43 research outputs found
Francesca da Rimini: cantata for soprano, bass, chorus and orchestra; text by Dante Alighieri. Full score
Prima edizione delle cantata di Ponchielli - First edition of Ponchielli's cantata. First edition by Henry Howey, Introduction by Licia Sirch, Revision by Marco Pace, Critical remarks by Pietro Zappala
Organisation
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/62282Henry Howey, born c.1805 in Northumberland, England, arrived in Sydney in 1826. On 1st December of that year he married Maria Matilda Minchin. He attended the first land sale of town blocks in Melbourne on 1 June 1837 and purchased the property in Swanston Street which bears his name. The estate consisted of properties fronting on to Collins, Swanston and Little Collins Street. On or about 21 June 1838, Henry, his wife and six children embarked on the schooner Sarah for an unknown destination. The schooner sailed into a hurricane and passengers and crew were lost. His executors sold his 3,800 sheep and 520 cattle on 16-18 July 1839 and both the proceeds of this sale and the land in Swanston Street passed to the Howey family in England, principally to John Werge Howey. On 17 April 1871 John Werge Howey died, leaving his property to his wife Elizabeth during her life, and after her death to his nephew John Edwards Werge Howey for his life, and then to J E W Howey s first and other sons and male heirs of each son, every older son and his male heirs to take before younger sons .
Letters of Administration were granted in turn to Joseph Richardson, Estate Agent of 100 Elizabeth Street, Melbourne (d1873) and to Samuel Alfred Richardson of the same business (d.1884) both of whom died before having fully administered the Estate. In May 1907 Letters of Administration were granted to Raynes W S Dickson, Solicitor, Melbourne. Elizabeth Howey, having died in 1878, and the oldest son of John Edwards Werge Howey in 1901, the properties in Melbourne then forming the Howey Estate passed to the second son, John Edwards Presgrave Howey, who attained his majority on 17 November 1907. Raynes W S Dickson continued to administer the Estate until his retirement, when his son, Raynes Waite Adrian Dickson took control under the company name of Raynes Dickson and Co. This company administered the Estate until it was wound up in the 1970s
Portrait of Henry William, Baron Forster of Lepe [picture] /
Title from inscription on photograph.; Condition: Good, but some silvering.; Inscriptions: "Forster" --Signed in ink lower right. "Spencer Shier, Howey House, 244 Collins Street, Melbourne" --Embossed lower right corner. "Henry William Baron Forster of Lepe, G.C.M.G." --In ink on reverse
Securities: An analysis of Howey test in the operational dynamics of virtual currency
The rise of the digital information age brought the term virtual currency. Virtual currency is a foreign concept. An online community of users create this digital money. To date, there are small and medium enterprises in the country which are using this kind of technology. As a consequence, their transactions became more efficient, and effective in delivering their goods and services to their consumers. The result of this virtual currency usage especially remittances among overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) gave rise to a regulation of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) through its issuance of Circular no. 944, Series of 2017. In the Philippine legal definition, virtual currency does not attain a precise meaning. However, resolutions from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) although they do not form part of the Philippine law classified virtual currencies as securities. In particular, SEC concluded that it passed the Howey Test.1 Thus, the author proposed that virtual currency is an investment contract. In this paper, the author sought to focus on the legal and operational dynamics of virtual currencies. The author asserts that virtual currency is a security classified as investment contracts passing the Howey Test2. The 1 In re: Black Cell Technology, Inc, et. al., SEC CDO Case No. 01-18-046 2 Howey Test is a United States Supreme Court decision from SEC v. W.J. Howey Co. within the meaning of the Securities Act of 1933. This is an important case in determining the general applicability of the federal securities law. The decision was adopted by the Philippine Supreme Court in -i- 4 - incorporation of decided cases and legal principles of the Philippine Supreme Court would give the legal meaning of virtual currency in the local context. Passing the Howey Test, virtual currencies are required to be registered pursuant to Section 8 of the Securities Regulation Code. Chapter One discussed the background of the study, thesis and problem statement, and objective. Chapter Two defined terminologies related to the study. Chapter Three discussed the related literature of virtual currencies as electronic in form, and as an investment contract. Chapter Three provided for the analysis. Chapter Four discussed the conclusion. Lastly, Chapter Five recommended that virtual currency is a security under the realm of the Philippine legal context
Climate Change, Sea-Level Rise, and the Vulnerable Cultural Heritage of Coastal New Hampshire
In this brief, author Meghan Howey examines the impact of climate change and sea-level rise on the vulnerable cultural heritage of coastal New Hampshire. Coastal New Hampshire has been identified by scientists and recognized by policy makers as an area experiencing many of the effects of climate change, including increasing temperatures and rising sea levels. The continued trajectory of such change places the seacoast region at a very high risk of coastal flooding today and of coastal land submersions within the next 50 to 100 years. Coastal New Hampshire stands to lose 14 percent of its known prehistoric and historic cultural heritage sites, including twelve sites on the National Register of Historic Places, to sea-level rise. These losses would negatively impact the region’s robust tourist economy. More than 80 known historic cemeteries are at risk of damage or complete destruction by sea-level rise. The potential damage to unknown, yet-to-be discovered burial grounds is also of concern. Communities across the region face difficult questions about what they are willing to lose and what efforts they are able and willing to make to protect vulnerable cultural heritage sites and graveyards from sea-level rise. Given the significance of these cultural heritage sites in coastal New Hampshire and the disproportionate contributions they make to the state’s revenue, these questions must addressed head-on, and continued analyses, discussions, and policy development will be important for addressing the vulnerability of the region’s cultural heritage
Olsen, Howey, and Owen 1 DEVELOPMENT OF A REGIONAL GIS PORTAL WITH TRANSIT DATA Corresponding Author
ABSTRACT The New River Valley (NRV) Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) recently launched a project creating a regional GIS portal in support of transit planning initiatives. The purpose of the project is to improve connections between transit providers and other modes of transportation, and to assist on-going and future transportation planning efforts at the local and regional scale. The project was conducted in two phases. Phase I included meetings with stakeholders to assess regional needs and to discuss transit-planning processes, GIS technologies, and existing data sources. Several stakeholder agencies collaborated to share transit-related data, which was cataloged and edited for public consumption. Phase II made transit data available to the public. The MPO partnered with the NRV Planning District Commission (PDC) to host the transit data on a FTP site. Using ArcGIS Online, an interactive web map was created featuring route and stop layers for the four fixed-route providers in the region. The project provided an outlet for important discussions between regional transit stakeholders and led to increased communication and collaboration between agencies. A regional transit GIS portal was created to share transit data featuring links to the FTP site, web map and additional resources regarding the MPO project
Social influences on primary health care Occupational Therapy
Social location refers to how individuals are situated within historical, structural and institutional processes and practices. It recognizes that race, culture, socioeconomic status, disability and other social factors grant and deny groups certain privileges and advantages, resulting in their unequalpositioning on the socio-economic hierarchy. Despite the fact that an awareness of social location better prepares occupational therapists for collaborating with those whose backgrounds differ from their own, the occupational therapy literature, to date, offers very little guidance for addressing social location. This paper reflects on a School of Occupational Therapy partnership with a primary health care community health centre to develop a business proposal in order to secure funding for an occupational therapist. School representatives engaged in self-reflexive practice and looked to the literature to make sense of their position as middle-class white women working with a low socio-economic status (SES) community that is comprised of more than half black, FirstNations and immigrant residents. Based on the experience of this partnership to date, the report offers some guidelines for integrating knowledge on social location into occupational therapy practice.Source type: Electronic(1
