3,247 research outputs found
[Oldbury Farm, Berrima, New South Wales, November 2000] [picture] /
Title devised by cataloguer based on information supplied by vendor.; Part of Historic Australian homesteads and gardens, 1994-2000 collection.; Condition: good. 'Oldbury Farm stands at the foot of Mount Ginnenbullen near Berrima and was built in 1828 for James Atkinson, author of the 1826 book Account of the State of Agriculture & Grazing in New South Wales. ... Photographed November 2000 [Berrima, N.S.W.]'--Trisha Dixon
Interview with Cynthia Dixon on the Women in Melville
Interview with Claudia A. Dixon, author of Bringing Her Home: The Woman in Herman Melville
Science in context: Pork tapeworm with Dr Matthew Dixon-Zegeye & Dr Nicholas Ngwili
In this episode of Science in context, Dr Sabine van Elsland speaks with Dr Matthew Dixon-Zegeye and Dr Nicholas Ngwili about pork tapeworm in Uganda
Author Thomas Dixon, Jr.
Author Thomas Dixon, Jr.To order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see:
http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/reproduction/reproduction
Please cite the Order NumberScanned at 600ppi with an Epson 20000 flatbed scanner. Image then rotated, cropped, level-adjusted, and sharpened using Photoshop CS3. Converted to a JPEG2000 image upon ingest into CONTENTdm
Replication Data for: Global Termination and Recurrence Macro Trends: A Follow-Up to Licklider and Dixon
Replication Data for Quinn and Hauenstein, "Global Termination and Recurrence Macro Trends: A Follow-Up to Licklider and Dixon
Zechariah and the Gospel off Matthew: the use of a biblical tradition
This thesis examines the use of Zechariah traditions in Matthew's Gospel. It analyzes and interprets the ways Matthew transmits, alters or adds Zechariah traditions to his sources. Instead of looking at portions of the Gospel in light of Zechariah 9-14 only, this study addresses the entire Gospel and all of Zechariah. In focusing on Zechariah tradition, the thesis has kept the following considerations in view. First, the content and function of Matthew's explicit uses of Zechariah are examined. Second, ways in which tradition derived from Zechariah may have exerted influence on portions of the gospel sub-structure are identified. Third, it explores the extent to which Matthew alludes to characteristic Zechariah themes. Together, these components illuminate how Matthew's Gospel incorporates its Zechariah material, whether alone or in combination with other prophetic traditions. Thus the methodological approach of the thesis is not only grounded in classical methods of biblical criticism but is also open to recent literary methods. In addition to explicit citations, numerous allusions and echoes of Zechariah tradition are present in Matthew. They appear in Matthean materials and in traditions Matthew has taken from Mark and Q. Because the focus of this thesis is open to both the Gospel and the Zechariah traditions in their entirety, two important observations have been made. First, traces of Zechariah material are found in the Infancy and Gaililean healing Narratives as well as in the Passion Narrative. Not only is the impact of Zechariah 9-14 observed, but important sections of Zechariah 1-8 are also discerned in Matthew's narrative structure. Moreover, Matthew's Son of David Christology is enriched and partially defined by Zechariah's prophet-shepherd imagery, as well as by the royal messianic motif
Paper : Kate Cotching, Annabel Dixon, Matthew Gardiner, Nicholas Jones, Tom Muller, Simon Pericich, Koji Ryui, Sandra Selig
Catalogue of an exhibition held at Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts, 6 July - 6 August 2006.Curated by Hannah Mathews. Essay by John Mateer.Artists: Kate Cotching, Annabel Dixon, Matthew Gardiner, Nicholas Jones, Tom Muller, Simon Pericich, Koji Ryui, Sandra Seli
Describing typeforms: a designer's response
The paper sets out an overview of a pragmatic research investigation initiated within a doctoral enquiry, and which continues to inform design practice and pedagogy. Located within the fields of typography and information design, and very much concerned with design history, enquiry emphasized exploration of alternative design research methodologies in the production of a design outcome loaded with pedagogical ambition.
The issue being addressed within the investigation was the limited scope of existing typeface classificatory systems to adequately describe the diversity of forms represented within current type design practice and thus, recent acquisitions to an established teaching collection in London.
Addressing this issue unexpectedly came to utilize the researcher’s own design practice as a methodology for managing emergent enquiry, and for organizing and generating new knowledge through the employment of visual information management methods.
A primary outcome of the enquiry was a new framework for the description of typeforms. This new framework will be described in terms of its operation, divergence from existing models and potential for application
2ndLTs Dixon, Reilly, and Banning are Recognized
Soon to be commissioned 2nd Lieutenants stand in front of Cherrydale Mansion as they are recognized during Military Appreciation Day. (From left to right: 2ndLTs Andy Reilly, Chris Dixon, Matthew Banning
Thirty years of New Zealand smoking advances a case for cultural epidemiology and cultural geography
This chapter builds upon a recent series of analyses using the New Zealand census on smoking, which indicates a slowing in the anticipated population-wide declines in smoking with entrenched and growing inequalities between socioeconomic, ethnic, and sex groups over 30 years. These two trends have been explained in part as the responses by marginalized groups to specific policy and commercial contexts. Using the same data, we provide a new life course analysis of successive cohorts since 1976, which indicates a hitherto unexplained sex, ethnic, and place variability in "smoking careers" as well as some common patterns. The range of behaviors supports a proposition that socioeconomic factors explain only part of smoking inequalities and indicate that groups interpret and respond to shared contexts in culturally specific ways. More sophisticated research designs are required to explain contextual influences over subpopulation behaviors, and recent insights into the contagious spread of behaviors and norms among group members over large distances highlight the relevance of the nascent fields of cultural epidemiology and cultural geography. Mixed method designs are required to augment multiple statistical level designs before we can know the intersecting set of determinants to health behaviors. © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.John D. Glover, Jane Dixon, Cathy Banwell, Sarah Tennant, and Matthew Freema
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