1,201 research outputs found
Sellwood-Moreland
report to Sellwood-Moreland Improvement League (SMILE) ; by Gail E.H. Evans-Hatch, Ph.D. and D. Michael Evans-Hatch, J.D.Title from PDF title page (viewed on January 29, 2020).This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Burke, Lisa. Interview about the Fowler House in Brigus.
Megan Webb interviews Lisa Burke about her knowledge of the Fowler House in Brigus and how she came to be involved in the social media page of the current owners sharing updates on the heritage restoration project.0:00 Start of recording; 2:40 Beginning of interview; 3:10 Introduction; 3:55 What she knows about Fowler House; 4:40 Hatch with stairs indicates that the original 1st floor layout would be different; 6:10 Covered window/door on back of house on 2nd floor; 8:25 Mill marks in the wood; 9:10 Mill marks on ceiling of 3rd floor; 9:30 There would have been a mill in Brigus too?; 10:35 Created social media for Fowler House restoration project; 13:24 Will of William A. Green; 15:40 At one point it was a Mercantile; 16:28 Hat Shop Ghost Story; 16:35 The Drop was a bar in Brigus; 18:06 Tiny crack was in the glass until someone through a rock through the window; 20:07 Linen closet on second floor - indication of stairs? Slope up; 21:28 Floor hatch on second floor - stone stairs?; 23:49 Right above 1st-2nd floor steps ending at floor hatch is where the plywood covered opening on 2nd floor wall is; 29:45 Other poured concrete foundations up the hill (left of the deck); 33:47 Original stone stairs in the house built into the hill?; 35:10 Saw something strange in the linen closet on the 2nd floor; 35:30 Heavy feeling (presence?) on the third floor; 37:55 Weddings and funerals held at Fowler House; 43:00 Main bedroom connected to Twine Loft with boarded off door; 45:56 End of recording
Card from Collin Lee Hatch to Mitzi Masukawa, January 15, 1943
A thank-you card from Collin Lee Hatch for a gift of a plaque that Mitzi Masukawa Naohara sent her as a Christmas gift. Because the receiver's last name was wrongly spelled as "Matsukawa," it got lost at the Poston camp in Arizona and took six months to reach Mitzi at the Poston camp III. An item from: Mitzi Naohara scrapbook (csudh_nao_0400), page 31.The George and Mitzi Naohara Papers consists of photo albums and scrapbooks compiled by George and Mitzi Naohara, and other documents pertaining to the Naohara and Masukawa family. Contained are photographs, correspondence, documents, and memorabilia depicting their experiences during World War II. George Nobuo Naohara is a Kibei Nisei, and his experiences include his farm labor in Idaho and Utah, incarceration in the Manzanar, Jerome, and Tule Lake camps, and the U.S. Army language school training and Korean War. He also engaged in Buddhist activities for his whole life and there are moving images depicting Gardena Buddhist Church activities after the war. Mitzi Masukawa Naohara was a preschool teacher at the Poston camp, Arizona, and also a member of a young Nisei women's club, "Sigma Debs.” Her collected materials depict her life as a teacher and social events in the Poston camp during the war
Meltiar Hatch
Brief biographical sketch of Meltair Hatch, who was born in New York State in 1825 and lived in various places in Utah and Nevada, including Panguitch and Hatch. Author unknown, but written for the Daughters of Utah Pioneers at Panguitch, and copied by Don Orton in 194
Portrait of Senator Carl Atwood Hatch.
Handwritten inscription: \u27To my good friend Skeeter with regards and good wishes - Carl A. Hatch\u27https://egrove.olemiss.edu/fmjohnston/1246/thumbnail.jp
Buckfield: A Geographical History of Rural Development in Nineteenth-Century Oxford County
In this article author Nancy Hatch presents a geographical and historical account of the town of Buckfield, Oxford County; Maine, that elaborates a model of center-village development constructed by Joseph Wood in his The New England Village, and a model of connected farm buildings, as constructed by Thomas Hubka in his Big House, Little House, Back House, Barn. Hatch uses these models to explain how Buckfield responded to the growth of inter-regional agricultural markets in the mid-nineteenth century and to new architectural styles that appeared on the national scene in these decades. Ms. Hatch was a student at the University of Southern Maine at Lewiston-Auburn College when she wrote this paper under the direction of Professor Barry Rodrigue
Long-term survival of Gasterosteus aculeatus F1 offspring throughout the 2 year experiment (at 409, 611 and 717 days post-hatch) depending on parent and offspring heatwave treatment
Long-term survival of F1 offspring throughout the 2 year experiment (at 409, 611 and 717 days post-hatch) depending on parent and offspring heatwave treatmen
Senator Trent Lott\u27s visit to South America with Senator Bob Dole and Senator Orrin Hatch
Footage from Senator Trent Lott\u27s visit to South America with Senator Bob Dole and Senator Orrin Hatch. They visited several countries and met with various leaders. Topics discussed include: narcotics trafficking; economic progress; argiculture; and relations with the United States
Sharing a funder's perspective: using and supporting various approaches to communicate progress toward meeting ecological outcomes
Ken Fetcho, effectiveness monitoring coordinator & Audrey Hatch, conservation outcomes coordinatorTitle from PDF caption (viewed on December 27, 2022)This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposesMode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications CollectionText in Englis
The effects of hatch-order, gender and clutch sex ratios on the behaviour of Burrowing Owls (Athene cunicularia)
The Burrowing Owl (Athene cunicularia) builds its nests in burrows made by various types of mammals. These owls have an asynchronous hatch. Females typically lay one egg per day for 8-12 days, incubation of each egg beginning as soon as it is laid. As a result, earlier laid eggs hatch earlier than those laid later. This asynchronous hatch results in age and thus size differences between the first and last hatched chicks of a clutch. Due to the size advantage, the earlier hatched chicks within a clutch may not need to fight to get food. In contrast, later-hatched chicks may be more aggressive since they must compensate for their size disadvantage. Burrowing Owls mate monogamously, and the members of a pair have different roles. Males spend the majority of the time outside of the burrow, guarding, the nest and hunting for themselves and their mates. Females, on the other hand, spend more time inside the burrow, incubating and caring for the young. As a result of their different roles, males may be innately more dominant and aggressive (to protect their nest from intruders), compared to females. In this study, I examine the possible effects of both asynchronous hatch order and gender on behaviour of young Burrowing Owl
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