43,032 research outputs found
Autun List of Local Churches, c. 1000
This dataset is based on a list of 144 churches in the diocese of Autun, France, which was made around the year 1000. It uses the edition in Cartulaire de l'évêché d'Autun, connu sous le nom de Cartulaire rouge, ed. A. de Charmasse (Autun, 1880), pp. 365-367, integrating corrections to de Charmasse's identifications by Olivier Bruand, Les origines de la société féodale : l'exemple de l'Autunois (Dijon, 2009). The dataset provides the names in the list, the modern place-names, the departement these places are located in, their order in the original list, whether each church is attested in earlier documentation or not, and if so, approximately when
Interview with Charles W. West Jr.
Dr. Charles W. West Jr. was born in Cuba to a military family and raised around West Point, New York. After a two-year commitment in the army, he earned his MBA from Cornell University in 1953. He then worked for several corporations, including Honeywell, General Electric, McKinsey and Company, the Package Machinery Company, and the American Air Filter Company of Louisville, Kentucky. Around 1970, he chose to end his industrial career and enter education. West received his PhD in Organizational Behavior from the University of Louisville and began teaching at Morehead State University. He was subsequently hired as School of Business faculty at UNCW. In this interview, Dr. West discusses his classes at the university and his involvement in the University Senate, the 1898 Foundation, and the Democratic Party, among other topics
Charles West: a 19th century perspective on acquired childhood aphasia
Dr Charles West was the founder (1852) of the first paediatric hospital in the English-speaking world. In a career spanning four decades, he devoted a great part of his energies to describing the nervous diseases of infants and children. In 1871, West published a series of lectures which focused uniquely on the developmental and acquired language and mental disorders of children. West's clinical experience indicated that acquired aphasia was almost always a transitory condition in children. However, there was one exceptional case which West followed for over 3 years. It represents the youngest case of persistent aphasia described in the modern English medical literature. West's writings reflect a significant early attempt to document and categorise language loss and disturbance in children. In this paper, we detail West's innovations in the description, assessment and treatment of child language disorders
Caterpillar's nest, west of Oodnadatta, South Australia, 1935 [transparency] /
Inscription: "Caterpillars nest, 1935, west of Odna" --In ink and pencil on label on mount of slide.; Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription.; Part of the collection: Charles Duguid collection of photographs of Aboriginal Australians at Ernabella Mission and other locations, ca. 1930-1950.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4404375
Letter from Charles F. Blankenship, Medical Director, Retired, Department of Health and Human Services to Assistant Surgeon General, Leonard Bachman, Division of Hospitals and Clinics, Department of Health and Human Services, August 12, 1981
Letter from Dr. Charles F. Blankenship recounting his participation in the medical component of the forced evacuation of 120,000 Japanese nationals and Japanese Americans from the West Coast to internment camps early in 1942.In 1942, Charles Blankenship, a physician with the U. S. Public Health Service and medical consultant for the Service Command, United States Army in the San Francisco Regional Office, was given the assignment to inspect all Japanese American incarcerees from the Southern California sector for medical conditions before or as they entered the Santa Anita Racetrack Assembly Center, and later Manzanar, Gila River, and Rohwer incarceration camps
Letter from Charles West Providing a Report on US House Resolution 203, May 25, 1937
This letter dated May 25, 1937 from acting Secretary of the United States (US) Interior Charles West to Will Rogers, Chairman of the Committee on Indian Affairs of the US House of Representatives, provides a report on US House Resolution 203 (H. R. 203) which is summarized here as for relief of the Indians of the Fort Berthold Reservation in North Dakota.
See also:
Agreement at Fort Berthold, 1866 and Addenda
Treaty of Fort Laramie with the Sioux, ETC., 1851https://commons.und.edu/burdick-papers/1039/thumbnail.jp
Charles West Churchman, Philosopher of Management
Charles West Churchman, Philosopher of Management / Richard Mason and Ian Mitroff, author
North West (boat), Detroit, Michigan, 1909
From the Charles Mensing photograph album, a 1909 view of the Detroit, Michigan skyline behind the excursion boat, North West, as it cruises on the Detroit River. Terms associated with the photograph are: North West (boat) | Detroit River (Mich.) | Detroit (Mich.) | excursion boat
RoMEO Studies 4: An analysis of Journal publishers' Copyright Agreements
This article is the fourth in a series of six emanating from the UK JISC-funded RoMEO Project (Rights Metadata for Open archiving). It describes an analysis of 80 scholarly journal publishers’ copyright agreements with a particular view to their effect on author self-archiving. 90% of agreements asked for copyright transfer and 69% asked for it prior to refereeing the paper. 75% asked authors to warrant that their work had not been previously published although only two explicitly stated that they viewed self-archiving as prior publication. 28.5% of agreements provided authors with no usage rights over their own paper. Although 42.5% allowed self-archiving in some format, there was no consensus on the conditions under which self-archiving could take place. The article concludes that author-publisher copyright agreements should be reconsidered by a working party representing the needs of both partie
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