4,942 research outputs found
26th Ward Mormon Chapel, 800 South Jeremy Street.
Photo of the 26th Ward Mormon Chapel, 800 South Jeremy Street in Salt Lake City, Utah
James Bond: international man of gastronomy
This article is concerned with the representation of food and drink in Ian Fleming’s James Bond novels. In particular, it examines how the author uses Bond’s culinary knowledge and habits of consumption as an important constituent of his hero’s character. Similarly, the food choices of other characters, notably villains, are shown to be linked, by Fleming, to core aspects of their identity − principally their ethnicity. Bond’s impulse to observe and classify, very much in evidence in the novels’ food sequences, is examined in terms of the texts’ construction of Bond as a skilled identifier of signs
Why major party reforms had to be sidelined during Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership
Bradley Ward argues that while Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership was initially drawn towards a more grassroots vision of rank-and-file democracy, this came into tension with the demands facing the leadership in the context of intense intra-party factionalism. In a Brexit-dominated political landscape, the constraints facing internal party democracy meant that major party reforms were increasingly sidelined
DR. JOHN R. WARD NAMED TO JEREMY CHAIR IN ARTHRITIC RESEARCH AT UNIVERSITY OF UTAH
John R. Ward, M.D., professor of internal medicine at the University of Utah School of Medicine, has been named the first holder of the new Thomas E. and Rebecca D. Jeremy Presidential Chair for Arthritic Research at the U of U
Pye, Ward T. August 8, 2018. C.Braye and J. Harnum interviewing Ward Pye, Lodge Bay
"Ward discusses fishing at Cape Charles; growing up in Lodge Bay/Cape Charles; building boats; harvesting timber; types of boats and boat design including speed boats and trap skiffs; and fishing for cod. His wife Verna was also present during the interview.
Data in online database ‘Last Statues of Antiquity (LSA)’
This dataset represents the text and image data contained in the searchable database of the published evidence for statuary and inscribed statue bases set up after AD 284, that were new, newly dedicated, or newly re-worked. (This database was completed and made public in May 2012, with only some minor revisions thereafter). The deposit includes data for a small number of records that are not included in the public version, and the contents of some notes fields. Researchers are welcome to use the data for their own purposes but should acknowledge the original source, and re-use should not be for commercial purposes. Meanwhile, enquiries should go to [email protected].
The original database was constructed as part of a major project funded by the AHRC. The text data has been deposited in FileMaker and the images are JPEGs. In order to run the data as a database, FileMaker Pro will be required. Ancient towns were filled with life-size bronze and marble figures – by the third century important cities of the empire could have over a thousand such statues. The habit of erecting statues in public to rulers, and to other dignitaries and benefactors, was a defining characteristic of the ancient world. The dedication of statues expressed the relationship between rulers and ruled and articulated the benefaction-and-honour system of city politics. Statues also played a significant role in defining civic identity, and in forming and perpetuating a city’s collective memory. In the fourth to sixth centuries AD, statues continued to be erected in many parts of the empire – but already the uniform practices of earlier imperial times had broken down and become attenuated. By the mid-seventh century, the statue-habit, once ubiquitous, had completely disappeared from the Roman world. Not even in Constantinople were new statues set up. The ‘Last Statues of Antiquity’ project investigated all evidence for new statuary of the period circa 280–650, as well as the slow decline (and eventual death) of the ancient statue-habit
Interview with Jeremy King, March 15, 2010
Interview Themes: What brought King to the field and how his approach to it has changed over time (00:33)
On King's work as transition from national to post-national history (06:00)
Alternative loci of identity formation besides nationalism (11:17)
How we should teach the next generation about nationalism (18:12)
Territorialization of nationhood in the 20C (25:33)
How knowledge of langauges affects research and findings (37:20)
How to deal with the conceptual disappearance/invisibility of East-Central Europe (44:02)
What is yet to be done in this field (53:38)Interview with Jeremy King, Associate Professor of History at Mount Holyoke College, conducted in Ithaca, NY on March 15, 2010. Professor King is the author of "Budweisers into Czechs and Germans: A Local History of Bohemian Politics, 1848-1948," published by Princeton University Press in 2002.1_yov93rq
A vindication of the Reasons and Defence, &c. Part 1. [electronic resource] : Being a reply to the first part of No sufficient reason for restoring some prayers and directions of King Edward Vi's first Liturgy. By the author of the Reasons and Defence.
The author of the Reasons = Jeremy Collier.Also issued as part of: 'A collection of tracts written by the late Reverend .. Jeremy Collier, ..', London, 1736.With a half-title.Electronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from British Library
Leamington LDS Ward
Adress: 61 West Main Street, Leamington, UT. The historic Leamington Ward meetinghouse was constructed from 1903 to 1910, and was remodeled in 1970. After a new ward building replaced it, the town purchased the old meetinghouse and turned it into the city hall, with a museum in the basement
Leamington LDS Ward
Adress: 61 West Main Street, Leamington, UT. The historic Leamington Ward meetinghouse was constructed from 1903 to 1910, and was remodeled in 1970. After a new ward building replaced it, the town purchased the old meetinghouse and turned it into the city hall, with a museum in the basement
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