18,582 research outputs found

    Katherine P. Lowe

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    Lowe, P W, 3793612

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/400159Surname: LOWE. Given Name(s) or Initials: P W. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 3793612. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: SEA-4154.218430 Item: [2016.0049.32452] "Lowe, P W, 3793612

    Old Friends

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    Contents: INTRODUCTION: How many Chinas are there? by Anna Chen p. 4; OLD FRIENDS by Hannah Lowe p. 8 ; IN CONVERSATION: with Hannah Lowe and Richard Scott p. 36; LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS p. 42. Available to purchase at: https://www.herculeseditions.com/product-page/old-friends-by-hannah-lowe .Old Friends is an exploration of the first Chinatown – at Limehouse in London – a place far larger in the public imagination than the few streets that once homed foreign seamen. The poems in this chapbook ask what can be found between census figures and sensationalist portrayals, between Brilliant Chang and Fu Manchu, and how do these flickers of the past speak to present perceptions of China, a place continually imagined and re-imagined in Britain’s public conscious.Supported using public funding by Arts Council England (Lottery funded)

    Richard Lowe

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    Marietta High School students, studio portrait. Richard Lowe (Orian, v. 16, 1934, p. 45)

    Marjorie Lowe

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    Marietta High School students; studio portrait. Marjorie Lowe (Orian, v. 20, 1938, p. 46)

    Guidebook for Pre-conference North Island Field Trip A1 ‘Ashes to Issues’, 28-30 November, 2008

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    Welcome to New Zealand or Aotearoa – „Land of the long lingering day [twilight]‟ – and to our three-day pre-conference North Island field trip „Ashes and Issues‟. We trust your stay in New Zealand is both informative and friendly and there is something for everyone on the trip. The itinerary in brief and a map of the North Island showing the main scientific stops are shown above. At the time of guidebook preparation, we have a group of 23, including four students, on the tour with participants from Japan, Taiwan, USA, UK, Australia and New Zealand. The tour leaders are Prof David Lowe (Univ. of Waikato, Hamilton) and Dr Haydon Jones (Scion Research, Rotorua). Assistant leader is Prof Paul McDaniel (Univ. of Idaho, Moscow), on leave at the Univ. of Waikato July-December, 2008. We offer a warm welcome to you all. Because we have considerable distances to travel (especially Day 3), as well as a range of stops planned, we will need to leave the hotel at 8.00 am each day

    Marriage record of Lowe, Frederick P. and Purnell, Florence Opal

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    Marriage license for Frederick P. Lowe and Florence Opal Purnell. James P. Hoyt was the officiant

    Marriage record of Underwood, Addington P. and Lowe, Alene

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    Marriage license for Addington P. Underwood and Alene Lowe. Charles Gray was the officiant

    EUROPEAN COMPETITION LAW ANNUAL 2010: MERGER CONTROL IN EUROPEAN AND GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE

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    The book contains 24 chapters covering a wide variety of merger control regimes. It provides critical perspectives on these regimes and explores their interaction

    Lifecourse social position and D-dimer; findings from the 1958 British birth cohort

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    The aim is to examine the association of lifecourse socioeconomic position (SEP) on circulating levels of D-dimer. Data from the 1958 British birth cohort were used, social class was determined at three stages of respondents' life: at birth, at 23 and at 42 years. A cumulative indicator score of SEP (CIS) was calculated ranging from 0 (always in the highest social class) to 9 (always in the lowest social class). In men and women, associations were observed between CIS and D-dimer (P<0.05). Thus, the respondents in more disadvantaged social classes had elevated levels of D-dimer compared to respondents in less disadvantaged social class. In multivariate analyses, the association of disadvantaged social position with D-dimer was largely explained by fibrinogen, C-reactive protein and von Willebrand Factor in women, and additionally by smoking, alcohol consumption and physical activity in men. Socioeconomic circumstances across the lifecourse at various stages also contribute independently to raised levels of D-dimer in middle age in women only. Risk exposure related to SEP accumulates across life and contributes to raised levels of D-dimer. The association of haemostatic markers and social differences in health may be mediated by inflammatory and other markers
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