. This is accomplished by looking at Ellis' experiences and how they influenced the creation of his own paradigm of rational emotive behaviour therapy. Furthermore, Ellis is conceptualised using Karen Horney’s theory of the dynamic relationship, which exists between cultural processes and conflicting human character traits and their impact on behavioural motivation. This study adopts an inductive research approach. Therefore, it implements an instrumental, single-case research design and is exploratory-descriptive in nature. The subject was chosen through purposive sampling and data will be analysed utilising three linked subprocesses theorised by Miles and Huberman.Thesis (DPhil) -- Faculty of Health Science, School of Behavioural & Lifestyle Sciences, 202
Philip Raisor, 15th Annual ODU Literary Festival
Philip Raisor is a critic, poet, and self-described ex-jock basketball player who played in the championship high school game immortalized in the movie, Hoosiers , and who also once played on a college team with Wilt Chamberlain. He is a board member of the Associated Writing Programs, as well as the current chair of The Old Dominion University English Department, and the author of a collection of poetry, Tecumseh Among Them
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