3,296 research outputs found
Data For: Heading Through A Crowd
Data and analysis scripts to accompany the article "Heading Through A Crowd" by Dr. Hugh Riddell and Prof. Dr. Markus Lappe. All analysis scripts are in SPSS format. Data has been provided in SPSS and .txt formats. Any correspondence should be addressed to Prof. Dr. Markus Lappe.</p
LappeFigureS1 – Supplemental material for Heading Through a Crowd
Supplemental material, LappeFigureS1 for Heading Through a Crowd by Hugh Riddell and Markus Lappe in Psychological Science</p
LappeOpenPracticesDisclosure – Supplemental material for Heading Through a Crowd
Supplemental material, LappeOpenPracticesDisclosure for Heading Through a Crowd by Hugh Riddell and Markus Lappe in Psychological Science</p
Kara Gust interviews prolific author and poet, retired Michigan State University Professor Hugh B. Fox
Prolific author and poet, retired Michigan State University Professor Hugh B. Fox talks about his early family life in Chicago and his writing career. Fox explains how he became acquainted with theater, music, and ballet at a young age and how he was forced into medical school, but later abandoned it to pursue the liberal arts and writing. Fox talks about his many interests including archeology, and his treatise on author and friend Charles Bukowski. Fox is interviewed by Kara Gust for the Michigan State University Libraries' Michigan Writers Series
Letter from Carl Hayden to Hugh E. Campbell
Letter from Carl Hayden to Hugh E. Campbell with an enclosed outline map of the proposed boundaries of Grand Canyon National Park
Hugh MacPherson Visits Bradenton
Scottish author, businessman, and politician, Hugh MacPherson, visits Bradenton. In this image, MacPherson and his wife meet with Bradenton Police Department Chief Harry Wilkison, Councilman Raymond Turner, and Mayor A. Sterling Hall
Hugh Gloster Visits Halle Selassie, circa 1972
Written on verso: After the Glee Club Concert in Addis Abba, Ethiopia, Dr. Hugh Gloster presents to Emperor Haile Selassie a scrapbook of the Emperor's visit to Morehouse College.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) in supporting the processing and digitization of a number of historic collections as part of the project: Our Story: Digitizing Publications and Photographs of the Historically Black Atlanta University Center Institutions.</em
The levellers: or, Satan's Privy-Council. A Pasquinade, in three cantos. The author, Hugh Hudibras, Esq.
[2],26p. ; 4⁰.Hugh Hudibras is a pseudonym.With a half-title.Reproduction of original from the British Library.English Short Title Catalog, ESTCT109049.Electronic data. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Thomson Gale, 2003. Page image (PNG). Digitized image of the microfilm version produced in Woodbridge, CT by Research Publications, 1982-2002 (later known as Primary Source Microfilm, an imprint of the Gale Group)
sj-docx-1-wso-10.1177_17474930231192214 – Supplemental material for Neuroimaging correlates of post-stroke fatigue: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-wso-10.1177_17474930231192214 for Neuroimaging correlates of post-stroke fatigue: A systematic review and meta-analysis by Amy A Jolly, Adriana Zainurin, Gillian Mead and Hugh S Markus in International Journal of Stroke</p
Hugh Huntington letter to Lucile Atcherson, October 23, 1914
On October 23, 1914, Hugh Huntington, the President of the Young Business Men's Club in Columbus, Ohio, wrote this letter to Lucile Atcherson, a suffrage leader with the Franklin County Woman Suffrage Association. In the letter, Huntington invited Atcherson and her suffragist allies to attend a debate on equal suffrage. Huntington also informed Atcherson that the Young Business Men's Club voted to bring their wives and girlfriends to the event. He also expressed the club's enthusiasm for having representatives from the Franklin County Woman Suffrage Association present at the debate.
The Franklin County Woman Suffrage Association was formed in 1912, after the Ohio Constitutional Convention elected to bring to a vote the question of removing the words "white male" from the state constitution with regard to voting rights. Headquartered in the Chamber of Commerce building in Columbus, Ohio, the organization put out regular publications, organized public speeches and meetings, distributed literature and held parades in support of the suffrage movement. Women's suffrage in Ohio was defeated in a special election in 1912 and again in 1914 and 1916 before a resolution narrowly passed in 1917 allowing municipal voting by women in Columbus. In 1920, the 19th Amendment passed, extending the vote to women and prohibiting state and federal government from denying suffrage on the basis of sex
- …
