15,388 research outputs found
Good old days of Molong / by J.C.L. Fitzpatrick.
Electronic reproduction. Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, 2011
Kathleen Fitzpatrick after being awarded an Order of Australia at Government House
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/270621Taken at Government House, Melbourne on occasion of KF being awarded an Order of Australia (A.O.) From L to R: Joyce Wood, John Pitt, Kathleen Fitzpatrick, Marjorie Pitt.
Inscription: On occasion of award of AO to K.E.F. L to R: Joyce Wood (lect. cartographer of Melb. Uni) John Pitt - brother of K. E. F. Kathleen Fitzpatrick A.O. Sheila Pitt - Sister in law (crossed out) MArjorie Pitt - cousin (wife of Dr David Pitt) (a double first cousin)
Previous Control Number: CP/3521
Previous Control Number: CP/3521 Album 19
Previous Series Number: 8/1422921
Item: [1991.0009.00002] "Kathleen Fitzpatrick after being awarded an Order of Australia at Government House
Male-female relatedness and patterns of male reproductive investment in guppies
Inbreeding can cause reductions in fitness, driving the evolution of pre- and postcopulatory inbreeding avoidance mechanisms. There is now considerable evidence for such processes in females, but fewstudies have focused on males, particularly in the context of postcopulatory inbreeding avoidance. Here, we address this topic by exposing male guppies (Poecilia reticulata) to either full-sibling or unrelated females and determining whether they adjust investment in courtship and ejaculates. Our results revealed that males reduce their courtship but concomitantly exhibit short-term increases in ejaculate quality when paired with siblings. In conjunction with prior work reporting cryptic female preferences for unrelated sperm, our present findings reveal possible sexually antagonistic counter-adaptations that may offset postcopulatory inbreeding avoidance by females. © 2014 The Author(s)
Jeff Young, Jim Fitzpatrick, Bill Palagain and John Linney
L-R: Young, Fitzpatrick, Palagain, Linney
Interview with author of The Black Biblical Heritage, June 1976
Interview with author of The Black Biblical Heritage, features an interview with John L. Johnson, author of the book The Black Biblical Heritage, about the role of black and Jewish individuals in the Bible. Johnson discusses the development and subject matter of his book, June 1976
John Wiley Sons Ltd Guidelines For Preparing A Manuscript Using L
INTRODUCTION The John Wiley & Sons L A T E X book style is an option which should be used with the standard L A T E X book style to create either single- or multiple-author (contributed) books. Fully marked-up examples of both types of book, including the preliminary pages, table of contents, a chapter, references, appendix and an index are provided. The single-author book example can be found in lasample.tex, and the contributed book one in cbook.tex, which includes a chapter jwcbsp01.tex. BEGINNING A BOOK Single-author book Each book starts with the information required for the title page, then the call for the table of contents, and the start of the first chapter, as follows: \documentstyle[jwbook]{book} \begin{document} \title{\LaTeX \\ Sample Output} \edition{First Edition} \author{J. SMITH} \affiliation{Text Processing, John Wiley \& Son
Correspondence [Photocopy], John Brown to Mrs. George L. Stearns, November 29, 1859
A photocopy of a letter to Mrs. George L. Stearns from John Brown while he was in prison in Charlestown, Virginia. 1 page
Myth and gender in contemporary Irish drama
[Summary of the book containing this chapter:] This collection of fourteen new essays by scholars of literature, theatre, historiography, psychology and political science explores aspects of feminism in Ireland four decades after the founding of the Irish Women s Liberation Movement. The tremendous changes to the social, economic, educational and personal lives of Irish women are discussed and analyzed here in terms of the everyday performance of being a woman in Ireland, and the everyday negotiation of gender roles and expectations in Irish society in the twenty-first century. The essays address such disparate areas as the visibility of women practitioners in the 2011 Dublin Theatre Festival; stand-up comedy; dramatic representations of gender and sexuality; gender and the iconography of the nation; women and publishing; motherhood; activism; and reproductive rights. This collection speaks to national issues that continue to concern women around the globe. Contributors include: Suzanne Colleary; Sara Keating; Brenda Donohue; Charlotte Headrick and John Countryman; Tom Maguire and Carole-Anne Upton; S.E. Wilme and Mary Caulfield; Megan Buckley and Julia Walther; Lisa McGonigle; Maria Kurdi; Jacinta Byrne - Doran; Lisa Fitzpatrick; Aideen Kerr; Alyson Cambell and Suzanne Platman; Fiona Bloomer TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction: Performing Feminisms Lisa Fitzpatrick 1 | Women in the Dublin Theatre Festival 2011 by Sara Keating 2 | Eating Tiny Cakes in the Dark: Maeve Higgins and the Politics of Self Deprecation by Susanne Colleary 3 | Marina Carr Writing as a Feminist Act by Brenda Donohue 4 | Damned If You Do; Damned If You Don t: Competing Feminisms in Irish theatre by Charlotte Headrick & John Countryman 5 | Myth and Gender in Irish Drama by Tom Maguire & Carole-Anne Upton 6 | Gendering the Nation in Iconography and Historiography by S.E. Wilmer & Mary Caulfield 7 | Midwives to Creativity : Irish women and public(ation), 1975-1996 by Megan Buckley & Julia Walther 8 | Judgemental oul hoors : Catholicism in the work of Marian Keyes by Lisa McGonigle 9 | The Mother-Daughter Relationship in Contemporary Plays by Women by Mária Kurdi 10 | An Exploration of the Intergenerational Influences on Working Mothers by Jacinta Byrne-Doran 11 | Rape, Murder and Mayhem: Women Writing Violence by Lisa Fitzpatrick 12 | Feminism, Gender Roles, and Sexualities in Contemporary Productions of Oscar Wilde by Aideen Kerr 13 | Le Monkey Homosexuel : the role of Ruth McCarthy s queerzines in Northern Ireland in the 1990s and 2000s by Alyson Campbell & Suzanne Patman 14 | Protests, Parades and Marches: activism and extending abortion legislation to Northern Ireland by Fiona Bloome
The formation of a cold-core eddy in the East Australian Current
Cold-core eddies (CCEs) frequently form in western boundary currents and can affect continental shelf processes. It is not always clear, however, if baroclinic or barotropic instabilities contribute more to their formation. The Regional Ocean Modelling System (ROMS) is used to investigate the ocean state during the formation of a CCE in the East Australian Current (EAC) during October 2009. The observed eddy initially appeared as a small billow (approx. 50 km in length) that perturbed the landward edge of the EAC. The billow grew into a mesoscale CCE (approx. 100 km in diameter), diverting the EAC around it. A ROMS simulation with a realistic wind feld reproduced a similar eddy. This eddy formed from negative vorticity waters found on the continental shelf south of the EAC separation point. A sensitivity analysis is performed whereby the impact of 3 different wind forcing scenarios; upwelling, downwelling, and no winds are investigated. A CCE formed in all wind scenarios despite the wind induced changes in hydrographic conditions in the continental shelf and slope waters. As such, the source of energy for eddy formation did not come from the interactions of wind with the continental shelf waters. Analysis of strain and energy transformation confirms this by showing that the prevailing source of CCE energy was kinetic energy of the offshore EAC. These results clearly link the formation of the CCE to the swift flowing EAC and barotropic instabilities.Peer reviewe
The auto-biography of John Britton ...
"A chronological list of the literary works of John Britton": vol. 3, p. [185-192]."Essays on the merits and characteristics of William Shakspere... " (vol. 3, p. [1]-48) has special t.-p.Vol. 3 has title: Appendix to Britton's Auto-biography containing biographical, archaeological, and critical essays ... London, Printed for the subscribers to the Britton testimonial, 1850.Vol. 2 has title: A descriptive account of the literary works of John Britton ... (from 1800 to 1849) ... by T. E. Jones. London, Printed for the subscribers to the testimonial, 1849."Royal octavo ... Five hundred copies of this size are printed."Mode of access: Internet.SML By6z B77 +849b: Includes "Notice" (1 l. following vol. 1, p. [xiv]), listing the editions in which the work was published, and "Subscribers to the Britton testimonial" ([4] p. following vol. 1, p. 396).SML By6z B77 +849b: "A chronological list of the literary works of John Britton": vol. 3, p. [169-176].SML By6z B77 +849b: "Essays on the merits and characteristics of William Shakspere ... (vol. 3, p. [1]-44) has special t.-p.SML By6z B77 +849b: "The quarto copies, which have been printed after the octavos, contain some literal corrections, and a few additional paragraphs."SML By6z B77 +849b: Title of vol. 2 and vol. 3 as in octavo edition.SML By6z B77 +849b: Added engraved t.-p. in vol. 1.SML By6z B77 +849b: "Demy quarto ... Only one hundred and twenty-five copies ... are printed of this size."SML By6z B77 +849b: Another edition. 3 v. in 2 : ill. ; 29 x 23 cm.SML By6z B77 849 Copy 2: "Preparing for publication. The auto-biography of John Britton ... London, Printed for the author, 1847": 7, [1] p. bound at end of vol. 1.SML By6z B77 849 Copy 2: "Notice," listing the editions in which the work was published, inserted in vol. 1, following p. xiv.SML By6z B77 849 Copy 1: "Subscribers to the Britton memorial" ([4] p.) inserted in vol. 1, following p. xiv
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