104,024 research outputs found
Handley, Albert G. - An inaugural dissertation on the medical man
Handwritten inaugural dissertation on the medical man by Albert G. Handley, of Tennessee.Inaugural dissertation; no. 47
Ichthyomys pittieri Handley and Mondolfi 1963
Ichthyomys pittieri Handley and Mondolfi, 1963. Acta Biol. Venezuela, 3:417. TYPE LOCALITY: Venezuela, Aragua, Rancho Grande, near headwaters of Rio Limon. DISTRIBUTION: N Venezuela. COMMENTS: Known by four specimens from the Carribean Coastal Range of Venezuela. Taxonomy reviewed by Voss (1988).Published as part of Guy G. Musser & Michael D. Carleton, 1993, Order Rodentia - Family Muridae, pp. 501-755 in Mammal Species of the World (2 nd Edition), Washington and London :Smithsonian Institution Press on page 705, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.735309
Agnes G. Handley, former member of the Soroptimist Club of Seattle, approximately 1930s
Agnes G. Handley was born in Kansas. She was president and manager of Metropolitan Press Printing Company, which she ran along with her brother George Nagle Handley until his death in 1952. She was elected as Soroptimist Club president in November 1935; she also served as president of the Seattle University Guild. She lived at 1531 Olin Place East.
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Struggle for the City
The urban renewal policies stemming from the 1954 Housing Act and 1956 Highway Act destroyed the economic centers of many Black neighborhoods in the United States. Struggle for the City recovers the agency and solidarity of African American residents confronting this diagnosis of “blight” in northern cities in the 1950s and 1960s. Examining Black newspapers, archival documents from Black organizations, and oral histories of community advocates, Derek G. Handley shows how African American residents in three communities—the Hill district of Pittsburgh, the Bronzeville neighborhood of Milwaukee, and the Rondo district of St. Paul—enacted a new form of citizenship to fight for their neighborhoods. Dubbing this the “Black Rhetorical Citizenship,” a nod to the integral role of language and other symbolic means in the Black Freedom Movement, Handley situates citizenship as both a site of resistance and a mode of public engagement that cannot be divorced from race and the effects of racism. Through this framework, Struggle for the City demonstrates how local organizers, leaders, and residents used rhetorics of placemaking, community organizing, and critical memory to resist the bulldozing visions of urban renewal. By showing how African American residents built political community at the local level and by centering the residents in their own narratives of displacement, Handley recovers strategies of resistance that continue to influence the actions of the Black Freedom Movement, including Black Lives Matter
Hilbert and Hardy type inequalities
© 2005 Dr. G. D. HandleyI use novel splittings of conjugate exponents in Holder’s inequality and other techniques to obtain new inequalities of Hilbert, Hilbert-Pachpatte and Hardy type for series and integrals. The Thesis gives far reaching generalisations of the work of Dragomir-Kim (2003), Pachpatte (1987, 1990, 1992),Handley-Koliha-Pecaric (2000), Hwang-Yang (1990), Hwang(1996), Love-Pecaric (1995) and Mohapatra-Russell (1985) and inequalities for fractional derivatives of integrable functions. (For complete abstract open document
Struggle for the City
The urban renewal policies stemming from the 1954 Housing Act and 1956 Highway Act destroyed the economic centers of many Black neighborhoods in the United States. Struggle for the City recovers the agency and solidarity of African American residents confronting this diagnosis of “blight” in northern cities in the 1950s and 1960s. Examining Black newspapers, archival documents from Black organizations, and oral histories of community advocates, Derek G. Handley shows how African American residents in three communities—the Hill district of Pittsburgh, the Bronzeville neighborhood of Milwaukee, and the Rondo district of St. Paul—enacted a new form of citizenship to fight for their neighborhoods. Dubbing this the “Black Rhetorical Citizenship,” a nod to the integral role of language and other symbolic means in the Black Freedom Movement, Handley situates citizenship as both a site of resistance and a mode of public engagement that cannot be divorced from race and the effects of racism. Through this framework, Struggle for the City demonstrates how local organizers, leaders, and residents used rhetorics of placemaking, community organizing, and critical memory to resist the bulldozing visions of urban renewal. By showing how African American residents built political community at the local level and by centering the residents in their own narratives of displacement, Handley recovers strategies of resistance that continue to influence the actions of the Black Freedom Movement, including Black Lives Matter
Miss Stella Dollar to be wed in Handley Baptist Church
Miss Stella Dollar, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil G. Dollar, 3017 Malcolm, was married to Thomas Dale Bishop, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Bishop of Winters, Californiaat 8 p. m. Friday at Handley Baptist Church. Shown is a portrait of the bride in her wedding dress.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/20778/thumbnail.jp
Whitley and Handley papers, MSS.2286
Abstract: Photographs, correspondence, newspaper clippings, and church programsScope and Content Note: This collection contains photographs, correspondence, newspaper clippings, and church programs.Biographical/Historical Note: Myrtis Annie Parker, daughter of James E. and Eula Parker, was born in Meridian, Mississippi, on May 1, 1900. By the 1910 U. S. Census, the family lived in Thomaston, Alabama. She married Gabe Sherrod Handley on October 28, 1938, and taught in Lewisburg and Mt. Olive, Alabama, for many years. She died on September 6, 1981, in Thomaston
The colonial ascidian fauna of Fiordland, New Zealand, with a description of two new species
Figure 4. Botrylloides leachii (NIWA 4998): (A) Zooid; (B1, B2) parietal and mesial sides of the stomach; (C) ventral side of a zooid showing relative position of gonads. Scale bars: A, C 1 mm; B 0.5 mm.Published as part of Page, M.J., Willis, T.J. & Handley, S.J., 2014, The colonial ascidian fauna of Fiordland, New Zealand, with a description of two new species, pp. 1653-1688 in Journal of Natural History (J. Nat. Hist.) 48 (27-28) on page 1659, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2014.896487, http://zenodo.org/record/519387
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