1,354,986 research outputs found

    With Art in Mind

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    Based in a deprived inner city area in Nottingham, Art in Mind aims to improve individual health and well‐being and to raise mental health awareness by encouraging self‐expression through the arts and participation in community activities. Theo Stickley, Willow Merryweather and Paul Leighton describe the power of the arts to change minds and lives.</jats:p

    Stickley, S A, QX12347

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/419402Surname: STICKLEY. Given Name(s) or Initials: S A. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: QX12347. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 20827.243981 Item: [2016.0049.51663] "Stickley, S A, QX12347

    Stickley, R J, QX20217

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/419403Surname: STICKLEY. Given Name(s) or Initials: R J. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: QX20217. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 20826.243982 Item: [2016.0049.51664] "Stickley, R J, QX20217

    [Mary Stickley]

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    Photograph of 1 female, Mary Stickley. There are two images of the same woman in two bust poses. In the left image she is at an angle to the camera, and in the right image she is facing the camera. She is wearing a dark-colored dress with a white collar and a cross necklace

    Stickley Sticks To It!: A Frog\u27s Guide to Getting Things Done

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    Stickley is a frog, and because he’s a frog he has special sticky toes that help him get around. But this unique “stick-to-it-ness” isn’t limited to his feet; Stickley also has an attitude that helps him stick with things, like projects and goals. The book follows Stickley as he works on his project for the science fair, builds a tower, and even writes a speech for his school. Even though there are sometimes barriers and challenges for Stickley in pursuing his goals, he always sticks with it and succeeds. In the end he even teaches his class how to make a plan and stick to it

    Stickley Mill Ruins, near Strasburg, Virginia, circa 1941-1970

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    Stickley Mill Ruins, near Strasburg, Virginia, circa 1941-1970. Caption reads: "Stickley Mill Ruins. Midway between Middletown and Strasburg, Va., along Cedar Creek and the Shenandoah Valley Pike are two stone mill ruins. The smaller mill was operated when it had but two competitors in the Lower Shenandoah Valley. The larger was burned in October, 1864, when over 100 mills and 2,000 barns and contents were destroyed and 15,000 domestic animals driven from the region by Union forces. This drastic action was to prevent the 'Granary of the Confederacy' from maintaining another army, and General Sheridan boasted that a crow would have to carry his knapsack to cross the valley.

    Gustav Stickley and Irene Sargent: United Crafts and The Craftsman

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    Reed sheds light on the important role played by Irene Sargent, a Syracuse University fine arts professor, in the creation of Gustav Stickley\u27s Arts and Crafts publications

    The establishment of PRRSv stable sow herds through the use of a “Load, Close and Homogenize” protocol: A case report

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    Bales, S.; Cline, G.; Stickley, J.. (2009). The establishment of PRRSv stable sow herds through the use of a “Load, Close and Homogenize” protocol: A case report. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/152237

    LONG-TERM TRIAL OF AN INFLATABLE EFFIGY SCARE DEVICE OR REPELLING CORMORANTS FROM CATFISH PONDS

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    Growing winter populations of double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocoax auritus) over the past decade have caused serious depredation problems for commercial channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) growers in the Mississippi Delta (Stickley and Andrews 1989). Stickley et al. (1992) found that cormorants allowed to feed without hindrance took an average of 5 catfish fingerlings per foraging hour, but at times took as many as 28 fingerlings per hour. Obviously, growers have to repel these birds or suffer heavy losses where the cormorants are feeding on catfish fingerlings and not gizzard shad (Jorosoma Gredianum) as they at times do (Stickley et al. 1992). Motionless scare devices tend to reduce cormorant depredations only temporarily (Feare 1988, Littauer 1990). However, a pop-up inflatable effigy device (Fig. 1) known as “Scarey Man” ($595 available through R. Royal, P.O. Box 108, Midnight, MS 39115)1 proved to be effective in reducing cormorant numbers on catfish ponds in 4 separate tests that ranged in length from 10 to 19 days. Cormorant numbers were reduced 71, 93, 95 and 99%, respectively, from pretreatment levels in these tests conducted in early 1991 in the Mississippi Delta (Stickley, pers. comm.). Success in these short-term tests prompted a longer term trial of Scarey Man. This paper describes such a trial conducted in the Mississippi Delta in early 1992

    Stickley House, near Strasburg, Virginia, circa 1941-1960

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    Stickley House, near Strasburg, Virginia, circa 1941-1960. Caption reads: "This house, built in 1859, is on the Shenandoah Valley Pike midway between Strasburg and Middletown, Va. It was used as a field hospital during the Battle of Cedar Creek October 19, 1864, between the Federal forces under Sheridan and the Confederates under Early. Scores of operations and amputations were performed in the house.
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