5,714 research outputs found

    Parliamentarians as legislators. by David W. Lovell

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    tag=1 data=Parliamentarians as legislators. by David W. Lovell tag=2 data=Lovell, David W. tag=3 data=Legislative Studies, tag=4 data=9 tag=5 data=1 tag=6 data=Spring 1994 tag=7 data=42-55. tag=8 data=MPS-FEDERAL tag=10 data=The key to a successful legislative role lies with the legislators themselves, and especially with the resources, incentives and procedures available to them. Yet parliamentarians express concern about how well they fulfil this role. tag=11 data=1995/1/1 tag=12 data=95/0076 tag=13 data=CABThe key to a successful legislative role lies with the legislators themselves, and especially with the resources, incentives and procedures available to them. Yet parliamentarians express concern about how well they fulfil this role

    The Biography of Emily W. Lovell

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    This paper is an attempt to trace the history of a house located at 214 East Thirty-Fourth Street, Savannah, and the person who originally owned the land upon which the structure was built. The ownership sequence contains nine names, beginning with Emily W. Lovell, who owned the property before selling it to Pierre N. Holst, who built a two-story Colonial Revival home on it in 1906. Chapter two of the paper focuses on the important dates and events in Emily\u27s life. Beginning with her Salzburger roots, documented evidence of the significant events in her life is presented along with colorful anecdotes provided by her granddaughter, Mary L. Cope Sweat.https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/sav-bios-lane/1063/thumbnail.jp

    Letter from Aldis Lovell to Alden Partridge, 4 June 1846

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    Includes a copy of a letter of reference for George Washington Franklin Emerson from Aldis Lovell, possibly for a position at an academy in Pembroke, New Hampshire; includes a brief postscript by George Emerson.Transcription by Joseph Byrne. Transcriptions may be subject to error

    Levinsenia kirbyorum Lovell 2002

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    Levinsenia kirbyorum Lovell, 2002, emended Figures 3 A–D, 7C, H Levinsenia kirbyae Lovell, 2002: 49–51, Fig. 9A–D. Levinsenia sp B SCAMIT 2007 §: SCAMIT 2007, Vol 25, No. 5, 1-12. Material examined. Indian Ocean, Andaman Sea, Sta. G-2/ OS, 23 April 1996, 63 m depth, paratype (LACM- AHF 2091).— USA. California. Orange County, Huntington Beach, OCSD Survey 97130, 1997, Sta. 37, rep. 4, 56 m depth, 0.1 m ² Van Veen grab, 07 January 1997, 1.0 mm sieve, 1 specimen, SEM stub (LACM-AHF 12565); OCSD Survey 9276, Sta. Control, replicate 5, 60 m depth, 0.1 m ² Van Veen grab, 23 July 1992, 1.0 mm sieve, 1 specimen, SEM stub (LACM-AHF 12566).— San Diego County, Carlsbad, Encina Treatment Plant, NPDES 9126, Sta. R2, rep. 4, 33°07.566’N, 117°20.694’W, 45 m depth, 0.1 m ² Van Veen grab, 1991, 1.0 mm sieve, 1 specimen, SEM stub (LACM-AHF 12567); Southern California Bight Project (SCBP), Bight 2003, Sta. A 2, 29 m deep, 6 Aug 2003, North San Diego Shelf, 33.165°N 117.391°W, 0.1 m ² Van Veen grab, 1.0 mm sieve, coll. Weston Solutions 1 specimen, SEM stub (LACM-AHF 12568); SCCWRP, Southern California Bight Project (SCBP), Bight 2008, Sta. 7556, 92 m deep, 09 September 2008, Channel Islands, 34.0790°N 119.7008°W, 0.1 m ² Van Veen grab, 1.0 mm sieve, 3 specimens (LACM-AHF 12569); Carlsbad, Encina Treatment Plant NPDES 9232, Sta. G1, replicate 3, 33°06.42’N 117°20.74’W, 45 m depth, 0.1 m ² Van Veen grab, 1992, 1.0 mm sieve, 1 specimen (LACM-AHF 12570); NPDES 9344, Sta. G2, rep. 3, 33°06.73’N, 117°20.85’W, 45 m depth, Van Veen grab, 1993, 1.0 mm sieve, 1 specimen (LACM-AHF 12571); NPDES 9232, Sta. R2, rep. 1, 33°07.566’N, 117°20.694’W, 45 m depth, 0.1 m ² Van Veen grab, 1992, 1.0 m sieve, 1 specimen (LACM-AHF 12572); Cardiff by the Sea, San Elijo Treatment Plant NPDES, sta. A-2-5, replicate 2, ~ 33.07°N, 117.25°W, 45(?) m depth, 9 March 2004, 0.1 m ² Van Veen grab, 1.0 mm sieve, 1 specimen (LACM-AHF 12573); San Onofre, SONGS D400-175 XXII, rep. 2, ~ 33.36°N, 117.57°W, 53.34 m depth, 6 April 1980, 0.1 m ² Van Veen grab, 1.0 mm sieve, 1 specimen (USNM 1604269); Carlsbad, Encina Treatment Plant NPDES: 9344, Sta. R2, rep. 3, 33°07.566′N, 117°20.694′W, 46 m depth, 0.1 m ² Van Veen grab, 1993, 1.0 mm sieve, 1 specimen (USNM 1604270).— Orange County, Huntington Beach, OCSD NPDES Survey 97139, Sta. ZB, rep. 3, 33°34.54’N, 118°0.00’W, 56 m depth, 0.1 m ² Van Veen grab, 22 October 1997, 1.0 mm sieve, 1 specimen (LACM-AHF 12574); OCSD NPDES Survey 9276, Sta. 37, rep. 2, 33°34.83’N, 117°57.37’W, 56 m depth, 0.1 m ² box core, 24 July 1992, 1.0 mm sieve, 1 specimen (LACM-AHF 12575); OCSD NPDES Survey 9276, Sta. Control, replicate 4, 33°36.04’N, 118°5.39’W, 60 m depth, 0.1 m ² box core, 23 July 1992, 1.0 mm sieve, 2 specimens (LACM-AHF 12576); OCSD NPDES Survey 98151, Sta. 5, rep. 1, 33°34.74’N, 118°01.61’W, 59 m depth, 0.1 m ² Van Veen, 21 October 1998, 1.0 mm sieve, 1 specimen (LACM-AHF 12577) Description. Specimens up to 39 mm long, 0.15–0.35 mm wide. Body inflated, dorsally flattened in prebranchial region, thereafter round in cross section. Tan color. Prostomium triangular, longer than wide; terminal sensory organ present; median antenna absent; ciliated peristomial nuchal slits. Prebranchial segments slightly inflated (Fig. 3A), with two longitudinal dorsal grooves. Branchiae begin on chaetigers 7–8, 13–20 pairs, conical; cilia present on lateral branchiae margins, continue as transverse bands across dorsum (Fig. 3B). Notopodial post-chaetal lobes short, conical in pre-branchial chaetigers, digitate in branchial region, shorter post-branchial. Notopodial sensory pores present along entire body (Fig. 3C), immediately below notochaetae, may have projecting filament. Neuropodial post-chaetal lobes absent. Notopodia with capillary chaetae only. Neuropodia with capillary chaetae and up to 13 concave, fringed acicular spines in post-branchial segments. Neuropodial spines thinner, straighter (superior) and thicker, more recurved (inferior), double rows in far posterior chaetigers (Figs 3E, 7H). Abdominal segments with deep, transverse dorsal intersegmental furrows. Pygidium unknown. Methyl green stain. Branchial region with ventral bands, and distinct notopodial post-branchial spots (Fig. 7C). Remarks. SEM images of Levinsenia sp B SCAMIT 2007 § confirmed that it is the same as L. kirbyorum, described from the Andaman Sea, as noted in the voucher sheet. The unusual dorsal longitudinal furrows on the California material, which are very clearly visible with SEM (Fig. 3A), were not described for L. kirbyorum are confirmed The paratype of L. kirbyorum (LACM-AHF 2091) was reviewed and dorsal furrows were confirmed. The original description of L. kirbyorum Lovell 2002 is emended to include these furrows. The California material examined also has the unique double-rowed neurochaetal fascicle arrangement described for L. kirbyorum. Identical methyl green staining spots are present in post-branchial notopodial areas in both Andaman Sea and California specimens. This is a range extension from the Andaman Sea into Southern California. For information on diagnostic character differences, see the dichotomous key below and table of character distributions (Table 2). The specific epithet is emended to acknowledge that the species was named in honor of three persons; Jacqueline Kirby Lovell, Andrew Kirby Lovell, and Robin Kirby Lovell. The name L. kirbyae is emended to Levinsenia kirbyorum. Type locality. Andaman Sea. Distribution. Andaman Sea, Indian Ocean; Southern California, 42–60 m depth.Published as part of Lovell, Lawrence L. & Fitzhugh, Kirk, 2020, Taking a closer look: an SEM review of Levinsenia species (Polychaeta: Paraonidae) reported from California, pp. 257-275 in Zootaxa 4751 (2) on pages 262-264, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4751.2.3, http://zenodo.org/record/371307

    Introduction: New Perspectives on the Cyprus Problem

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    In today’s world, the issue of Cyprus is notable for all the wrong reasons: because of the duration of the divisions in Cyprus itself between Greek-Cypriots and Turkish-Cypriots (formalized since 1983 by a disputed international border across the island); because of the involvement of Greece and Turkey, for which the “hyphenated” Cypriot communities form proxy battalions; and because of the failure of the United Nations’ longstanding efforts to resolve the conflict. Much of the discussion in the book revolves around the difficulty of producing viable constitutional and civic arrangements in an ethnically-divided polity. It is clear that this issue dominates almost all discussions of the Cyprus Problem, from the drawing of internal borders, the conceptualization of identity of oneself and of the “other,” to the management of the natural resources with which the island is endowed. Containing chapters from both Turkish- and Greek-Cypriots, as well as outside scholars, the book covers four key themes, namely identity and perceptions; contemporary issues in the Greek- and Turkish-Cypriot communities; comparisons with divided polities elsewhere; and new approaches to resolving the Cyprus Problem. One of the key messages from this book is that people-to-people initiatives must supplement the plans (and posturing) of politicians in order to make progress towards an ultimate resolution of the Cyprus Problem. The book shows that human ingenuity is able to find a widely accepted and workable formula for a Cyprus that combines unity and diversity, acknowledges the worth of its different constituent communities, and addresses – or begins to move beyond – historical animosities and injustices

    Geologic atlas of the United States : topography, areal geology, economic geology, structure sections / 149 Penobscot Bay Folio : Maine

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    H. M. Wilson ; W. H. Lovell ; Hersey MunroeList of Sheets: Topographic Map, Areal Geology Map, Structure-Section Shee

    Poems by the late Thomas Lovell Beddoes, author of Death's Jest-book or The fool's tragedy. With a memoir.

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    Edited from the author's manuscripts, by Thomas Forbes Kelsall. The memoir (v.1, p.[v]-cxxxiv) includes a number of Beddoes' letters, and reminiscences by C.D. Bevan (p.cxxvi-cxxxiv)Consists of the "Poems," originally issued in one volume, 1851; and "The brides" tragedy (the last forming v.2 (p.[175]-288) without t.-p.)Imperfect? lacks the general title prefixed to the 2 vol. ed.: The poems, posthumous and collected, of Thomas Lovell Beddoes ... 1851.v.1. Memoir. The second brother; an unfinished drama. Torrismond; an unfinished drama. Dramatic scences and fragments. [Miscellaneous poems] Poetic fragments. Appendix. Notes.--v.2. The brides' tragedy, first published 1822.Mode of access: Internet

    Lovell optical lab

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    Street Scenes - Service Stations. Damaged car, Buick Special, parked in front of Lovell Optical Lab, 124 W. Lovell. Facades of Dalm & Dalm Law Office, 122 W. Lovell, and Margaret's Gift Shop, 118 W. Lovell visible. Client: Gulf Insurance Co. (Photographic Negative

    Bryant Hill Pit, Lovell

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    Shearing in upper (till) unit in deep Bryant Hill pit, Rte 5, Lovell, ME, Ctr. Lovell-NE-84-87, view to W Project Name: Thompson NGGDPP Grant 2020https://digitalmaine.com/mgs_geologic_field_photos/17262/thumbnail.jp

    Hatch Hill Pit, Lovell

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    Center Lovell-SE-83-55. Overview of Hatch Hill Pit, Lovell, ME (2 of 2), Mt. Kearsarge in distance, view to W. Project Name: Thompson NGGDPP Grant 2020https://digitalmaine.com/mgs_geologic_field_photos/17750/thumbnail.jp
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