65,639 research outputs found
Letter from Arthur P. Bell to W. T. Johnson, M. S. Sanders, and W. T. Ellis
Letter from Arthur P. Bell to W. T. Johnson, M. S. Sanders, and W. T. Ellis, concerning Teacher Education Seminar in Vocational Agriculture at A & T College
Book review: "English for telecoms and information technology" by T. Ricca and M. Duckworth; "English for legal professionals" by A. Frost; "English for the pharmaceutical industry" by M. Buchler, K. Jaehnig, G. Matzig, and T. Weindler; "English for cabin crews" by S. Ellis and L. Lansford; and "English for negotiating" by C. Lafond, S. Vine, and B. Welch.
This review examines five books in the Oxford Business English Express Series, including "English for telecoms and information technology" by T. Ricca and M. Duckworth; "English for legal professionals" by A. Frost; "English for the pharmaceutical industry" by M. Buchler, K. Jaehnig, G. Matzig, and T. Weindler; "English for cabin crews" by S. Ellis and L. Lansford; and "English for negotiating" by C. Lafond, S. Vine, and B. Welch
Our Lincoln, The Hero of the Nation
80.7568.933 – “Our Lincoln, The Hero of the Nation”: T. Francis Burke: Mrs. Ella M. Ellis: Mrs. Ella M. Ellis: 1916: Voice
E.E. Ellis et M. Wilcox, ed., Neotestamentica et Semitica. Studies in honour of Matthew Black, Edimbourg, T. and T. Clarck, 1969
Chevallier Max-Alain. E.E. Ellis et M. Wilcox, ed., Neotestamentica et Semitica. Studies in honour of Matthew Black, Edimbourg, T. and T. Clarck, 1969. In: Revue d'histoire et de philosophie religieuses, 52e année n°3,1972. p. 371
T. Ellis 1926
<p>Milacidae Ellis, 1926</p> <p>Diagnostic features.</p> <p>Horse-shoe shaped groove on the mantle; pneumostome postmedian; keel connecting sole tip and mantle; sole tripartite, central sole field with V-shaped wrinkles, only visible in preserved animals (Wiktor 1987).</p>Published as part of <i>Schallenberg, Vivianne M., Heim, Rene, Schneppat, Ulrich E., Mueller, Peter, Rueetschi, Joerg & Neubert, Eike, 2022, Revision of the family Milacidae from Switzerland (Mollusca, Eupulmonata, Parmacelloidea), pp. 149-179 in ZooKeys 1116</i> on page 149, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.1116.8276
Interview with Richard Ellis
Interview in eight sessions (January–February 2014) with Steele Professor of Astronomy Richard Ellis, whose life has taken him from a small coastal town in Wales to the edge of the universe. He recounts that trajectory in this oral history, starting with his upbringing and education in Wales and his youthful enthusiasm for astronomy, which he pursued through studies at University College London (B.Sc. 1971) and Oxford University (D.Phil. 1974). Having the good fortune to begin his career at the dawn of the “golden era” of British astronomy, he describes his years on the faculty of the University of Durham, where he worked with physics department head and future UK Astronomer Royal A. Wolfendale to develop the “Durham group” into an internationally recognized astronomy program. He talks about his work at the Royal Greenwich Observatory, his galactic and extragalactic studies carried out at British observatories and elsewhere, most notably the Anglo-Australian Telescope, and his involvement in mapping the future of British astronomy.
In 1993, he became the Plumian Professor at the University of Cambridge and director of Cambridge’s Institute of Astronomy, and in 1999 he joined the faculty of Caltech, where he served as director of Palomar Observatory/Caltech Optical Observatories (2000–05), carried out pioneering observations at the W. M. Keck Observatories and Hubble Space Telescope, and was centrally involved in still-ongoing efforts to build the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT).
Ellis details his years of research in observational cosmology, probing galactic evolution and distribution at ever-higher redshifts, and his work on gravitational lensing and dark matter, the cosmic “dark ages” and cosmic dawn, and the pursuit of the most distant objects in the universe. He recalls his role in the 1987 discovery of the first cosmologically distant supernova and subsequent involvement in the supernova cosmology project, an investigation that won the 2011 Nobel Prize in physics for three of its principal scientists. He talks about his collaborations and interactions with numerous colleagues and students, including D. Axon, R. Blandford, A. Boksenberg, G. Efstathiou, D. Lynden-Bell, J. Peebles, M. Rees, W. Sargent, D. Saxon, B. Tinsley, and T. Tombrello, and shares his perspectives on the science and sociology of the astrophysical communities in Great Britain and the United States. Recaps of his election to the UK Royal Society and his designation as a Commander of the British Empire (CBE)—the latter formalized at a Buckingham Palace reception with HRH Prince Charles—also form part of this oral history.
Note: Occasional allusions in this manuscript to a Royal Society memoir or biography refer to an autobiography that Ellis was asked to prepare for the Royal Society at the time he was elected a Fellow in 1995. A copy of the bio is appended to this oral history
Letter from M. S. Sanders, Assistant Supervisor Vocational Education, to James D. Allen
Letter from M. S. Sanders, Assistant Supervisor Vocational Education, to James D. Allen, concerning his job availability. Cc. W. T. Johnson and W. T. Ellis
Letter from M. S. Sanders, Assistant Supervisor Vocational Education, to William Barnes
Letter from M. S. Sanders, Assistant Supervisor Vocational Education, to William Barnes, concerning his job availability. Cc W. T. Johnson and W. T. Ellis
Further taxonomic studies on the families Calymperaceae (Musci) and Orthotrichaceae (Musci) in the bryoflora of Réunion Island, with notes on taxa from other islands in the western Indian Ocean
The systematics and geographical distribution of some taxa in the moss families Calymperaceae and Orthotrichaceae that occur in Réunion and neighbouring islands are revised. In the family Calymperaceae, three new subspecies are proposed: Calymperes taitense (Sull.) Mitt. subsp. pachyloma (Hampe ex Müll. Hal.) L. T. Ellis, comb. et stat. nov., Syrrhopodon hispidocostatus Renauld et Cardot subsp. artsii L. T. Ellis, subsp. nov. and S. flexifolius Mitt. subsp. reunionensis L. T. Ellis, subsp. nov.; three further new records for Réunion Island are cited: Calymperes pallidum Mitt., Syrrhopodon dimorphophyllus L. T. Ellis, S. vardei L. T. Ellis, and the presence and geographical distribution in the East African Islands is discussed of Calymperes couguiense Besch., Syrrhopodon asper Mitt., S. africanus (Mitt.) Paris, S. gardneri (Hook.) Schwägr., and S. pulcher W. D. Reese. In the family Orthotrichaceae, new synonymy and distribution records are reported for the genus Macromitrium. Several new synonyms are proposed under Macromitrium microstomum (Hook.et Grev.) Schwägr., M. serpens (Hook. et Grev.) Brid., M. mauritianum Schwägr. and M. pallidum (P. Beauv.) Wijk et Margad. Macromitrium fimbriatum (P. Beauv.) Schwägr. var. chloromitrium Besch. is recognised as a species in its own right, M. chloromitrium (Besch.) Wilbraham, comb. et stat. nov., and is newly recorded from Réunion. Macromitrium belangeri Müll. Hal. is excluded from the Réunion Island’s moss flora.</p
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