2,953 research outputs found

    Phoebus 10: A Journal of Art History

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    tableOfContents: Homage to the Past: The Art of Yin Xiaofeng by Ralph Gabbard and Liu Liu.. pages 5-1

    Letter from Ralph H. Cameron to Carl Hayden

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    Letter from Ralph H. Cameron asking to speak to Carl Hayden concerning a matter relevant to the bill granting National Park status to the Grand Canyon

    January 22, 1985 letter from Ralph A. Patterson, Jr., Diamond Shamrock Thermal Power Company, to Takeshi Yoshihara, DPED, Energy Division

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    The author of the letter is named as Ralph A. Patterson Jr., but "crn" actually wrote the letter (per "RAP/crn"). The original letter included attachments (not included in the digital file)

    Letter from Carl Hayden to Ralph H. Cameron

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    Letter from Carl Hayden to Ralph H. Cameron responding favorably to a request to meet in regards to the bill granting National Park status to the Grand Canyon

    Letter from Ralph H. Cameron to Carl Hayden

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    Letter from Ralph H. Cameron to Carl Hayden requesting a delay on the introduction of the Grand Canyon bill until he can meet with himself and Senator Ashurst in Washington

    Ralph E. Twitchell

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    Ralph Emerson Twitchell was a historian of New Mexico history, an author, and lawyer. He served as president of the New Mexico Bar Association, Historical Society of New Mexico, and the Santa Fe Chamber of Commerc

    William E. Hoy, letter to Mr. Ralph Elliot Lin Weber, July 8, 1943, with envelope and newspaper articles

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    This letter was sent from William E. Hoy to Mr. Ralph Elliot Lin Weber and is dated July 8, 1943. The letter recounts information about the only baseball game where Hoy, a deaf athlete, was at-bat against Taylor, also a deaf athlete. Mentioned in the letter is a typewritten play by play of the same game, copied from the Enquirer of May 17, 1902. Also included is an envelope and newspaper articles. The envelope, from International League Information, is addressed to Ralph E Lin Weber and has handwritten lists of players of N.Y. and Cincinnati. The newspaper articles are from the Dayton Daily News and the Cincinnati Enquirer and feature pictures of William E. Hoy, the author of the letter

    A slave for two masters: countertransference of a wounded healer in the treatment of a "difficult to treat" adolescent

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    The aim of this case study is to analyze intense countertransference experienced by a therapist while treating a “difficult to treat” adolescent patient. During treatment, the therapist struggled to recognize much of his subjective countertransference and its impact on the treatment. This paper will discuss the reasons for this and the manner in which both subjective and objective countertransference played a role. In doing so, the therapist discusses how his childhood experiences and the subsequent assumption of Carl Jung’s wounded healer archetype fueled the countertransference in ways that were concurrently beneficial and detrimental to the treatment. The patient’s symptoms, behavior, and family system are also examined to illustrate how they uniquely contributed to the intense feelings evoked in the therapist. Topics of abandonment, omnipotence, curative fantasies, Borderline Personality Disorder, biblical myth, and childhood trauma are explored throughout this paper, as they uniquely intersected to create a complex web of psychodynamics between therapist and patient. This is demonstrated primary through an interpretation of the patient’s final session and the therapist’s dream following treatment. Finally, implications for wounded healers’ self-disclosure are examined, reflections of the treatment are offered, and suggestions made for the recognition and management of countertransference wounded healers are prone to feel while working with ‘difficult to treat’ patients.DSWIncludes bibliographical referencesby Ralph Cusegli

    The topology of partial metric spaces

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    The T0 world of Scott's topological models used in the denotational semantics of programming languages may at first sight appear to have nothing whatever in common with the Hausdorff world of metric space theory. Can this be true though when the notion of "distance" is so important in the application of inductive proof theory to recursive definitions? This paper shows that existing work on the application of quasi metrics to denotational semantics can be taken much further than just describing Scott topologies. Using our "partial metric" we introduce a new approach by constructing each semantic domain as an Alexandrov topology "sandwiched" between two metric topologies. To be presented at the Eighth Summer Conference on General Topology and Applications, June 18-20 1992, Queens College, New York City
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