3,544 research outputs found

    Richard Fuchs Collection 1920s-1938

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    This collection contains music by composer Richard Fuchs, particularly a full score and individual chorus parts for his four-song cycle "Vom jüdischen Schicksal," composed in 1933, and based on poems by Karl Wolfskehl and Süsskind von Trimberg. Also included are clippings and other music.The Richard Fuchs Archive in New Zealand holds materials about Fuchs and actively promotes his work.Richard Fuchs (1887, Karlsruhe, Germany – 1947, Wellington, New Zealand) was a composer and architect. After a stint in the Dachau concentration camp in 1938, Fuchs was able to emigrate to New Zealand in 1939.This collection has been part of the Walther Hirschberg collection, AR 3840.Processeddigitize

    Commentaire par Richard Fuchs : dans une société sans livres, pourquoi commencer par les livres?

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    Version anglaise disponible dans la Bibliothèque numérique du CRDI: Commentary by Richard Fuchs : in a bookless society, why start with books

    Commentary by Richard Fuchs : in a bookless society, why start with books?

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    French version available in IDRC Digital Library: Commentaire par Richard Fuchs : dans une société sans livres, pourquoi commencer par les livres

    FUCHS, Richard

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    Correspondence made between Richard Fuchs and General Plutarco Elías Calles relating to a shipyard and naval construction project. General Calles answers him that he regrets that he has not managed to awaken the interest of the president of the Republic nor of the private investment, and that he cannot help him since he has removed himself from all activity and business. / Correspondencia efectuada entre el señor Richard Fuchs y el general PEC relativa a un proyecto de astillero y construcciones navales; contestándole el general PEC que lamenta que no haya logrado despertar el interés del presidente de la República ni del capital privado pero no puede ayudarlo en virtud de encontrase retirado de toda actividad o negocio

    Canada en direct : entrevue avec Richard Fuchs de ICT4D, 26 mars 2003

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    Réunion: Forum branchons les autochtones, 26 mars 2003, Ottawa, ON, CAReporter: Robert JarosEntrevues avec Richard Fuchs et Dan PellerinTexte parallèle en français et en anglaisThis 2-minute audio clip provides an introduction to an interview with Director of Information and Communication Technologies for Development at IDRC, Richard Fuchs. It provides a glimpse into the use of technology (pre-Web 2.0) by Indigenous peoples and an introduction to connectivity in the North

    In conversation : Richard Fuchs

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    French version available in IDRC Digital Library: Tête-à-tête avec Richard Fuch

    Canada today : interview with Richard Fuchs of ICT4D, Mar. 26, 2003

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    Meeting: Connecting Aboriginal Peoples Forum, 26 Mar. 2003, Ottawa, ON, CASupplied titleParallel text in English and FrenchReporter: Robert JarosInterviewees: Richard Fuchs and Dan PellerinDigital audio files in WAV formatClips of interviews with participants in the Forum, notably IDRC personnel Robert Fuchs and Dan Pellerin of the Northern Chiefs Council. Topics include the digital divide in the Americas, Canada's involvement in bridging that divide (including mention of the Institute for Connectivity in the Americas) and local examples of indigenous connectivity

    Tête-à-tête avec Richard Fuchs

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    Version anglaise disponible dans la Bibliothèque numérique du CRDI: In conversation : Richard Fuch

    Larval responses to turbulence and temperature in a tidal inlet: Habitat selection by dispersing gastropods?

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    Author Posting. © Sears Foundation for Marine Research, 2010. This article is posted here by permission of Sears Foundation for Marine Research for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Marine Research 68 (2010): 153-188, doi:10.1357/002224010793079013.Marine larval dispersal is affected by hydrodynamic transport and larval behavior, but little is known about how behavior affects large-scale patterns of dispersal and recruitment. Intertidal habitats are characterized by strong and variable turbulence relative to shelf and pelagic waters, so larval responses to turbulence may affect both dispersal and habitat selection. This study combined observations and theoretical approaches to model gastropod larval responses to multiple physical variables in a well-mixed tidal inlet. Physical measurements and larvae were collected in July 2004 in Barnstable Harbor, Massachusetts (USA). Physical measurements were incorporated in an advection-diffusion model where larval vertical velocity is a function of turbulence dissipation rate, temperature, and the temperature gradient. Modeled larval distributions were fitted to observed concentration profiles by maximum likelihood to estimate larval behavioral velocity (swimming or sinking) as a function of environmental conditions. These quantitative behavior estimates were used to test hypotheses about behavioral differences among groups and to assess the relative impact of different cues on overall larval behavior. Larvae of five common gastropod species from different coastal habitats reacted most strongly to turbulence but had genus-specific responses to environmental cues. Larvae of a species from tidal inlets (the mud snail Nassarius obsoletus) had near-zero velocities under calmer conditions and sank in strong turbulence. In contrast, larvae from exposed beach habitats (Crepidula spp. and Anachis spp.) sank in weak turbulence and swam up in strong turbulence, with additional responses to temperature and temperature gradient. Larval responses also differed between small and large size classes and between flood and ebb tides. Behavior of mud snail larvae would contribute to retention inside the inlet and near adult habitats, whereas behavior of beach snail larvae would contribute to rapid export from muddy inlets lacking suitable adult habitats.This work was funded by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) Coastal Ocean Institute, the WHOI Rinehart Coastal Research Center, the National Science Foundation (NSF OCE- 0326734), NSF and US Office of Naval Research grants to S. Elgar and B. Raubenheimer, and the WHOI Sea Grant (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Grant No. NA16RG2273, project no. R/O-38-PD). Analyses were completed while HLF was a postdoctoral scholar at Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO), supported by the California Current Ecosystem Long-Term Ecological Research program (NSF OCE-0417616) and by SIO funding to P. Franks
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