299 research outputs found

    Davis, Parley N.

    No full text
    Photograph from the C.R. Savage Portrait Studio. Name associated with the photograph: Parley N. Davi

    Mount Aire in Parley\u27s Canyon

    No full text
    PC010Smith Creek & Mount Aire Canyon Rd. Mount Aire Canyon on the south side of Parley\u27s Canyo n is a secondary drainage that flows into Parley\u27s Creek

    Dr. Terryl Givens – Faculty Author Interview

    No full text
    Dr. Terryl Givens, Bostwick Professor of Literature and Religion, discusses his new book, Parley P. Pratt: A Cultural and Intellectual Biography, published recently by Oxford University Press. Dr. Givens and his co-author, Matthew J. Grow, offer the first full-length scholarly treatment of one of the most important influences on the development of the Mormon Church

    D-0156: 465 West 100 South, Logan, Utah, John Thain Jr./Parley V. and Emma A. Dutson/William N. and De Rell Patten residence. Lot 3 Block 7 Plat A.

    No full text
    D-0156: 465 West 100 South, Logan, Utah, John Thain Jr./Parley V. and Emma A. Dutson/William N. and De Rell Patten residence. Lot 3 Block 7 Plat A

    Davis, Parley N.

    No full text
    Photograph from the C.R. Savage Portrait Studio. Name associated with the photograph: Parkley N. Davi

    Soren N. Nielson

    No full text
    Soren N. Nielson while he was constructing a mountain cabin in Big Pine Canyon, a tributary of Argyle Canyon, on his newly acquired homestead. Soren purchased three additional homesteads in Argyle Canyon. He died in Salt Lake City at the age 74 after having served twenty-four years as a Utah State Road Foreman in Parley\u27s Canyon

    Parley : / edited by Marc Johnson ; with contributions by Colin Browne [and 27 others].

    No full text
    "PARLEY" is the result of artist Marc Johnson’s immersive journey into cultural dialogue and discovery, initiated at the 2019 Vancouver Biennale International Residency program “re-IMAGE-n public space.” Conversations with esteemed local figures; including Dana Claxton, Karen Duffek, Sharon Fortney, Haa Huups, Peter Morin, Kamala Todd, Ian Wallace, Connie Watts, Laura Wee Lay Laq, Jordan Wilson, Tʼuyʼtʼtanat Cease Wyss, Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas and Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun amongst others; paved the way for a deeper communion with the city’s intellectual and artistic heartbeat. Johnson’s research took him behind the scenes of the Museum of Anthropology, the Museum of Vancouver, and the Vancouver Maritime Museum, sparking a profound curiosity about the narratives attached to stored and preserved artifacts. It was in the quiet reflection of these institutions’ collections that he found himself contemplating, “What is the archive hiding? I wonder if there is anything I would hide if I was the archivist.” This exploration into the intricacies of museum curation and the selective storytelling of exhibited pieces set Johnson on a path of inquiry and insight. In a dedicated effort to foster intercultural understanding, PARLEY weaves together the perspectives of 26 curators, artists, writers, and knowledge keepers, delving deep into issues of First Nation rights and cultural revitalization. Johnson’s dialogue with these experts, along with the exploration of archiving, collecting, and sharing First Nations languages and artifacts, formulates a narrative that challenges readers to consider the multifaceted aspects of history, representation, and the ongoing journey toward reconciliation. This book is not just a testament to Johnson’s residency experience; it’s an invitation to join an essential conversation on cultural heritage and the paths that lie ahead for collective understanding and healing.Ingår i SKH:s publikationsserie X Position nr 27,ISSN 2002-603X ; 27</p

    Parley : / edited by Marc Johnson ; with contributions by Colin Browne [and 27 others].

    No full text
    "PARLEY" is the result of artist Marc Johnson’s immersive journey into cultural dialogue and discovery, initiated at the 2019 Vancouver Biennale International Residency program “re-IMAGE-n public space.” Conversations with esteemed local figures; including Dana Claxton, Karen Duffek, Sharon Fortney, Haa Huups, Peter Morin, Kamala Todd, Ian Wallace, Connie Watts, Laura Wee Lay Laq, Jordan Wilson, Tʼuyʼtʼtanat Cease Wyss, Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas and Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun amongst others; paved the way for a deeper communion with the city’s intellectual and artistic heartbeat. Johnson’s research took him behind the scenes of the Museum of Anthropology, the Museum of Vancouver, and the Vancouver Maritime Museum, sparking a profound curiosity about the narratives attached to stored and preserved artifacts. It was in the quiet reflection of these institutions’ collections that he found himself contemplating, “What is the archive hiding? I wonder if there is anything I would hide if I was the archivist.” This exploration into the intricacies of museum curation and the selective storytelling of exhibited pieces set Johnson on a path of inquiry and insight. In a dedicated effort to foster intercultural understanding, PARLEY weaves together the perspectives of 26 curators, artists, writers, and knowledge keepers, delving deep into issues of First Nation rights and cultural revitalization. Johnson’s dialogue with these experts, along with the exploration of archiving, collecting, and sharing First Nations languages and artifacts, formulates a narrative that challenges readers to consider the multifaceted aspects of history, representation, and the ongoing journey toward reconciliation. This book is not just a testament to Johnson’s residency experience; it’s an invitation to join an essential conversation on cultural heritage and the paths that lie ahead for collective understanding and healing.Ingår i SKH:s publikationsserie X Position nr 27,ISSN 2002-603X ; 27</p

    QATAR-2 : a K dwarf orbited by a transiting hot Jupiter and a more massive companion in an outer orbit

    No full text
    We report the discovery and initial characterization of Qatar-2b, a hot Jupiter transiting a V = 13.3 mag K dwarf in a circular orbit with a short period, P b = 1.34 days. The mass and radius of Qatar-2b are M P = 2.49 M J and R P = 1.14 R J, respectively. Radial-velocity monitoring of Qatar-2 over a span of 153 days revealed the presence of a second companion in an outer orbit. The Systemic Console yielded plausible orbits for the outer companion, with periods on the order of a year and a companion mass of at least several M J. Thus, Qatar-2 joins the short but growing list of systems with a transiting hot Jupiter and an outer companion with a much longer period. This system architecture is in sharp contrast to that found by Kepler for multi-transiting systems, which are dominated by objects smaller than Neptune, usually with tightly spaced orbits that must be nearly coplanar

    Mails and files

    No full text
    Page 77 of "Out of the Desert" the Poston I High School Junior Red Cross Correspondence Album. The entire album can be seen at SFSU_SCRB_0001Marguerite Archer Collection of Historic Children's Materials contains approximately 3,500 historical children's books, textbooks, and periodicals, ephemera, and realia, including puzzles, toys and educational games. The collection, originally based upon the Peter Parley to Penrod Bibliography, is considered to be a major scholarly resource showing the progressive development and growth of American children's literature from the 1820s to the 1920s, and includes many original editions of literary classics, as well as early textbooks and related teaching aids
    corecore