9,340 research outputs found
Local Author Book Talk: Meet D.M. Pulley author of The Dead Key
Local Author D.M. Pulley, author of The Dead Key.
2014 Winner — Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award — Grand Prize and Mystery & Thriller Fiction Winner. It’s 1998, and for years the old First Bank of Cleveland has sat abandoned, perfectly preserved, its secrets only speculated on by the outside world.--Source Amazon.com
These books and all Friends of the Library 2021/2022 book selections are on sale at Viking Outfitters, located in the CSU Student Center
Canceled: Local Author Book Talk: Meet D.M. Pulley author of The Dead Key
This event has been canceled due to the Coronavirus.
Meet Local Author D.M. Pulley, author of The Dead Key.
2014 Winner — Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award — Grand Prize and Mystery & Thriller Fiction Winner. It’s 1998, and for years the old First Bank of Cleveland has sat abandoned, perfectly preserved, its secrets only speculated on by the outside world.--Source Amazon.com
The books titled The Dead Key, No one’s Home, Unclaimed Victim, and The Buried Book will be available for sale by Viking Outfitters at the event. These books and all Friends of the Library 2019/2020 book selections are on sale at Viking Outfitters, located in the CSU Student Center
Charles Williams and Malory's Arthurian Tradition in Taliessin through Logres and The Region of The Summer Stars
openThe present paper explores the different tales of Arthurian mythology concerning King Arthur, his knights of the Round Table and the myth of the Grail primarily through the lens of an English author, Charles Williams. This study introduces the life and major works of Charles Williams, who is mostly remembered as a member of the famous literary group the Inklings alongside the renowned writers C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien. Despite not achieving widespread success, Williams was a very versatile author who wrote inspiring poetry regarding Arthurian legends in his books "Taliessin through Logres and the Region of the Summer Stars". These Arthurian works narrate the tales of the legendary Logres, the mythical land from which today’s Britain originated, along with the undertakings of its main characters. Therefore, this study presents also an analysis of one of the greatest books regarding these legends, "Le Morte D’Arthur" by Sir Thomas Malory, delving into its publication and the author’s intentions.The present paper explores the different tales of Arthurian mythology concerning King Arthur, his knights of the Round Table and the myth of the Grail primarily through the lens of an English author, Charles Williams. This study introduces the life and major works of Charles Williams, who is mostly remembered as a member of the famous literary group the Inklings alongside the renowned writers C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien. Despite not achieving widespread success, Williams was a very versatile author who wrote inspiring poetry regarding Arthurian legends in his books "Taliessin through Logres and the Region of the Summer Stars". These Arthurian works narrate the tales of the legendary Logres, the mythical land from which today’s Britain originated, along with the undertakings of its main characters. Therefore, this study presents also an analysis of one of the greatest books regarding these legends, "Le Morte D’Arthur" by Sir Thomas Malory, delving into its publication and the author’s intentions
A comparison of carbonyl compound concentrations at urban roadside and indoor sites
Measurements of formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, hexanal, crotonaldehyde, acrolein, propanal, benzaldehyde and iso-valeraldehyde concentrations were made at two locations (four sites) in London, UK. One location was in Ealing, West London, while the other was in Wood Green, North London. At each location, a residential and commercial roadside site was identified and monitored. The measurements were made using a derivatisation technique in which sample air was pumped through an acidified solution of 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine, producing hydrazones which were separated and quantified using High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC). Quantitative determinations were made for 26 and 47 samples at the Ealing and Wood Green locations respectively during 1991 and 1992. The average concentrations determined at the Ealing location for formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, hexanal and crotonaldehyde (taking into account concentrations below the detection limits) were 15.0, 2.5, 1.5 and 1.2 ppb, respectively (residential site), and for the commercial site the corresponding values were 19.2, 1.6, 1.2 and 0.5 ppb. Similarly, at the residential site in Wood Green, the average concentrations for formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, hexanal and crotonaldehyde were 3.4, 1.9, 0.5 and 0.5 ppb, respectively, while at the commercial site the average concentrations for formaldehyde, acetaldehyde and hexanal were 7.4, 2.3 and 0.6 ppb. Acrolein, propanal, benzaldehyde and iso-valeraldehyde were not detected at either survey location. At the residential location in Wood Green, sufficient samples were collected to allow the data to be statistically divided into morning and afternoon collection periods, and the data show that the aldehyde concentrations were generally slightly higher in the afternoon. The observed concentrations reported here are compared with previously reported measurements in the UK and with indoor measurements taken at the Bounds Green Campus of Middlesex University. The advantages and limitations of the method employed are also discussed and compared with a solid-phase extraction technique.<br/
Perry Williams Typing The Alumnus 01
Perry Williams typing a copy of The Alumnus. The original description of the photo negative strip included D.M. Register and Perry [Williams] .https://scholarworks.uni.edu/uniphotos/3573/thumbnail.jp
Perry Williams Typing The Alumnus 02
Perry Williams typing a copy of The Alumnus. The original description of the photo negative strip included D.M. Register and Perry [Williams] .https://scholarworks.uni.edu/uniphotos/3574/thumbnail.jp
Aulacodiscus madagascarensis Tempere ex D. M. Williams 2021, nov. sp.
Aulacodiscus madagascarensis Tempère ex D.M. Williams, nov. sp. TYPE:— Madagascar (BM Adams 121 = specimen on Figure 26, holotype designated here) (isotypes: BM Adams 137, BM Adams 502, BM 56700, BM 62933). Description:—Cells solitary, radially symmetrical, with conspicuous marginal rimoportulae extending on to valve exterior in hyaline tubes, not reaching centre (annulus), terminating at valve edge in semi-circular slit. Numbers vary, 5–8. Annulus small, central, with rows of loculate puncta situated between marginal rimoportulae. Valves appear dissimilar (compare Figures 22–24, with 25 and 26).Published as part of Williams, David M., 2021, Notes on the diatom collection of the Natural History Museum, London (BM) II- IV. Some type specimens in the genus Aulacodiscus Ehrenberg and nomenclatural notes on Thumia Cleve ex F. B. Taylor, pp. 152-162 in Phytotaxa 480 (2) on page 157, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.480.2.4, http://zenodo.org/record/541601
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