5,571 research outputs found
Dr. Nathan Nobis, Morehouse College, August 2011
This video is a conversation with Dr. Nathan Nobis. Dr. Nobis talks about his paper, "The Harmful, Nontherapeutic use of Animals in Research is Morally Wrong." Brad Ost, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer
Mable MacMahon [music] : an Australian melody ... /
For voice and piano.; "No. 3".; "Respectfully inscribed to Roger Therry Esq., Attorney General".; T.p. carries complete words in English and Gaelic.; Lithography by T. Liley.; Date estimated from advertisement in Sydney Morning Herald, 27 August 1842, p. 1.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-vn2424397; MUS: N, JAF ; A, JAF.; A copy bound with 24 other Nathan compositions
Letter from Nathan Bankhead, Bankhead and Henderson, to Carl Hayden
Letter from Nathan Bankhead to Carl Hayden concerning his sheep and the accusations of Horace M. Albright
Nathan Newsom diary
Narrative account entitled "A Short summary of a journey, taken by volunteers from Gallia County; for the purpose of destroying Indians and the invasion of Canada," written by Nathan Newsom. Newsom was an orderly sergeant in Captain Calvin Shepard's company from Gallia County, Ohio, during the War of 1812. This volume conveys conditions experienced by soldiers during the war, including low pay, shortages of food and clothing, low morale, and severe weather conditions. Newsom also describes the cooperation of the army with friendly Indians and the disciplinary measures taken for desertion and other offenses
Star of the south [music] : an Australian national melody /
For chorus (SSTTBarB) and piano.; "No. 5".; "The music composed and, as a small token of grateful recollection of the hospitality experienced on his first landing in Australia Felix, respectfully inscribed to Mr Latrobe and the inhabitants of the district".; Date estimated from article in Sydney Morning Herald, 9 August 1842, p. 2.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-an6427323; MUS: N, JAF ; A, JAF.; A copy bound with 24 other Nathan items
Distance vision test – a play?
Dear World & Everyone In It is a ground-breaking new poetry anthology presenting the work of over 60 of the most talented and interesting young poets currently writing in the UK. Chosen by one of the country's leading young poetry editors, inspired by American precedents, and growing out of The Rialto's recent series of young poets features curated by Nathan Hamilton, it is the first British anthology to attempt to define a generation through a properly representative cross-section of work and a fully collaborative editorial process.
By drawing on the poets' own recommendations, this anthology represents more effectively and appropriately a new generational mood - hybrid, playful, collaborative, ambitious, inclusive, cooperative. Less top down, more bottom up, it speaks also of other movements in our world, and even ends up challenging parochial notions of Britishness by including overseas poets who live or work here and who have become engaged and influential in the scene.
Avoiding, or ironising, older, oppositional attitudes, Nathan Hamilton introduces his anthology with an essay describing 'this new generation's hybridisation of two aptly ironic and business-sounding "strains" in UK poetics - taxonomised as "product" and "process"'. His lively analysis juxtaposes modernist approaches with those exploring more traditional modes, hoping to bring some of the pleasures of the former to a wider audience.
Dear World & Everyone In It is an indispensable summary or starting map for anyone wanting to explore and enjoy more of the current UK poetry landscape or seeking to better understand what's going on out there.
The poets included are: Rachael Allen, Andrew Bailey, Emily Berry, Ben Borek, Siddhartha Bose, Elizabeth-Jane Burnett, James Byrne, Stuart Calton, Tom Chivers, Tim Cockburn, Becky Cremin, Emily Critchley, Joe Crot, Patrick Coyle, Amy De'Ath, Laura Elliott, Stephen Emmerson, Amy Evans, Ollie Evans, S.J. Fowler, Miriam Gamble, Jim Goar, Matthew Gregory, Elizabeth Guthrie, Emily Hasler, Oli Hazzard, Colin Herd, Holly Hopkins, Sarah Howe, Tom Ironmonger, Meiron Jordan, Katharine Kilalea, Sarah Kelly, Luke Kennard, Laura Kilbride, Michael Kindellan, Agnes Lehoczky, Frances Leviston, Eireann Lorsung, Chris McCabe, Michael McKimm, Fabian Macpherson, Toby Martinez de las Rivas, mendoza, James Midgley, Marianne Morris, Camilla Nelson, Kei Miller, Tamarin Norwood, Richard Parker, Sandeep Parmar, Holly Pester, Heather Phillipson, Kate Potts, Nat Raha, Sam Riviere, Sophie Robinson, Hannah Silva, Angus Sinclair, Marcus Slease, Andy Spragg, Ben Stainton, Keston Sutherland, Jonty Tiplady, Emily Toder, Simon Turner, Jack Underwood, Ahren Warner, Tom Warner, Rachel Warriner, James Wilkes and Steve Willey
Two University of Southern Maine researchers, archaeologist Nathan Hamilton and
Two University of Southern Maine researchers, archaeologist Nathan Hamilton and geographer Matthew Bampton, hope to use information gathered this summer at an archaeological excavation in Phippsburg to help them understand human use of the Maine environment all the way back to the last glaciation period. The dig, on the shores of a rich marine basin where the New Meadows River empties into the ocean, showed that prehistoric people ate an abundant amount of shellfish and were proficient at making stone tools
Two University of Southern Maine researchers, archaeologist Nathan Hamilton and
Two University of Southern Maine researchers, archaeologist Nathan Hamilton and geographer Matthew Bampton, hope to use information gathered this summer at an archaeological excavation in Phippsburg to help them understand human use of the Maine environment all the way back to the last glaciation period. The dig, on the shores of a rich marine basin where the New Meadows River empties into the ocean, showed that prehistoric people ate an abundant amount of shellfish and were proficient at making stone tools
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