3,821 research outputs found

    Nur-i-Afshan V.11 no.16 April 1907

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    Contents: Foreign telegrams [Letter] - Editorial notes - The seven sisters [Poetry] - Sermon [Article] by Whyte, Alexander - Teaching of peace - From foreign fields - Cazotte's second-sight This volume of Nur-i-Afshan published weekly on Fridays from Ludhiana

    Nur-i-Afshan V.10 no.20 May 1906

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    Contents: Foreign telegrams [Letter] - Editorial notes - Some of David's nets and some of ours [Article] by Whyte, Alexander - Three an unevangelised Himalayan native ruled state [Article] - The grave : the triumph [Poetry] This volume of Nur-i-Afshan published weekly on Fridays from Ludhiana

    Nur-i-Afshan V.11 no.18 May 1907

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    Contents: Foreign telegrams [Letter] - Editorial notes - Discourse on John Bunyan's grace a bounding to the chief of sinners [Article] by Whyte, Alexander - The christian communities in Japan by Walshe, W. Gilbert - The glories of the West Indies - Back to Palestine : gradual return of Jews to their land of old This volume of Nur-i-Afshan published weekly on Fridays from Ludhiana

    Nur-i-Afshan V.11 no.17 April 1907

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    Contents: Foreign telegrams [Letter] - Editorial notes - Sermon [Article] by Whyte, Alexander - Leland Stanford University - A missionary contribution to science - An olf fashioned girl by Foley, J. W. - Christ hath burst the tomb [Poetry] - The evening and the morning [Poetry] This volume of Nur-i-Afshan published weekly on Fridays from Ludhiana

    Whyte, I N, VX37683

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/425614Surname: WHYTE. Given Name(s) or Initials: I N. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: VX37683. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 4290.251735 Item: [2016.0049.57875] "Whyte, I N, VX37683

    Nur-i-Afshan V.10 no.21 May 1906

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    Contents: Foreign telegrams [Letter] - Editorial notes - My father's world [Poetry] by Babcock, Maltbie D. - Some of David's nets and some of ours [Article] by Whyte, Alexander - The revival in the Lushai Hills [Article] - The two men [Poetry] This volume of Nur-i-Afshan published weekly on Fridays from Ludhiana

    Nur-i-Afshan V.11 no.20 May 1907

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    Contents: Foreign telegrams [Letter] - My Shadow [Poetry] by Edwards, Louise Betts - Sermon [Article] by Whyte, Alexander - Prayer defined [Article] by Frost, W. H. - O love that wilt not let me go - Torrey-Alexander mission at Plymouth - Worship a privilege This volume of Nur-i-Afshan published weekly on Fridays from Ludhiana

    Whyte-Out: How the Creator of Groupthink Became Unseen by Management's History

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    Irving Janis’ (1971) concept of ‘groupthink’, the idea that the desire for consensus overrides the realistic appraisals of alternatives and leads to poor decision making, is a staple of management and organizational behavior textbooks. Despite gaining little support in empirical studies, Janis’ eight symptoms of groupthink remains a popular framework taught to budding managers. What has been forgotten, however, is that nearly 20 years before Janis’ supposed invention, groupthink was created by William H Whyte, author of one of the 1950s’ most influential and popular books on management. We investigate how Whyte’s link to groupthink became invisible to management’s history, why this matters, and how recovering Whyte’s ideas can provide fresh, critical insights into people dynamics in contemporary organizations.

    Edmund Burke, John Whyte and Themes in Canadian Constitutional Culture

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    John Whyte, the author observes, is committed to the idea that there are moral foundations to Canada\u27s constitutional order and that these foundations are derived from liberal principles. This paper compares Whyte\u27s liberal and organicist constitutionalism to that of the eighteenth century British political thinker, Edmund Burke. Three themes are predominant in Whyte\u27s work: those of liberty and security, unity and diversity, and constitutional change. Drawing out these themes in both Whyte\u27s and Burke\u27s constitutional thought, the author argues that Whyte has a sound historical basis for deriving Canadian constitutional practices from liberal principles ordinarily associated with Burke. The author concludes by asking this question: if Canadian constitutionalism can be reduced to liberalism, what distinguishes Canada from the United States, and more critically, what will prevent Canada from being absorbed into a larger North American political unit

    Maratus sagittus Schubert & Whyte 2019

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    <i>Maratus sagittus</i> Schubert & Whyte 2019 <p> <i>Maratus sagittus</i> Schubert & Whyte 2019</p> <p> Only a single male specimen of this species is known, from the Cape York Peninsula of northern Queensland. The species name, <i>sagittus</i>, refers to the arrow-shaped pattern on the dorsal opisthosoma. Dull-red scales (not shown) are present on the front of the eye region. Photo by Robert Whyte.</p>Published as part of <i>Otto, Jürgen C. & Hill, David E., 2019, Catalogue of the Australian peacock spiders (Araneae: Salticidae: Euophryini: Maratus, Saratus), version 3, pp. 1-28 in Peckhamia 148 (3)</i> on page 23, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/3732535">10.5281/zenodo.3732535</a&gt
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