3,507 research outputs found
The Bibelot, a reprint of poetry and prose for book lovers, chosen in part from scarce editions and sources not generally known.
Mode of access: Internet.Vol. 1-20. 1 v.Editor: T. B. Mosher
The Mosher Books, Season of MDCCCCIII
A catalog of offerings of specialty printer T. B. Mosher, Portland, Maine, for 1903
Amphora : a collection of prose and verse /
"Nine hundred and twenty-five copies of this book (fourth edition) printed on Van Gelder hand-made paper and the type distributed in the month of January MDCCCCXXII"--Colophon.Edition note on t.p. verso unchanged from 3rd ed.Compiled by T. B. Mosher in part from material previously published in his book catalogs.Hatch, B. L. Mosher,Mode of access: Internet
The hound of heaven /
"Nine hundred and twenty-five copies of this book (fourth edition) printed."Foreword signed: T. B. W. [i.e. Thomas Bird Mosher]Mode of access: Internet
Thinking About Rural Development.—By Arther T. Mosher. New York: Agricultural Development Council, Inc., 1976. xii+pp.350.
This book is essentially a selection of the articles written
by Arther T. Mosher during his long career as a rural development
expert. Also appended at the end is a complete list of writings by him.
The Agricultural Development Council has chosen to publish this book to
honour the author, who was its President during 1967-1973, The
publication of this book is welcome in the context of the recent
rediscovery of rural development as a principal plank of need-oriented
develop¬ment strategies. A basic defect of writing on rural development
has been excessive resort to stereotype rehtoric, over-enthusiasm and a
certain pedanticism. Fortunately, Mosher's orientation is practical, not
doctrinaire. Although the book is titled "Thinking About Rural
Development", the author keeps on bring¬ing together the thinking and
practice into their validly interactive perspectives. Not surprisingly
so, for the author has himself worked in the field as a rural
development practitioner for a considerable length of time
The Hound of heaven /
"Nine hundred and twenty-five copies of this book (Fifth edition) have been printed on Van Gelder hand-made paper for Thomas Bird Mosher."Mode of access: Internet
Amphora; a collection of prose and verse chosen by the editor of the Bibelot.
"Nine hundred and twenty-five copies of this book printed on Van Gelder hand-made paper and the type distributed in the month of October MDCCCCXII."Mode of access: Internet
A walled garden, and other poems /
Partly reprinted from various periodicals.Illus. t.-p.Bound in deep green paper over boards; printed in deep blue-green on front cover and spine."Two hundred and fifty copies of this book printed on Van Gelder handmade paper and the type distributed."Mode of access: Internet
Engineering Technology Students: Factors Predicting Success
The published literature regarding students who depart engineering has generally not examined those who stay in the “T” part of STEM by pursuing engineering technology (ET). Internal data from the authors’ department suggest that students who transfer into ET from engineering fields often succeed in the more hands-on setting, but bring with them far lower early-semester GPAs. Internal data also show that these transfers may have lower engagement with the discipline and less interaction with faculty and student organizations.This proceeding is published as Mosher, G. (2018, August), "Engineering Technology Students: Factors Predicting Success." Paper presented at 2018 ASEE Conferences - Conference for Industry and Education Collaboration / San Antonio proceedings, San Antonio. https://peer.asee.org/31370. Posted with permission.</p
- …
