29,456 research outputs found
STEFAN NAGLIS, PATRICK GROOTAERT& SCOTT E. BROOKS (2013) Phoomyia, a new genus of Dolichopodinae from the Oriental Region (Diptera: Dolichopodidae). Zootaxa,
Naglis, Stefan, Grootaert, Patrick, Brooks, Scott E. (2013): STEFAN NAGLIS, PATRICK GROOTAERT& SCOTT E. BROOKS (2013) Phoomyia, a new genus of Dolichopodinae from the Oriental Region (Diptera: Dolichopodidae). Zootaxa,. Zootaxa 3691 (1): 200-200, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3691.1.1
OP72 - Jarrette, Murchison; Scott, John
2 audio cassettesThis resource is available for research. It is the property of the West Indiana and Special Collections Division, The Alma Jordan Library, The University of the West Indies, St. Augustine Campus. Copyright: The University of the West Indies.Murchison Jarrette and John Scott are long-standing members of La Petite Musicale. At the time of the interview, Jarrette was Secretary of the group and Scott was an Executive Member. Hazel Elcock and Patrick Rouse, who sewed as interviewers, are also members who joined the group in more recent times
A Rural Resort: Farming and Recreation in Scott County, Kansas at Beaver Beach, 1886-1933
Patrick Kirk, “A Rural Resort: Farming and Recreation in Scott County, Kansas at Beaver Beach, 1886-1933,” Chapman Center Research Collections, accessed October 7, 2020, https://ccrsresearchcollections.omeka.net/items/show/221.The author uses historic accounts to recreate the details of Beaver Beach Amusement Park, which was a source of recreation for rural Scott County residents
An interview with Scott Pomeroy M.D.
This oral history may be streamed from the Winkler Center websiteAn interview with Scott Pomeroy M.D./Ph.D. interviewed by Michael Behbchani Ph.D. and Patrick Tso Ph.D. May 14, 2010. This video was a part of the Henry R. Winkler Center Oral History series
Original composition on 5- string banjo
banjosCollected by Patrick A. Todd Played by Earnest Scott
Goshen, Arkansas Jan 1960 Reel 330, Item 6
Original composition on 5-string banjo (Mr. Scott has no name for this.)Funding for digitization provided by the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Happy Hollow Foundation
The Ghost of Patrick Geddes: Civics As Applied Sociology
In 1904 and 1905 Patrick Geddes (1905, 1906) read his famed, but today little-read, two-part paper, \'Civics: as Applied Sociology\', to the first meetings of the British Sociological Society. Geddes is often thought of as a \'pioneer of sociology\' (Mairet, 1957; Meller, 1990) and for some (eg Devine, 1999: 296) as \'a seminal influence on sociology\'. However, little of substance has been written to critically assess Geddes\'s intellectual legacy as a sociologist. His work is largely forgotten by sociologists in Britain (Abrams, 1968; Halliday, 1968; Evans, 1986). Few have been prepared to follow Geddes\'s ambition to bridge the chasm between nature and culture, environment and society, geography, biology and sociology. His conception of \'sociology\', oriented towards social action from a standpoint explicitly informed by evolutionary theory. A re-appraisal of the contemporary relevance of Geddes\'s thinking on civics as applied sociology has to venture into the knotted problem of evolutionary sociology. It also requires giving some cogency to Geddes\'s often fragmentary and inconsistent mode of address. Although part of a post-positivist, \'larger modernism\' Geddes remained mired in nineteenth century evolutionary thought and fought shy of dealing with larger issues of social class or the breakthrough work of early twentieth century sociology of Simmel, Weber and Durkheim. His apolitical notion of \'civics\' limits its relevance to academic sociology today.History of Sociology, Civics, Patrick Geddes, Scottish Generalism, Urban Sociology
Email from Patrick Parkinson to Don Kohn, Scott Alvarez , and Brian Madigan Re: The Federal Reserve\u27s Liquidation Consortium Gameplan
Federal Reserve Bank Email from Patrick M Parkinson to Don Kohn Scott Alvarez and Brian Madigan Re revised Liquidation Consortium gameplan questioins
Troxler, Gale Scott. Fijian masi. A traditional art form
O'Reilly Patrick. Troxler, Gale Scott. Fijian masi. A traditional art form. In: Journal de la Société des océanistes, n°40, tome 29, 1973. p. 330
Irish washerwoman
banjosCollected by Patrick A. Todd Played by Earnest Scott
Goshen, Arkansas
Jan 1960 Reel 330, Item 12
"IRISH WASHER WOMAN" (5-string banjo solo)Funding for digitization provided by the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Happy Hollow Foundation
Letter From William Bell Scott to Mr Chambers
abstract: Concerning Scott's thanks, his writings about his own works, and a manuscript of "The Nightingale Unheard."Seller's Description: Reads "A.L.S. from Author to Mr. Chambers explaining how busy he is... The sonnet is printed in the book. Fredeman: 56.7 £87.50"Handwritten Note: Unknown handwriting at top right reads "June 1st 1877."Publication Details: "The Nightingale Unheard" published in "Poems" by William Bell Scott.Creation Date Details: Undated range is the author's lifespan.Provenance: Removed from:
Poems / by William Bell Scott. Ballads, studies from nature, sonnets, etc. / illustrated by seventeen etchings by the author and L. Alma Tadema. Publisher London : Longmans, Green, 1875. CALL #
HAYDEN SPECIAL COLL SPEC PRB-13
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