2,204 research outputs found

    No.272, Peter Loewenberg, interview by Newell Bringhurst

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    Transcript (28 pages) of interview by Newell G. Bringhurst with Peter Loewenberg, as associate of Fawn Brodie, on December 12, 1988. This interview is no. 272 in the Everett L. Cooley Oral History Project, and tape no. U-941. Accompanied by Loewenberg\u27s curriculum vitaeLoewenberg (b. 1933) recalls his association with Fawn McKay Brodie and her husband Bernard, through the Department of History at UCLA and in group discussions about psychoanalytical biography as a genre. Interviewer: Newell Bringhurs

    St. Peter\u27s Episcopal Chapel, 657 North 200 West.

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    Photo of St. Peter\u27s Episcopal Chapel, 657 North 200 West, Salt Lake City, Utah

    Peter Newell interviewed by Angela Reilly, 27 Jun 1998

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    Angela Reilly conducted a series of interviews with Campbell Scott over a period of four months while researching her Bachelor of Architecture thesis, 'Houses by Hayes and Scott: 1946-1962'. Angela Reilly studied architecture at the University of Queensland and worked as assistant to Queensland architect and historian Alice L. T. Hampson

    Letter announcing arrival of Dr. Karpovich in America, Feb. 27, 1925

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    This is a copy of a letter announcing Dr. Peter V. Karpovich's arrival in New York City from Riga Latvia. The letter is written by Arthur F. Newell and sent to Robert E. Lewis of the Cleveland YMCA. It is dated February 27, 1925. The letter describes how he has subsequently left for Springfield College to matriculate. He will then go on to Cleveland as part of his study for his degree as well as earn funds to pay for his stay.For more information on Peter V. Karpovich, see: https://springfield.as.atlas-sys.com/agents/people/57

    Book review: Power shift: the global political economy of energy transitions by Peter Newell

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    In Power Shift: The Global Political Economy of Energy Transitions, Peter Newell examines energy transitions at all levels of governance, drawing out the lessons learned from prior energy transitions to unlock an actionable understanding of today’s struggle to decarbonise the global economy. While the book stops short of presenting a detailed comparative analytical framework, researchers can learn a great deal from Newell’s activism, insights and his extensive survey of the existing literature, writes Mark S. Langevin

    Review of the Indian Ocean spikefish genus Mephisto (Tetraodontiformes Triacanthodidae)

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    Bemis, Katherine E., Tyler, James C., Psomadakis, Peter N., Ferris, Lauren Newell, Kumar, Appukuttannair Biju (2020): Review of the Indian Ocean spikefish genus Mephisto (Tetraodontiformes Triacanthodidae). Zootaxa 4802 (1): 82-98, DOI: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4802.1.

    Bernice E. Newell, Tacoma, Washington, approximately 1899

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    Caption on mount: A. L. Jackson. 919 C. Street. Tacoma, Wash. Paris Panel. Handwritten on mount: Bernice E. Newell. Journalist. Author of "The Mountain." Handwritten on verso: Wife Bernice Newell PH Coll 334 AL Jackson. 1Albert L. Jackson was active in Eugene and Portland, Oregon from 1878 to 1887. He then moved to Tacoma, Washington where he worked from 1891 until 1917.To order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see: http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/reproduction/reproduction Please cite the Order Numbe

    HIV status, breastfeeding modality at 5 months and postpartum maternal weight changes over 24 months in rural South Africa

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    Objective: To determine the effect of infant feeding practices on postpartum weight change among HIV-infected and -uninfected women in South Africa.<p></p> Methods: In a non-randomised intervention cohort study of antiretroviral therapy-naïve women in South Africa, infants were classified as exclusive (EBF), mixed (MF) or non-breastfed (NBF) at each visit. We analysed infant feeding cumulatively from birth to 5 months using 24-hour feeding history (collected weekly for each of the preceding 7 days). Using generalised estimating equation mixed models, allowing for repeated measures, we compared postpartum weight change (kg) from the first maternal postpartum weight within the first 6 weeks (baseline weight) to each subsequent visit through 24 months among 2340 HIV-infected and -uninfected women with live births and at least two postpartum weight measurements.<p></p> Results: HIV-infected (−0.2 kg CI: −1.7 to 1.3 kg; P = 0.81) and -uninfected women (−0.5 kg; 95% CI: −2.1 to 1.2 kg; P = 0.58) had marginal non-significant weight loss from baseline to 24 months postpartum. Adjusting for HIV status, socio-demographic, pregnancy-related and infant factors, 5-month feeding modality was not significantly associated with postpartum weight change: weight change by 24 months postpartum, compared to the change in the reference EBF group, was 0.03 kg in NBF (95% CI: −2.5 to +2.5 kg; P = 0.90) and 0.1 kg in MF (95% CI: −3.0 to +3.2 kg; P = 0.78).<p></p> Conclusion: HIV-infected and -uninfected women experienced similar weight loss over 24 months. Weight change postpartum was not associated with 5-month breastfeeding modality among HIV-infected and -uninfected women
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