988 research outputs found

    McDonald (C.) with the collaboration of Goebel (Ulrich). German Medieval Literary Patronage from Charlemagne to Maximilian I. - A critical commentary with special emphasis on imperial promotion of literature

    No full text
    Wagner Fritz. McDonald (C.) with the collaboration of Goebel (Ulrich). German Medieval Literary Patronage from Charlemagne to Maximilian I. - A critical commentary with special emphasis on imperial promotion of literature. In: Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, tome 61, fasc. 3, 1983. Langues et littératures modernes — Moderne taal- en letterkunde. pp. 629-630

    Supplemental Material, 6_19-0101_Figure_2_R2_orginal_rpw - Early Postoperative Use of Diuretics After Kidney Transplantation Showed Increase in Delayed Graft Function

    No full text
    Supplemental Material, 6_19-0101_Figure_2_R2_orginal_rpw for Early Postoperative Use of Diuretics After Kidney Transplantation Showed Increase in Delayed Graft Function by Wolfgang Baar, Kai Kaufmann, Kai Silbach, Bernd Jaenigen, Przemyslaw Pisarski, Ulrich Goebel, Johannes Kalbhenn, Sebastian Heinrich and Julian Knoerlein in Progress in Transplantation</p

    Supplemental Material, 5_19-0101_Figure_1_R2_original_final_rpw - Early Postoperative Use of Diuretics After Kidney Transplantation Showed Increase in Delayed Graft Function

    No full text
    Supplemental Material, 5_19-0101_Figure_1_R2_original_final_rpw for Early Postoperative Use of Diuretics After Kidney Transplantation Showed Increase in Delayed Graft Function by Wolfgang Baar, Kai Kaufmann, Kai Silbach, Bernd Jaenigen, Przemyslaw Pisarski, Ulrich Goebel, Johannes Kalbhenn, Sebastian Heinrich and Julian Knoerlein in Progress in Transplantation</p

    Supplemental Material, 8_19-0101_Supplement_1_R1_final_rpw_(1) - Early Postoperative Use of Diuretics After Kidney Transplantation Showed Increase in Delayed Graft Function

    No full text
    Supplemental Material, 8_19-0101_Supplement_1_R1_final_rpw_(1) for Early Postoperative Use of Diuretics After Kidney Transplantation Showed Increase in Delayed Graft Function by Wolfgang Baar, Kai Kaufmann, Kai Silbach, Bernd Jaenigen, Przemyslaw Pisarski, Ulrich Goebel, Johannes Kalbhenn, Sebastian Heinrich and Julian Knoerlein in Progress in Transplantation</p

    sj-docx-1-acr-10.1177_02841851221077402 - Supplemental material for Patterns of cardiac involvement in different muscular dystrophies assessed by magnetic resonance imaging

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-acr-10.1177_02841851221077402 for Patterns of cardiac involvement in different muscular dystrophies assessed by magnetic resonance imaging by Juliane Goebel, Karolin Schult, Ulrike Schara, Ulrich Neudorf, Michael Forsting, Thomas Schlosser and Kai Nassenstein in Acta Radiologica</p

    Supplemental Material, 7_19-0101_Figure_3_R2_orignal_final_rpw - Early Postoperative Use of Diuretics After Kidney Transplantation Showed Increase in Delayed Graft Function

    No full text
    Supplemental Material, 7_19-0101_Figure_3_R2_orignal_final_rpw for Early Postoperative Use of Diuretics After Kidney Transplantation Showed Increase in Delayed Graft Function by Wolfgang Baar, Kai Kaufmann, Kai Silbach, Bernd Jaenigen, Przemyslaw Pisarski, Ulrich Goebel, Johannes Kalbhenn, Sebastian Heinrich and Julian Knoerlein in Progress in Transplantation</p

    Dendrocellus Schmidt-Goebel 1846

    No full text
    Dendrocellus Schmidt-Goebel, 1846 Type species: Dendrocellus discolor Schmidt-Goebel, 1846 (= Desera nepalensis Hope, 1831)= Desera Hope, 1831 (nec Dejean, 1825) Type species: Desera nepalensis Hope, 1831 Bousquet (2002) and Liang et al. (2004) have correctly reconstructed the complex nomenclatorial history of this genus, reaching the conclusion that its valid generic name is Dendrocellus Schmidt-Goebel, 1846, instead of Desera Dejean, 1825, as it was frequently considered previously. We only observe that back in 1949 Jeannel already wrote: “Les Dendrocellus Schm. -Goeb. (type: discolor Schm. -Goeb.,= nepalensis Hope) sont généralement classés à tort sous le nom de Desera. … Malgré leurs ongles tarsaux pectinés, ils sont très voisins des Drypta s. str. ” (Jeannel, 1949). So, it seems the french author had already reached the same conclusions. This genus, recently revised by Liang & Kavanaugh (2007), contains 22 species occuring in Africa, Asia and Australia. Systematically it is extremely close to Drypta, differing only in its tarsal claws pectinate instead of smooth. The genitalic characters of both sexes are the same, the external resemblance among members of the two genera is sometimes puzzling and a few species of Dendrocellus show very slight tarsal pectination, sometimes leaving a doubt on their generic pertinence; only a comparative study of all the characters of the species belonging to the two genera will allow to decide whether they can be really maintained as separate genera. Already in 1968 Darlington observed: “ Desera differs from Drypta only in having pectinate tarsal claws. A modern revision of the species is needed to show whether both genera are really monophyletic and distinct” (Darlington, 1968, p. 218). The unique combination of characters distinguishing this genus from the others of the tribe is: pronotal bead absent or very rudimental (fig. 10); punctuation on head and pronotum dense, regular, the punctures usually well distinct from each other; pronotum very feebly constricted towards base; elytral microsculpture well developed; elytral pubescence dense, usually arranged in two-three more or less regular rows; scutellar pore constantly single; intervals flat or slightly convex; tarsal claws slender, more or less pectinate on inner side; two to five evident setae on outer side of stylomere (fig. 8).Published as part of Sciaky, Riccardo & Anichtchenko, Alexander, 2020, Taxonomic notes on the tribe Dryptini Bonelli, 1810 with description of a new genus and species from China (Coleoptera: Carabidae: Dryptini), pp. 522-530 in Zootaxa 4731 (4) on page 524, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4731.4.5, http://zenodo.org/record/366198

    William Goebel: The Politics of Wrath

    No full text
    The turbulent career of William Goebel (1856–1900), which culminated in assassination, marked an end-of-the-century struggle for political control of Kentucky. Although populism had become a strong force in the nation, the Louisville and Nashville Railroad and ex-Confederates still dominated the state and its Democratic party. Touting reforms and attaching the railroad monopoly, Goebel challenged this old order. A Yankee in a state that fancied itself southern, Goebel had to depend on a strong organization to win votes. As “The Kenton King” he created a new style of politics. To some he was a progressive reformer; to others, a tyrannical machine boss. His drive for power and his enemies’ fierce opposition aroused violent political factionalism. Goebel’s fateful duel with a rival, his partisan election law, and his ruthless convention tactics led to the bitterly contested gubernatorial election of 1899 that resulted in his murder. Although the full truth about the murder was never revealed in nearly a decade of trials and the advent of progressive politics was long delayed in Kentucky, Goebel’s death did relieve the state’s political turmoil and induce some legal reforms. Using new sources and fresh perspectives, James C. Klotter portrays Goebel’s tumultuous era and discovers the real man within the obscurity of his conflicting images. James C. Klotter is professor of history at Georgetown College and the state historian of Kentucky. He is the author or coauthor of several books, including A New History of Kentucky. A lively account of one of the most bizarre and controversial episodes in Kentucky history. -- Tennessee Historical Quarterlyhttps://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_political_history/1000/thumbnail.jp

    Player agency in interactive narrative: audience, actor & author

    No full text
    The question motivating this review paper is, how can computer-based interactive narrative be used as a constructivist learn- ing activity? The paper proposes that player agency can be used to link interactive narrative to learner agency in constructivist theory, and to classify approaches to interactive narrative. The traditional question driving research in interactive narrative is, ‘how can an in- teractive narrative deal with a high degree of player agency, while maintaining a coherent and well-formed narrative?’ This question derives from an Aristotelian approach to interactive narrative that, as the question shows, is inherently antagonistic to player agency. Within this approach, player agency must be restricted and manip- ulated to maintain the narrative. Two alternative approaches based on Brecht’s Epic Theatre and Boal’s Theatre of the Oppressed are reviewed. If a Boalian approach to interactive narrative is taken the conflict between narrative and player agency dissolves. The question that emerges from this approach is quite different from the traditional question above, and presents a more useful approach to applying in- teractive narrative as a constructivist learning activity

    The literary text-types and the intentions of the German hymn in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries

    No full text
    Religion and music are basic elements found in every human culture. The combination of these two elements has produced the hymn. The use of that particular form of literature during the reformation and counter reformation can be categorized under the text-types of worship, doctrine, or evangelism. This is a more appropriate method of classification than Horaz' "prodesse et delectaTe" (teaching and entertainment) characterization of literature according genre, because the hymn form can and does express more than only teaching or entertainment. A sampling of Gennan hymns from Catholic, Lutheran, and Pietistic sources from the 16th and 17th centuries are examined and divided into the three text-types according to the author's intention as determined from the text of the hymn
    corecore