5,058 research outputs found
Service-oriented models for audiovisual content storage
What are the important topics to understand if involved with storage services to hold digital audiovisual content? This report takes a look at how content is created and moves into and out of storage; the storage service value networks and architectures found now and expected in the future; what sort of data transfer is expected to and from an audiovisual archive; what transfer protocols to use; and a summary of security and interface issues
‘Psychoanalysis is one more way of taking people seriously’ : Adam Phillips in conversation with Emma Williams
Adam Phillips is a leading psychoanalyst and author. Phillips was educated at Clifton College and studied English Literature at Oxford University. He trained to be a psychoanalyst at the Institute of Child Psychology. Across the course of his professional career, he has worked at Guys Hospital, with a school for ‘maladjusted children’, at Camberwell Child Guidance Clinic and at Charing Cross Hospital in the Department of Child Psychiatry. He now works in private practice. Phillips is the author of many works, including Terrors and Experts (1997), In Writing: Essays on Literature (2016), Attention Seeking (2019) and his most recent book, The Cure for Psychoanalysis (2021). He also served as the General Editor of the New Penguin Classics Translations of the works of Sigmund Freud.
The conversation begins by exploring the way mental health has become a topic of public interest as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The opportunities and challenges in Phillips's experience working with schools and for young people's mental health services during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s are then discussed. Questions about the nature of psychoanalysis are introduced, and the discussion turns towards the relationship between philosophy, literature and psychoanalysis. There is a brief discussion of connections between Phillips's work and the philosophy of Stanley Cavell. Phillips's essays on schools and education are explored in connection with ideas of omniscience, sadomasochism and ‘experiments in living’. The conversation ends with a glimpse of school as a place to cultivate one's interest and one's sociability with others
Emma Eastburne Ireland
1 photographic printWritten on back: Emma (to?) Fanny, Summer 73
Printed on back: Broadbent & Phillips / photographers / 1206 Chestnut Street Philadelphia / No..... / Every variety of photographs, including the new style of "crayon" pictures, photo-miniatures, ivorytypes, portraits in/oil and copying, all in the best manner."
Trademark: Son's rays illuminate seated man, female arists, = putti"
Emma Eastburne Ireland, Henrietta Ireland's sister
Emma Eastburne Ireland
1 photographic printWritten on back: Emma (to?) Fanny, Summer 73
Printed on back: Broadbent & Phillips / photographers / 1206 Chestnut Street Philadelphia / No..... / Every variety of photographs, including the new style of "crayon" pictures, photo-miniatures, ivorytypes, portraits in/oil and copying, all in the best manner."
Trademark: Son's rays illuminate seated man, female arists, = putti"
Emma Eastburne Ireland, Henrietta Ireland's sister
Histories, Lake-Lofgreen
The Daughters of Utah Pioneers, Phillips Camp biographies (circa 1940-1974) is a collection of biographical sketches of Utah pioneers submitted to the Phillips Camp, Daughters of Utah Pioneers, in Kaysville, Utah. The individual sketches give insight into the socioeconomic status of European, as well New World, converts to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints during the nineteenth century. They contain biographical and genealogical information, as well as descriptions of experiences crossing the Atlantic to America and traveling across the plains to Utah. Minute details of pioneering life in Davis County, Utah, and other frontier outposts of settlement are illuminated. Described also are individual occupations and survival techniques along with information on offices held in, and services to, the church and the community. Biographies include: Emma Court Lake (1811-1894), 1 page; Joseph Lake 1847-1882), 1 page; William Lake (1802-1877), 1 page; William Lake (1802-1877), Emma Court Lake (n.d.-1894), Joseph Lake (1847-1882) and Lucy Tristram Lake (1854-1933), 2 pages; Ann Larkins (1834-1887), 1 page; Martha Pack Larkins (1809-1855?), 2 pages; Charles Layton (1832-1901), 2 pages; Elizabeth Bowler Layton (1825-1896), 2 pages; Sarah A. Croket Layton (1833-1898), 2 pages; Sarah A. Crockett Layton, obstetrician (1833-1898), 2 pages; Sarah Barnes Layton (1826-1906), 3 pages; Mary Ann Phillips Lewis (1848-1914), 8 pages; James Henry Linford (1836-1925), 5 pages; Zillah Crockett Linford (1839-1913), 2 pages; Nils Lofgreen (n.d.-n.d.), 6 page
Marriage record of August, John Alexander and Phillips, Emma
Marriage license for John Alexander August and Emma Phillips. J.M. Auld was the officiant
Histories, Nelson-Openshaw
The Daughters of Utah Pioneers, Phillips Camp biographies (circa 1940-1974) is a collection of biographical sketches of Utah pioneers submitted to the Phillips Camp, Daughters of Utah Pioneers, in Kaysville, Utah. The individual sketches give insight into the socioeconomic status of European, as well New World, converts to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints during the nineteenth century. They contain biographical and genealogical information, as well as descriptions of experiences crossing the Atlantic to America and traveling across the plains to Utah. Minute details of pioneering life in Davis County, Utah, and other frontier outposts of settlement are illuminated. Described also are individual occupations and survival techniques along with information on offices held in, and services to, the church and the community. Biographies include: Karen Camilla Moller Nelson (1845-1922), 4 pages; Metta Gudkjarsen Nelson (1827-n.d.), 3 pages; Ann L. West Neville (1856-n.d.), 10 pages; Alice Nicholls (1870-n.d.), 2 pages; Emma Sargent Nicholls (1842-n.d.), 2 pages; Agnes McDonald Graham Odd (1864-1948), 6 pages; Christmas At Grandmas, written by Barbara Odd, 3 pages; Edward Ogden (1812-1853), 5 pages; Sarah Rooth Garratt Ogden (1808-1890), 5 pages; George Openshaw (1817-1906) and Nancy Ingham (1821-1875), 4 page
A Homegoing Celebration Service for Mrs. Emma Jean Phillips
Funeral program for Mrs. Emma Jean Phillips, born May 10, 1943 and died February 4, 2007. The funeral was held Saturday, February 10, 2007 at Lilly of the Valley Missionary Baptist Church, officiated by Steven R. Owens. Funeral arrangements were made through Lewis Funeral Home and she was buried in Meadowlawn Memorial Park in San Antonio, Texas
Letter from Hubert Phillips to American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, August 4, 1942
Letter from Hubert Phillips to American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, enclosing checks for $57 from F. C. Kellogg, Arthur E. Geschke, Claus Bertelsen, and Hubert Phillips. The letter states that the checks represent "the contributions of about twenty-five people made at a dinner held here recently to consider the phases of the status of citizens of Japanese ancestry and is to be applied specifically to helping prosecute the case of Miss Mitsuye Endo. Mr. F. C. Kellogg of the Fowler High School faculty was the author of the idea and deserves the credit for raising the enclosed contribution."The ACLU-Northern California case file records contain legal documents and correspondence pertaining to the case Ex parte Mitsuye Endo (1944), in which the United States Supreme court unanimously ruled that the federal government could not indefinitely detain United States citizens who were loyal to the government. Files include documents related to the Gordon Hirabayashi Supreme Court case Hirabayashi v. United States
Histories, Farmington-Goodrich
The Daughters of Utah Pioneers, Phillips Camp biographies (circa 1940-1974) is a collection of biographical sketches of Utah pioneers submitted to the Phillips Camp, Daughters of Utah Pioneers, in Kaysville, Utah. The individual sketches give insight into the socioeconomic status of European, as well New World, converts to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints during the nineteenth century. They contain biographical and genealogical information, as well as descriptions of experiences crossing the Atlantic to America and traveling across the plains to Utah. Minute details of pioneering life in Davis County, Utah, and other frontier outposts of settlement are illuminated. Described also are individual occupations and survival techniques along with information on offices held in, and services to, the church and the community. Biographies include: Farmington, Deseret Brass Band in 1856, 4 pages; Mary Spencer Flint (1814-1894), 3 pages; Robert Flint (1781-1862), 2 pages; Samuel Flint (1857-1955), two documents, 8 pages, including obituary; William Allen Flint (1820-1895), 9 pages; William Foxley (1831-1906), 2 pages; Sarah Garlick (1830-1904), 10 pages; Elizabeth Morris Davis Gibson (1848-1925), 1 page; William Glover, Jr. (1813-1892) and Jane Cowan Glover (1816-1896), 3 pages; George Albert Goodrich (1839-1911), 5 page
- …
