2,171,254 research outputs found

    Derek Denton Lecture Series 2012 Professor Erling Norby

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/435961Correspondence, notes, DVD of lecture held on 17 May 2012257930 Item: [2017.0015.00248] "Derek Denton Lecture Series 2012 Professor Erling Norby

    derek-corcoran-barrios/NetworkExtinction: v1.0.3

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    latest version released in CRAN @derek-corcoran-barrios @ErikKusch NetworkExtinction-master.zi

    Gus Nelson on right. In France.

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    Black-and-white photographic portrait of Gus Nelson (on right), from his service with the 102nd Machine Gun Battalion, 26th U.S. Infantry Division during World War I, photographed approximately 1917-1919.Gustaf "Gus" Nelson entered Norwich University as a member of the Class of 1919; he left school to serve in World War I and served with the 102nd Machine Gun Battalion of the Yankee Division. After the war, he returned to Norwich University and graduated in 1924

    Miss Nelson '67

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    Miss Nelson displays her ability on the drums at a music event, fall 1967

    Nelson Police bike

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    Nelson police officer stands smiling with his new Kawasaki 1000 police motorcycle

    Sledding on Nelson Streets

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    Mother Kendra Jupp and daughter Lesley of 411 Innes Street, Nelson, enjoy the wintery conditions, January 1975

    Spaces of the Past, Histories of the Present: An Interview with Stuart Elden and Derek Gregory

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    The ontologies of space and territory, our experience of them and the techniques we use to govern them, the very conception of the socio-spatial formations that we inhabit, are all historically specific: they depend on a genealogy of practices, knowledges, discourses, regulations, performances and representations articulated in a way that is extremely complex yet nevertheless legible over time. In this interview we look at the logic and the patterns that intertwine space and time — both as objects and tools of inquiry — though a cross-disciplinary dialogue. The discussion with Stuart Elden and Derek Gregory covers the place of history in socio-spatial theory and in their own work, old and new ways of thinking about the intersection between history and territory, space and time, the implications of geography and history for thinking about contemporary politics, and the challenges now faced by critical thought and academic work in the current neo-liberal attack on public universities and the welfare stat

    Aerial view of Nelson

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    Aerial view of Nelson showing many of the landmarks of the time, including the civic grounds, airstrip, gyro park and rail town, May 27, 1971

    Gus Nelson, the day the armistice was signed.

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    Black-and-white photographic portrait of Gus Nelson during his service with the 102nd Machine Gun Battalion, 26th U.S. Infantry Division during World War I, photographed the day the armistice was signed.Gustaf "Gus" Nelson entered Norwich University as a member of the Class of 1919; he left school to serve in World War I and served with the 102nd Machine Gun Battalion of the Yankee Division. After the war, he returned to Norwich University and graduated in 1924

    Lt. Nelson on the long hike south after the armistice, November 1918

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    Photograph from Gus Nelson's service with the 102nd Machine Gun Battalion, 26th U.S. Infantry Division; complete caption by Nelson reads: "Lt. Nelson on the long hike south after the armistice. We pulled out of the line for the last time at noon Nov 12 & arrived in Poulangy Nov 23."Title from a caption by Gus Nelson. Gustaf "Gus" Nelson entered Norwich University as a member of the Class of 1919; he left school to serve in World War I and served with the 102nd Machine Gun Battalion of the Yankee Division. After the war, he returned to Norwich University and graduated in 1924
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