62,226 research outputs found
Clark, P J, 312589
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/377183Surname: CLARK
Given Name(s) or Initials: P J
Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 312589
Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: SEA-5259191003
Item: [2016.0049.09487] "Clark, P J, 312589
Clark, J R P, T15
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/377288Surname: CLARK
Given Name(s) or Initials: J R P
Military Service Number or Last Known Location: T15
Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 25741191106
Item: [2016.0049.09590] "Clark, J R P, T15
Sophie Freud
Sophie Freud (granddaughter of Sigmund and noted professor, psychiatric social worker, and author) in the audience (bottom left) at the symposium Global Freud . This event, which celebrated the centennial of Sigmund Freud\u27s visit to Clark University by discussing his reception around the world, took place on November 21, 2009 as part of the Henry J. Leir Chair Programming for the 2009-2010 season. Robert Tobin was the Henry J. Leir Chair from 2008 up until his passing in 2022.
These are Robert Tobin\u27s photos, originally hosted on his WordPress site provided by Clark University.https://commons.clarku.edu/tobinglobalphotos/1003/thumbnail.jp
A Reading and Discussion of God in Pink
Poster for a reading and discussion by author Hasan Namir on his book God In Pink . This event was held on Zoom November 12, 2021.
Some the artists who helped design these posters include Nina Borland, Jasper Boyd, Isabel Miranda, and Sampson Wilcox. This is the current extent of our knowledge regarding the Henry J. Leir poster designers.https://commons.clarku.edu/henryjleirposters/1031/thumbnail.jp
T&T Clark Companion to the Dead Sea Scrolls
This is an Accepted Manuscript of a book chapter published by Bloomsbury Academic in T&T Clark Companion to the Dead Sea Scrolls on 20th September 2018, available online: https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/tt-clark-companion-to-the-dead-sea-scrolls-9780567352057/For more than two-thirds of a century, the Dead Sea Scrolls have left a trail of intrigue and controversy in their wake. They have had an immeasurable impact, not only within the realms of academia and scholarship, but also upon the wider world, thanks to the widespread permeation of the scrolls into popular culture. On the one hand, they have provided scholars with a previously unimaginable wealth of textual material from the Second Temple period (shedding light, for instance, on the literature and social, political and religious world of the intertestamental era, as well as the transmission history of the scriptural texts), while on the other, the infamy resulting from years of restricted access and the consequent perceived secrecy surrounding their content has made them attractive to a fascinated public, for whom ‘the Dead Sea Scrolls’ constitutes ‘a cultural “buzz-phrase” signifying mystery, conspiracy, and ancient or hidden knowledge’ (Collins, 2011, p. 227). How have the Dead Sea Scrolls come to occupy this conceptual space in the public consciousness, and how might we begin to examine and explain the impact they continue to have upon both the academic and popular spheres
[Letter from Worth Clark to George & Leila - October 17, 1948]
Letter written to George & Leila from Worth Clark, Ft. Jackson, South Carolina dated October 17, 1948. Worth Clark advises that he will be discharged from the Army on January 21, 1949 and his divorce final on November 22. He updates with news that Mother [Eula Clark] is in Albuquerque, that he will go to the umpire school at Sanford or Orlando under the G. I. Bill and asks that they tell J. P., Genia and all the folks hello and to tell J. P. to find him a rich red head. The reverse side of the second page includes the address for Pvt. Worth Clark, Ft. Jackson SC
Margaret Breen giving a talk on Edward Irenaeus Prime-Stevenson
Photo of Margaret Breen (University of Connecticut) discussing author Edward Irenaeus Prime-Stevenson. Breen gave a talk titled “Queer Translations: Prime-Stevenson’s Imre (1906) and The Intersexes (1908) and the Emergence of Homosexual Identity”. This talk was from the event German Discovery of Sex: Medicine, Activism, Literature which took place on April 16, 2011 as part of the Henry J. Leir Chair Programming for the 2010-2011 season. Robert Tobin was the Henry J. Leir Chair from 2008 up until his passing in 2022.
These are Robert Tobin\u27s photos, originally hosted on his WordPress site provided by Clark University.https://commons.clarku.edu/tobindiscphotos/1009/thumbnail.jp
Polyrhachis barnardi Clark 1928
Polyrhachis (Myrmhopla) barnardi Clark. Journ. Roy. Soc. W. Aust., xv, p. 39, pl. i, figs. 37-38. 1923. Female.-Length, 14-5-15 mm. Not previously described. Resembles the worker, but is much larger and more robust. The colour, sculpture and pilosity are identical. The spines of the pronotum, epinotum and node are shorter and thicker. On the mesonotum there is a sharp longitudinal carina in the middle of the anterior half, effaced behind. A strong carina on each side takes the place of parapsidal furrows. The posterior border finely, but sharply, margined, with a sharp tooth-like corner at the junction with the lateral carina. Wings hyaline, with a smoky tinge. Habitat.-North Queensland: Cape York (W. B. Barnard). Since the worker was described I have received further.examples of this species from Mr. Barnard, including the female, also examples of P. clotho Forel. The latter is very distinct from P. barnardi having a differently shaped head and node. The formation of the thorax is somewhat similar. In P. clotho the head is almost as broad as long, and broadly rounded behind. The spines of the epinotum are more widely separated and raised at a very slight angle. The node is higher in front than behind, more like that of P. trapezoidea Mayr. The pilosity is similar to that of P. glabrinotum, described above.Published as part of Clark, J., 1930, New Formicidae, with notes on some little-known species., pp. 2-25 in Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 43 on pages 2-2
Communication de J. D. Clark. University of California archaeological expedition to the Southern Afar Rift, Ethiopia, January to mid- April, 1974
Clark J. Desmond. Communication de J. D. Clark. University of California archaeological expedition to the Southern Afar Rift, Ethiopia, January to mid- April, 1974. In: Annales d'Ethiopie. Volume 10, année 1976. p. 324
Communication de J. D. Clark. University of California archaeological expedition to the Southern Afar Rift, Ethiopia, January to mid- April, 1974
Clark J. Desmond. Communication de J. D. Clark. University of California archaeological expedition to the Southern Afar Rift, Ethiopia, January to mid- April, 1974. In: Annales d'Ethiopie. Volume 10, année 1976. p. 324
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