8,936 research outputs found
ROSENTHAL, Eric Inventory of documents
COVERAGE 1904; 1 File; 011 metre.Private papers of Eric Rosenthal, author, journalist and broadcaster
tritrophic-dispersal-model: Code used for creating figures for "Non-hierarchical dispersal promotes stability and resilience in a tri-trophic metacommunity"
<p>This is the commented code used for creating figures for the paper. Any questions regarding the code should be directed to the corresponding author and repository owner (Eric Pedersen). </p>
Eric Velazquez Spanish Language Picture Book Award 2022 Acceptance Speech
Author Eric Velazquez gives his Silver Medal acceptance speech for Pulpo Guisado (Holiday House)https://educate.bankstreet.edu/spanishlanguageaward/1001/thumbnail.jp
Eric C. Lincoln, Professor of Sociology and Religion, 1971
This is an interview with Eric C. Lincoln. Eric was a Professor of Sociology and religion, Union Theological Seminary and author of many books and articles on Negro history. In this recording the contributors discuss local memphis politics, sociology, and race relations compared to that of other cities in the South and the rest of the country
Interview with Eric Bentley, author, drama critic, and playwright
Distinguished drama critic and Bertolt Brecht scholar, Eric Bentley is interviewed by WTMJ-TV host Jim Peck and John B. Fuegi, associate professor of Comparative Literature. Bentley recalls his association with Brecht, the critical and creative aspects of literature, and his interest in writing plays for the theater.GrayscaleSoun
Reduvius (Eumerus) fenestratus Klug 1830
<i>Reduvius</i> (<i>Eumerus</i>) <i>fenestratus</i> Klug, 1830 <p> <b>Original data:</b> “Patria: Ambukohl Dongalae; mense Augusto” (Klug 1830, unpagined).</p> <p> <b>Non-type:</b> 1 ♀: “ TYPE ” // “4180 34” disc // “MECHRANIUS Amyot -bimaculatus Serv. - Am. Serv. 324. -fenestratus Burm. 239 -AFRICA.”</p> <p> <b>Type locality:</b> Ambukohl [now Ambikal], Dongalae [Dongola] [North Sudan].</p> <p> <b>Current status:</b> <i>Ectomocoris fenestratus</i> (Klug, 1830) (combination proposed by Stål 1866: 257).</p> <p> <b>Remarks:</b> The species described by Klug (1830) from Ambukohl and Dongalae (North Sudan) was collected during the expedition to Egypt and Asia Minor of W. Hemprich and Ch. Ehrenberg in 1820–1825. According to Bradley (1968), the expedition brought an enormous amount of material for the Berlin Museum and Dr. Jürgen Deckert kindly confirmed the presence of three syntypes of <i>Reduvius</i> (<i>Eumerus</i>) <i>fenestratus</i> in MFN.</p> <p> The female labelled “type” found in MNHN cannot be an additional syntype. It was placed—certainly by Villiers— among other non-type specimens of this species; however, the specimen in concern did not bear an identification label from Villiers’ hand, which is unusual for a type specimen. The round label bearing two numbers (“4180” and “34”) indicates that this female is not a type specimen. In the laboratory register dated 1834, number 4180 indicates: “Achat à Mr Botta d’Insectes recueillis par lui en Nubie. Tous portent ce numéro” (Purchase from Mr. Botta of insects collected by him in Nubia. All bear this number). Nubia is the region (North Sudan) of the type locality of <i>R. fenestratus</i>; the label “Type” could possibly mean “Topotype”, a term not regulated by the Code, defined as a specimen collected at the same location as the type specimen(s) regardless whether it is part of the type series or not.</p> <p> The large rectangular label lined with black is characteristic of the labels made in MNHN during the second half of 19th century for specimens of the general collection of Heteroptera. At that time, the general collection was arranged according to the classification of Amyot & Serville (1843), and very often, C.J.B. Amyot worked at MNHN. “ <i>Mechranius</i> Amyot” appearing on one of the labels of the specimen is probably an unpublished generic name given by Amyot in accordance with his “Méthode mononymique” (Amyot 1848).</p>Published as part of <i>Liu, Yingqi, Pluot-Sigwalt, Dominique, Guilbert, Eric & Cai, Wanzhi, 2022, Catalogue of type specimens of Peiratinae (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Reduviidae) preserved in the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, pp. 1-85 in Zootaxa 5110 (1)</i> on page 82, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5110.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/6340419">http://zenodo.org/record/6340419</a>
Dr. Eric Yellin – Faculty Author Interview
Dr. Eric Yellin, Associate Professor of History and American Studies discusses his new book, Racism in the Nation’s Service: Government Workers and the Color Line in Woodrow Wilson’s America, published recently by the University of North Carolina Press. In this book, Dr. Yellin argues that President Wilson’s administration successfully segregated the federal government in the age of progressive politics. He investigates how the enactment of the segregation policy imposed a color line on American opportunity and implicated Washington in the economic limitation of African Americans for decades to com
Essentials of Dental Radiography and Radiology / Eric Whaites and Nicholas Drage.
Previous edition: Essentials of dental radiography and radiology / Eric Whaites. Fourth edition. Edinburgh ; New York : Churchill Livingstone, 2007.Includes bibliographical references (pages 461-464) and index.x, 478, [2] pages
10th C. Eric Lincoln Lecture Series, 1992
Part of the 10th anniversary of the C. Eric Lincoln lecture series Dr. Love Henry Whelchel moderates a panel of scholars. The panel includes Dr. C. Eric Lincoln, Dr. Jacquelyn Grant, and Dr. John Hope Franklin. The panel discusses the life of George Washington Williams (author of History of the Negro Race in America). The discussion includes issues related to Womanist theology, Islamic religion, sociology, religion and history.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the National Endowment for Humanities - Humanities Collections and Reference Resources Implementation Project Grant in supporting the processing and digitization of a number of its major archival collections as part of the project: Spreading the Word: Expanding Access to African American Religious Archival Collections at the Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library
Q & A - Eric Davidson
Eric Davidson graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1954 and received his PhD from Rockefeller University in 1963. He remained at Rockefeller until 1971 when he moved to Caltech in Pasadena, California. He was elected to the U.S. National Academy of Sciences in 1985, and is at present Norman Chandler Professor of Cell Biology in the Division of Biology, Caltech. He is the author of 5 books and over 400 papers on developmental gene regulation and evolution of genomic programs for development. For the last decade his work has focused on theory and operation of developmental gene regulatory networks
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