74,749 research outputs found
Wright, H D, SX11439
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/427402Surname: WRIGHT. Given Name(s) or Initials: H D. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: SX11439. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 38406.250485
Item: [2016.0049.59663] "Wright, H D, SX11439
Chronicles of Oklahoma
Article discusses the life and career of John D. Benedict, first United States superintendent of schools in Indian Territory. The position was mandated through the Curtis Act, and Muriel H. Wright provides historical context to the educator's life before including a transcription of the man's reminiscences in his role
Chronicles of Oklahoma
Article describes the life and career of Colonel Elias C. Boudinot, an attorney of the Cherokee Nation and Stand Watie's nephew. Muriel H. Wright provides context to the life of the Confederate Army officer and includes an excerpt of a tribute written by Boudinot's friend John D. Adams
Soils of western Wright Valley, Antarctica
Western Wright Valley, from Wright Upper Glacier to the western end of the Dais, can be divided into three broad geomorphic regions: the elevated Labyrinth, the narrow Dais which is connected to the Labyrinth, and the North and South forks which are bifurcated by the Dais. Soil associations of Typic Haplorthels/Haploturbels with ice-cemented permafrost at 70 cm. They are developed in situ in strongly weathered drift with very low surface boulder frequency and occur on the upper erosion surface of the Labyrinth and on the Dais. Typic Anhyorthels also occur at lower elevation on sinuous and patchy Wright Upper III drift within the forks. Salic Aquorthels exist only in the South Fork marginal to Don Juan Pond, whereas Salic Haplorthels occur in low areas of both South and North forks where any water table is> 50 cm. Most soils within the study area have an alkaline pH dominated by Na+ and Cl- ions. The low salt accumulation within Haplorthels/Haploturbels may be due to limited depth of soil development and possibly leaching
Transformation of the endostyle of the anadromous sea lamprey, Petromyzon-marinus L, during metamorphosis .2. Electron-microscopy
PT: J; CR: BARRINGTON EJW, 1956, Q J MICROSC SCI, V97, P393 BARRINGTON EJW, 1975, INTRO GENERAL COMP E BEAMISH FWH, 1975, J ZOOL, V177, P57 BENCOSME SA, 1959, J BIOPHYS BIOCHEM CY, V5, P508 CHENG H, 1974, AM J ANAT, V141, P537 CLEMENTSMERLINI M, 1960, J MORPHOL, V106, P337 COLEMAN R, 1968, GEN COMP ENDOCR, V10, P34 CORDIER AC, 1976, AM J ANAT, V146, P339 DAEMS WT, 1969, LYSOSOMES, V1, P64 EGEBERG J, 1965, Z ZELLFORSCH MIKROSK, V68, P102 ETKIN W, 1968, METAMORPHOSIS PROBLE, P313 FINSTAD J, 1964, J EXP MED, V120, P1151 FOX H, 1970, J EMBRYOL EXP MORPH, V24, P139 FOX H, 1973, Z ZELLFORSCH, V130, P371 FUJITA H, 1966, Z ZELLFORSCH MIKROSK, V73, P559 FUJITA H, 1968, GEN COMP ENDOCR, V11, P111 FUJITA H, 1969, Z ZELLFORSCH, V98, P525 FUJITA H, 1972, ARCH HISTOL JAPON, V34, P109 FUJITA H, 1975, ARCH HISTOL JPN, V37, P277 FUJITA H, 1975, INT REV CYTOL, V40, P197 GOOD RA, 1972, BIOL LAMPREYS, V2, P405 GORBMAN A, 1962, TXB COMP ENDOCRINOLO HELMINEN HJ, 1971, J ULTRASTRUCT RES, V36, P708 HENDERSON NE, 1971, GEN COMP ENDOCR, V16, P409 HILFER SR, 1964, J MORPHOL, V115, P135 HILFER SR, 1977, J CELL BIOL, V75, P446 HOHEISEL G, 1969, GEGENBAURS MORPHOL J, V114, P204 HOHEISEL G, 1970, MORPHOL JB, V114, P337 HOURDRY J, 1969, Z ZELLFORSCH MIKR AN, V101, P527 JAMIESON JD, 1977, INT CELL BIOL, P308 KLINCK GH, 1970, LAB INVEST, V22, P2 KRAENVZEL F, 1933, ARCH BIOL LIEGE, V44, P469 KRUPP PP, 1977, ANAT REC, V187, P495 LANZING WJR, 1959, STUDIES RIVER LAMPRE LEACH JW, 1939, J MORPHOL, V65, P549 LUFT JH, 1961, J BIOPHYS BIOCH CYTO, V9, P409 MANASEK FJ, 1969, J EMBRYOL EXP MORPH, V21, P271 MARINE D, 1913, J EXP MED, V17, P379 MILLONIG G, 1961, J APPL PHYS, V32, P1637 MOLLENHAUER HH, 1964, STAIN TECHNOL, V39, P111 MORRIS GP, 1979, CELL TISSUE RES, V196, P449 NEUENSCHWANDER P, 1972, Z ZELLFORSCH MIKROSK, V130, P553 NEVE P, 1965, J MICROSC-PARIS, V4, P811 NICKERSON PA, 1970, J CELL BIOL, V47, P277 NOVIKOFF AB, 1976, CELLS ORGANELLES NUNEZ EA, 1967, J CELL BIOL, V2, P404 NUNEZ EA, 1976, ANAT REC, V184, P133 OLIN P, 1970, ENDOCRINOLOGY, V87, P1000 OLIVEREAU M, 1952, ARCH ANAT MICROSC EX, V41, P1 OOI EC, 1976, CAN J ZOOL, V54, P1449 OOI EC, 1979, AM J ANAT, V154, P57 PEEK WD, 1979, J MORPHOL, V160, P143 PIPAN N, 1976, CYTOBIOLOGIE, V13, P435 POLLARD B, 1966, PHYLOGENY IMMUNITY, P88 REMY L, 1977, J ULTRASTRUCT RES, V61, P243 REYNOLDS ES, 1963, J CELL BIOL, V17, P208 ROITT IM, 1971, ESSENTIAL IMMUNOLOGY, P211 ROMERT P, 1973, Z ANAT ENTWICKLUNGS, V139, P319 SELJELID R, 1967, J ULTRASTRUCT RES, V17, P195 SELJELID R, 1967, J ULTRASTRUCT RES, V17, P401 SETOGUTI T, 1973, Z ZELLFORSCH MIKROSK, V137, P195 SHEPARD TH, 1967, J CLIN ENDOCR METAB, V27, P945 SHIVELY JN, 1969, AM J VET RES, V30, P219 STERBA G, 1953, WISS Z F SCHILLER MN, V3, P1 STERBA G, 1953, WISS Z F SCHILLER MN, V3, P239 STERBA G, 1961, INT REV GES HYDROBIO, V46, P105 STERBA G, 1962, HDB BINNENFISCHEREI, V3, P263 THIELE J, 1976, CELL TISSUE RES, V168, P133 WATSON ML, 1958, J BIOPHYS BIOCHEM CY, V4, P475 WESSELLS NK, 1971, SCIENCE, V171, P135 WETZEL BK, 1969, ENDOCRINOLOGY, V84, P563 WISSIG SL, 1960, J BIOPHYS BIOCHEM CY, V7, P419 WOLLMAN SH, 1969, LYSOSOMES BIOLOGY PA, V2, P483 WRIGHT G, 1978, AM J ANAT, V152, P263 WRIGHT GM, 1976, GEN COMP ENDOCR, V30, P243 WRIGHT GM, 1977, J EXP ZOOL, V202, P27 WRIGHT GM, 1978, THESIS U TORONTO, P70 YOUSON JH, 1977, CAN J ZOOL, V55, P469 YOUSON JH, 1979, CAN J ZOOL, V57, P1808 YOUSON JH, 1980, CAN J FISH AQUAT SCI, V37; NR: 80; TC: 21; J9: J MORPHOL; PG: 27; GA: KT943Source type: Electronic(1
On the writing, reading and publishing of digital stories
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to describe a study set up to investigate and map the landscape of digital writing today. A holistic perspective has been adopted involving writers, readers and publishers alike.
Design/methodology/approach – The research uses a qualitative approach and combines interviews and direct observations. In in-depth interviews 13 participants (four writers, four publishers, three readers and two on-line readers) were questioned for their opinions on issues related to writing, publishing and reading digital fiction. The three readers were also observed while interacting, for the first time, with three digital stories.
Findings – Results show that the area is still unsettled though much excitement surrounds experimentations and freedom of publishing online. Readers seem uneasy with the role of co-creators that writers want to assign them and prefer linear stories to more deconstructed ones. Writers like to experiment and combine multiple media and readers like to interact with multimedia stories; this seems to open interesting perspectives over interactive narrative. Publishers are not yet involved in digital writing and this is seen simultaneously as a blessing (unfiltering of innovative ideas) and a curse (lack of economical support, lack of quality selection). Despite disagreement and ambiguity all interviewees agree that digital fiction will come, likely prompted by new reading technology.
Originality/value – This paper is the first attempt to understand the phenomena of digital writing taking into consideration the perspectives of writers, readers and publishers simultaneously and comparing their different views
The Persistence of the R.A. Fisher-Sewall Wright Controversy
This paper considers recent heated debates led by Jerry A. Coyne and Michael J. Wade on issues stemming from the 1929-1962 R. A. Fisher-Sewall Wright controversy in population genetics. William B. Provine once remarked that the Fisher-Wright controversy is central, fundamental, and very influential. Indeed, it is also persistent. The argumentative structure of the recent (1997-2000) debates is analyzed with the aim of eliminating a logical conflict in them, viz., that the two “sides” in the debates have different aims and that, as such, they are talking past each other. Given a philosophical analysis of the argumentative structure of the debates, suggestions supportive of Wade’s work on the debate are made that are aimed, modestly, at putting the persistent Fisher-Wright controversy on the course to resolution
A 2 h periodic variation in the low-mass X-ray binary Ser X-1
Spectroscopy of the low-mass X-ray binary Ser X-1 using the Gran Telescopio Canarias have revealed a ?2 h periodic variability that is present in the three strongest emission lines. We tentatively interpret this variability as due to orbital motion, making it the first indication of the orbital period of Ser X-1. Together with the fact that the emission lines are remarkably narrow, but still resolved, we show that a main-sequence K dwarf together with a canonical 1.4 M? neutron star gives a good description of the system. In this scenario, the most likely place for the emission lines to arise is the accretion disc, instead of a localized region in the binary (such as the irradiated surface or the stream-impact point), and their narrowness is due instead to the low inclination (?10°) of Ser X-1
The Dayton-Wright Airplane Company organizational chart 1918
The photograph shows the organization chart for the Dayton-Wright Airplane Company in circa 1918. The chart is labeled with the names of the members of the company and their photographs. In the center at the top is pictured (from left to right) C. F. Kettering, H. E, Talbott Jr., H. E. Talbott, G. M. Williams. The far left of the photograph under the title Engineering is pictured - (from left to right) Orville Wright, J. M. Schoonmaker, H. S. Taylor, J. M. Jacobs, N. S. Clunet, L. C. Luneke, R. V. Hutchinson, H. M. Rinehart. Pictured in the center of the photograph under the title Manufacturing is -(from left to right) H. A. Fitzjohn, E. J. Tingle, F. W. Sutton, C. R. McLaughlin, W. S. Whittaker, F. W. Atkin, H. K. Hamilton, D. M. Dunwoodie, G. P. A. Stape, J. P. Henry, C. P. Nellis, R. J. King, J. L. Primmer, D. G. Calvert, B. J Van Doren, Harvey D. Geyer, J. H. Allen, W. F. Dupre, E. F. Bearce, J. E. Butz, G. Ramsey. Pictured on the left side of the photograph under the title Finance is (from left to right) G. H. Mead, C. J. Sherer, T. P. Gaddis, H. M. Howell, L. R. Scafe.https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/special_ms152_photographs/1058/thumbnail.jp
Transformation of mucocartilage to a definitive cartilage during metamorphosis in the sea lamprey, Petromyzon-marinus
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