172,339 research outputs found

    The Victoria galop [music] /

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    For orchestra.; Caption title.; "From The illustrated Melbourne post Nov-Dec 1865 p. 191".; Part of the Richard Divall collection of music scores.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-vn3702539.Illustrated Melbourne post

    List of Richard F. Green’s Papers

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    This is a list of papers written or co-written by Richard F. Green. The list was compiled by Richard F. Green. Links are provided to items that are available in the University Digital Conservancy (University of Minnesota institutional repository).Green, Richard F. (2020). List of Richard F. Green’s Papers. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/212276

    Richard F. Simons

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    "Richard F. Simons Co "C" 808 Engineers From Feb 20th 1942 - to July 1942. Hughes Airstrip Strauss Airstrip Livingston Airstrip Fenton Airstrip We built them all!!"Richard F. Simons, Company "C" 808 Engineers. From February 20th 1942 - to July 1942. Hughes Airstrip, Strauss Airstrip, Livingston Airstrip, Fenton Airstrip. We built them all!

    Richard Dorson (interview)

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    This interview is included in the American Folklore Society Oral History Project held at the Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. In this item, Richard M. Dorson is interviewed by Richard Reuss at the American Folklore Society annual meeting in Nashville, Tennessee for the American Folklore Society Oral History Project. Biography/History note: Richard M. Dorson, folklorist, author, and educator, was born in New York City in 1916 and died in 1981. He earned his B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. at Harvard University and taught at Harvard and Michigan State University before becoming professor of history and folklore at Indiana University where he founded its Folklore Institute in 1963 and became the first director and first chair of the Folklore Department at Indiana University in 1978. This collection consists of 1 sound tape reel (40 min.) : analog, 7 1/2 ips, 2 track, mono. ; 7 in. It was originally recorded on November 2, 1973 at the American Folklore Society annual meeting in Nashville, Tennessee by Richard Reuss on a Sony audiocassette. This is a first-generation copy

    Getting Started as a Medical Teacher in Times of Change

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    Medical school teaching is a skill that is very often learned on the job. The faculty comprised of researchers and clinicians are expert in many biomedical disciplines, but familiarity with learning theories and pedagogy are usually not included in their knowledge and skill sets. The pressure to see patients and acquire extramural funding leaves little time for faculty to learn how to teach. When coupled with the natural attrition of senior faculty it is necessary to start junior faculty on the correct path to being effective medical educators who are capable of lecturing and facilitating. Institutions cannot afford to have medical educators learn through trial and error. The standards set by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) are also creating an urgency to produce competent teachers as quickly as possible. Novice teachers need to be able to use these standards to align their teaching with goals, objectives and the appropriate pedagogy. This article is designed to be a self-directed guide describing some essentials that a newly hired faculty member can quickly use to get started. An institutional faculty development program can then serve to build upon and enrich the experience for the new faculty member.This is the authors' accepted manuscript of the article. The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1007/s40670-014-0098-y.Peer reviewe

    Richard F. Hoffman Oral History

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    An oral history interview of military veteran Richard F. Hoffman originally conducted under the auspices of the Library of Congress Veterans History Project

    Réponse de Richard F. Hamilton

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    Hamilton Richard F. Réponse de Richard F. Hamilton. In: Revue française de sociologie, 1970, 11-1. pp. 102-104

    Oral History Interview with Richard Hoffman, April 17, 2007

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    The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with Richard F. Hoffman. Hoffman was born 7 January 1922 in Seattle, Washington. While in college, he joined the Naval Reserve V-7 program. Upon graduation in June 1943, he reported to Great Lakes Naval Training Center, then to the Midshipman School at Columbia University. In November 1943 he was commissioned an ensign and sent to Antisubmarine Warfare schools in Miami and Key West. He subsequently joined the commissioning crew of the USS Damon M. Cummings (DE-643) as the ASW officer. The Cummings sailed to the Western Pacific in September 1944, escorting a convoy to Eniwetok. She continued to provide patrol and escort duty until March 1945 when she escorted a convoy of LSTs from the Philippines to Okinawa. During the battle for Okinawa, Cummings provided picket duty, shooting down one kamikaze. After the war, she went to Japan where Hoffman was able to go ashore in Tokyo. From Japan, they sailed to Bremerton, Washington for an overhaul. Hoffman was now the Executive Officer. The Cummings crossed the Pacific again to provide services in Mainland China and French Indochina. Hoffman left the ship in May 1946 and was returned to the states. He was discharged from active duty in June 1946

    Richard Hoffmann, Glas, Porzellan, Küchengeräte, Weissenburg i./Bay., F. Preuss, Weissenburg: 1913

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    RICHARD HOFFMANN, GLAS, PORZELLAN, KÜCHENGERÄTE, WEISSENBURG I./BAY., F. PREUSS, WEISSENBURG: 1913 Richard Hoffmann, Glas, Porzellan, Küchengeräte, Weissenburg i./Bay., F. Preuss, Weissenburg: 1913 ( -

    Folder 9: Schwiderski, Richard Craig v. State of Texas 2, 1979-1984

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    Photocopy of a section of an article written by New York author Richard Reeves and titled 'Too Late to Kill the Messenger' and dated 1979, and argues for the role of media during violent situations
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