246 results on 'Available in Library Collection'
Search Results
2. The University of Virginia Claude Moore Health Science Library Online Collections, available online at http://www.hsl.virginia.edu/historical/exhibits2.cfm
- Author
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Paul Ramírez
- Subjects
History ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,General Nursing - Published
- 2013
3. African Manuscripts - Manuscript Collections of Africana in Rhodes House Library, Oxford. Compiled by Louis B. Frewer. 1968. Pp. 100. Available from the Library, 20s. ($2.50) post free
- Author
-
null J. D. F.
- Subjects
History - Published
- 1969
4. PRIMÓRDIOS DA IOGA NO BRASIL, c. 1910-1920.
- Author
-
Rocha Dias, Andrea Calazans and Dias, Cleber
- Abstract
Copyright of Movimento (0104754X) is the property of Movimento, da Escola de Educacao, Fisica, Fisioterapia e Danca and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. PRIMÓRDIOS DA IOGA NO BRASIL, c. 1910-1920.
- Author
-
Rocha Dias, Andrea Calazans and Dias, Cleber
- Abstract
Copyright of Movimento (0104754X) is the property of Movimento, da Escola de Educacao, Fisica, Fisioterapia e Danca and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Historical Study for the Differences of Processing of Pinellia ternata Tuber Between China and Japan.
- Author
-
Liu, Yan, Ota, Misato, Fueki, Tsukasa, and Makino, Toshiaki
- Subjects
JAPANESE herbal medicine ,TUBERS ,CHINESE medicine ,HAN dynasty, China, 202 B.C.-220 A.D. ,QING dynasty, China, 1644-1912 - Abstract
Pinellia Tuber (the dried tuber of Pinellia ternata (Thunb.) Makino [Araceae]) (PT) is a crude drug used in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) and Japanese Kampo medicine. PT is subjected to additional processing before use in TCM because of its toxic, while the processing has not been used in Kampo medicine. The aim of this study is to clarify the reason why the differences about the processing of PT between TCM and Kampo medicine have been appeared. We investigated successive literatures published in China and in Japan from the Han dynasty to the modern age. The descriptions about the processing of PT in China had appeared since the Later Han dynasty as washing, and after that, various processing methods have been recorded, such as boiling, steaming, making cakes, and fermenting to prepare PT malt (PTM) with various drug additives. The objective of the processing for PT was not only to remove its toxicity but to change drug properties, and several kinds of processed PT had been developed to treat different types of "phlegm" in the Ming dynasty. The current Chinese Pharmacopoeia recommends the use of processed PT to avoid the toxicity, and registers unprocessed PT as well as three kinds of processed PT except for PTM which had been deleted in 2015 edition. These processing methods for PT have been established in the Qing dynasty. The oldest description in Japan was appeared in 1363, and the processing methods had been influenced by the literatures in the Song dynasty. After that, the processed PT in Japan had mainly been PTM until the 18th century. In 1738, Shuan Kagawa wrote that PT should not be processed because its pharmacological effects disappeared and the toxicity of PT disappeared by preparing its decoction without processing. Then, the processing of PT has been unpopular, and the Japanese Pharmacopoeia has registered PT since 1939 without any processing. Compared to TCM, Japanese Kampo medicine has tended to avoid ideologism based on traditional knowledge and to adopt positivism. This policy has reflected the differences in the processing of PT between Kampo medicine and TCM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Oregonscape
- Author
-
Tint, Mikki
- Subjects
History ,Regional focus/area studies - Abstract
The Portland Automobile Club was organized in 1905, and members spent their Sunday afternoons on organized auto tours to their clubhouse outside Portland and in sponsored races to show off [...]
- Published
- 2012
8. Northwestern Lake County hosts striking Fort Rock, among the least visited landmarks of Oregon
- Subjects
Antiquities -- Collections and collecting ,Petrogenesis -- Natural history ,Caves -- Collections and collecting ,History ,Regional focus/area studies ,Collections and collecting ,Natural history - Abstract
NORTHWESTERN LAKE COUNTY hosts striking Fort Rock, among the least visited landmarks of Oregon. A tuff ring, the formation was created over 100,000 years ago when hot magma encountered water-saturated [...]
- Published
- 2011
9. Vatican Library. (Notes and Comments)
- Subjects
History ,Philosophy and religion - Abstract
A set of three videocassettes on the Vatican Apostolic Library has been produced with the general title 'The Wonders of the Vatican Library.' The first cassette is on 'The Hall [...]
- Published
- 2003
10. Oregonscape
- Author
-
Tint, Mikki
- Subjects
History ,Regional focus/area studies - Abstract
EIGHT-YEAR-OLD Orytha 'Ryth' Gatch poses for her mother, Helen Plummer Gatch, with seven-year-old Asahel Bush IV in front of Asahel's grandfather's house--now known as the Bush House Museum --in Salem. [...]
- Published
- 2013
11. The Medieval Qaraite Calendar in the Diaspora
- Author
-
Vidro, Nadia
- Subjects
Karaites -- Social aspects -- History ,Community life -- History ,Philosophy and religion ,Science and technology ,Social aspects ,History - Abstract
One of the most salient divisions between medieval Rabbanites and Qaraites was in the field of calendar. Qaraites and Rabbanites disagreed on how to determine which years to intercalate (i.e., to extend with the insertion of a thirteenth month) in order to keep up with the seasons. While the Rabbanites used a fixed nineteen-year cycle of intercalation, the Qaraites maintained that intercalation must be based on the state of ripeness of barley crops in Palestine. This created problems for Qaraite communities outside of the Land of Israel, many of whom found it impossible to receive information about the state of crops in Palestine in time to celebrate Passover. This article investigates how medieval Qaraite Diaspora communities made a decision to intercalate. Based on a wide range of sources many of which were not previously discussed, it studies the Diaspora communities' approaches to empirical intercalation and provides an in-depth analysis of the Qaraites' attitude toward and use of mathematical methods, such as the method of the vernal equinox and the Rabbanite nineteen-year cycle of intercalations. The article also reflects on the attitude of Palestinian Qaraite ideologists toward the calendar situation in the Diaspora and argues that the division between Qaraites as adherents of an empirical intercalation vs. Rabbanites as followers of a fixed calculated scheme was never clear-cut when considered in the context of the entire Qaraite Jewish community, and of lived practice rather than ideology., Introduction One of the most salient divisions between medieval Rabbanites and Qaraites was in the field of calendar. The Rabbanite calendar was based on a fixed calculation. The Qaraites maintained [...]
- Published
- 2022
12. Determining the Location of the 22 May 1855 Chicago Area Tornado.
- Author
-
Lincoln, W. Scott, Ogorek, Rafal, Borchardt, Brett, and Heraty, Siobhan
- Subjects
TORNADOES ,METEOROLOGICAL services ,PUBLIC spaces ,GEOGRAPHIC information systems - Abstract
The number and location of tornadoes in the greater Chicago area is a topic of frequent interest among the media, public, and local government agencies served by the National Weather Service (NWS) Chicago Forecast Office. While accounts of tornadoes over the last several decades are generally clear, tornadoes occurring prior to 1950—especially those considered to be weak—are often more difficult to discern owing to limited corresponding detailed reports. As part of an effort to review and update all tornadoes known to have occurred within the modern-day boundaries of Chicago, NWS Chicago staff reviewed the 22 May 1855 tornado, which is regarded as the first to impact the city of Chicago. Multiple sources reported that the tornado occurred near the town of Jefferson, which eventually became the Jefferson Park neighborhood of Chicago. However, after reviewing multiple historical records, newspaper articles, property maps, and genealogical information, the actual location of the tornado was determined to have been in present-day Des Plaines. Confusion over the name "Jefferson" likely led to the misunderstanding that, until now, has been perpetuated through numerous reports and media accounts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. OPEN EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES IN HISTORY: A STATE-OF-THE-FIELD ESSAY
- Author
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Tsan, Katherine Foshko
- Subjects
History -- Study and teaching ,Education ,History ,Usage ,Methods - Abstract
As I learn about OER, the moral clarity of using materials that are entirely free and clear for pedagogical distribution is obvious and appealing. The pandemic has heightened an already [...]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Making history come alive. (Tech knowledge: new products ... hardware reviews ... opinions ... web sites)
- Author
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McCaffrey, Meg
- Subjects
United States. Library of Congress -- Evaluation -- History ,Information services industry -- Evaluation -- History ,Web sites -- Evaluation ,Information services -- Evaluation -- History ,United States history -- History ,Education ,Library and information science ,Publishing industry ,Company Web site/Web page ,Information services industry ,Evaluation ,History - Abstract
The Library of Congress's American Memory Historical Collections site has two new online exhibits available at lcweb.loc.gov. One collection, 'Emile Berliner and the Birth of the Recording Industry,' talks about [...]
- Published
- 2002
15. OregonScape
- Author
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Tint, Mikki
- Subjects
Clatsop County, Oregon -- Accidents ,Shipwrecks -- History -- Location ,History ,Regional focus/area studies ,Accidents ,Location - Abstract
As she lies divested of every attribute of advantage, disfigured and forsaken, she is but a startling type of that more dreadful wreck, the man of power, or grace, and [...]
- Published
- 2011
16. Archives, Rhetorical Absence, and Critical Imagination: Examining Black Women's Mental Health Narratives at Virginia's Central State Hospital.
- Author
-
Jones, Natasha N. and Williams, Miriam F.
- Subjects
WOMEN'S mental health ,BLACK women ,MENTAL health facilities ,PSYCHIATRIC hospitals ,HISTORICAL libraries - Abstract
Introduction: This article examines the rhetorical implications of archiving technical documents by studying the erasure of Black women's mental health narratives in Virginia's Central State Mental Hospital in the late 1800s and early 1900s. This article seeks to examine how historical mental health documents characterize (or fail to characterize) Black women and their mental health. About the case: We examine Black women's mental health experiences through absences in the annual reports from Central State Hospital in Virginia (formerly Central State Lunatic Asylum for Colored Insane). Situating the case: There is a dearth of work related to the unique experiences that Black women face when dealing with mental health challenges coupled with or compounded by a legacy of misogynoir. Methods/approach: We offer an inventive approach for reading rhetorical absences and provide guiding questions for employing the critical archival inquiry methodology. Results/discussion: In taking on this endeavor to learn more about how Black women's mental health was represented in historical archives, we learned a great deal, not from the text on the page of the documents but from the text that was missing from those documents. Conclusions: Technical communication scholars, especially those with an interest in inclusion and justice, must adjust their methodological orientation and their approaches to historical and archival research to include an exploration of what is missing from the archives. Technical and professional communicators have a unique skill set that is ideal for reading through absences and erasures in both contemporary and historical documents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. THE EPA AS A CATALYST FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL LAW
- Author
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Percival, Robert V.
- Subjects
United States. Environmental Protection Agency -- History -- Powers and duties ,International environmental law -- History -- Evaluation ,Air pollution control -- Laws, regulations and rules -- History ,International cooperation -- Environmental aspects -- History -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Law ,Government regulation ,Powers and duties ,Evaluation ,History ,Environmental aspects ,Laws, regulations and rules - Abstract
CONTENTS INTRODUCTION I. THE EPA AND THE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT: A HISTORY A. Establishment of the EPA B. The 1972 Stockholm Conference C. Environmental Cooperation with Other Countries D. The Ford [...]
- Published
- 2020
18. YAKUS AND THE ADMINISTRATIVE STATE
- Author
-
Conde, James R. and Greve, Michael S.
- Subjects
New Deal, 1933-1939 -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Research ,Administrative discretion -- History -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Remedies ,Exhaustion of administrative remedies -- History -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Research ,Price regulations -- History -- Research ,Yakus v. United States (321 U.S. 414 (1944)) ,Emergency Price Control Act of 1942 ,Law ,Political science ,Government regulation ,Research ,History ,Remedies ,Laws, regulations and rules - Abstract
INTRODUCTION I. THE OUTWORKS OF AN ELABORATE STRUCTURE: ADMINISTRATIVE LAW, CIRCA 1940 II. THE NEW DEAL GOES TO WAR A. The Emergency Price Control Act: Origins and Structure B. The [...]
- Published
- 2019
19. EUROPE'S FINEST FOOTBALL MUSEUMS: Explore the history of football in Europe and beyond through these impressive institutions
- Subjects
Soccer -- United Kingdom ,Sports associations ,Museums ,History ,Fédération Internationale de Football Association - Abstract
1 MUSEO DEL CALCIO FLORENCE, ITALY Based at Coverciano, the technical headquarters of the Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio (FIGC), which in English translates to the Italian Football Federation, the Museo [...]
- Published
- 2022
20. Best Historical Materials 2012.
- Author
-
Hootman, Jennifer, Marshall, Jerilyn, Morris, Sara E., Sherman, Jacob, Wayman, Matthew J., Widder, Agnes Haigh, Wilke, Mary, and Wyant, Nicholas
- Subjects
- *
HISTORICAL source material , *DIGITIZATION of library materials , *WAR of 1812 , *AMERICAN Civil War, 1861-1865 , *COMPUTER network resources , *HISTORY - Abstract
Brief reviews for multiple web sites and internet references for historical materials made available in 2012 are presented, including the "War of 1812 in the Collections of the Lilly Library," found at http://collections.libraries.iub.edu/warof1812, "Baltimore 68: Riots and Rebirth. Special Collections University of Baltimore," found at http://archives.ubalt.edu/bsr, and "Civil War Diaries and Letters. University of Iowa Libraries," found at http://digital.lib.uiowa.edu/cwd.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Playing in the Past: A History of Games, Toys, and Puzzles in North American Libraries.
- Author
-
Nicholson, Scott
- Subjects
LIBRARY public services ,HISTORY of libraries ,ACADEMIC libraries ,HISTORY of library science ,LIBRARY users ,CHESS clubs ,EDUCATIONAL games ,GAMES -- Social aspects ,HISTORY - Abstract
Games and other forms of play are used in today's libraries to attract underserved patrons, to introduce patrons to other library resources and services, and to facilitate engagement between library patrons. While many perceive gaming as a new library service, gaming services have been part of librarianship since the nineteenth century through chess clubs. During the Great Depression, libraries supported patrons with puzzle contests and developed circulating toy and game collections. Academic libraries built game collections for research and classroom needs, while school libraries collected and facilitated educational games to aid teachers. Video games have been used in libraries to help patrons learn to use technology and to bring groups of patrons together to enjoy shared experiences. The goal of this article is to demonstrate the different ways in which libraries have used games, toys, and puzzles over the last 150 years through both collections and services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. SELF-DEPORTATION NATION
- Author
-
Park, K-Sue
- Subjects
Deportation -- History -- Demographic aspects -- Methods ,Native American relocation -- History -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Methods ,Preemption (Legislative power) -- History -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Usage ,Group dominance -- Political aspects -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Usage ,Race discrimination -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Political aspects -- Influence ,Law ,Government regulation ,History ,Demographic aspects ,Methods ,Laws, regulations and rules ,Usage ,Political aspects ,Influence - Abstract
"Self-deportation" is a concept to explain the removal strategy of making life so unbearable for a group that its members will leave a place. The term is strongly associated with recent state and municipal attempts to "attack every aspect of an illegal alien's life," including the ability to find employment and housing, drive a vehicle, make contracts, and attend school. However, self-deportation has a longer history, one that predates and made possible the establishment of the United States. As this Article shows, American colonists pursued this indirect approach to remove native peoples as a prerequisite for establishing and growing their settlements. The new nation then adopted this approach to Indian removal and debated using self-deportation to remove freed slaves; later, states and municipalities embraced self-deportation to keep blacks out of their jurisdictions and drive out the Chinese. After the creation of the individual deportation system, the logic of self-deportation began to work through the threat of direct deportation. This threat burgeoned with Congress's expansion of the grounds of deportability during the twentieth century and affects the lives of an estimated 22 million unauthorized persons in the United States today. This Article examines the mechanics of self-deportation and tracks the policy's development through its application to groups unwanted as members of the American polity. The approach works through a delegation of power to public and private entities who create subordinating conditions for a targeted group. Governments have long used preemption as a tool to limit the power they cede to these entities. In the United States, this pattern of preemption establishes federal supremacy in the arena of removal: Cyclically, courts have struck down state and municipal attempts to adopt independent self-deportation regimes, and each time, the executive and legislative branches have responded by building up the direct deportation system. The history of self-deportation shows that the specific property interests driving this approach to removal shifted after abolition, from taking control of lands to controlling labor by placing conditions upon presence. This Article identifies subordination as a primary mode of regulating migration in America, which direct deportations both supplement and fuel. It highlights the role that this approach to removal has played in producing the landscape of uneven racial distributions of power and property that is the present context in which it works. It shows that recognizing self-deportation and its relationship to the direct deportation system is critical for understanding the dynamics of immigration law and policy as a whole., CONTENTS INTRODUCTION I. HISTORICAL PRECEDENTS OF SELF-DEPORTATION A. Indian Removal in the Colonies: An Indirect Strategy that Obscured Its Own Aim B. U.S. Removal Policy During the Early Republic 1. [...]
- Published
- 2019
23. Early motion picture
- Author
-
Tint, Mikki
- Subjects
Sill, Jesse ,Cinematographers ,History ,Regional focus/area studies - Abstract
EARLY MOTION PICTURE photographers had to have sound nerves as well as an eye for the interesting and newsworthy. Their heavy wooden cameras had only one lens, so getting a [...]
- Published
- 2011
24. People have been playing
- Author
-
Tint, Mikki
- Subjects
History ,Regional focus/area studies - Abstract
Caption: PEOPLE HAVE BEEN PLAYING baseball in Portland since the early pioneers established the city in the mid-nineteenth century. The area's first organized team was even called the Pioneers. Several [...]
- Published
- 2011
25. Necessity is the mother of invention: William Stewart Halsted’s addiction and its influence on the development of residency training in North America.
- Author
-
Wright Jr., James R. and Schachar, Norman S.
- Subjects
ADDICTIONS ,INVENTIONS ,MOTHERS ,INFLUENCE ,ANESTHESIA -- History ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,SURGERY practice ,HISTORY ,INTERNSHIP programs ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists - Abstract
Summary: William Stewart Halsted developed a novel residency training program at Johns Hopkins Hospital that, with some modifications, became the model for surgical and medical residency training in North America. While performing anesthesia research early in his career, Halsted became addicted to cocaine and morphine. This paper dissects how his innovative multi-tier residency program helped him hide his addiction while simultaneously providing outstanding patient care and academic training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. How ya gonna get 'em back in the stacks?
- Author
-
Rockwood, Irving E.
- Subjects
University and college libraries -- Management ,Collection development (Libraries) ,Periodical publishing -- Aims and objectives -- History ,Library and information science ,Literature/writing ,Company business management ,Management ,Aims and objectives ,History - Abstract
When Choice was founded in 1963-64, its mission and intended audience were laudably clear and uncomplicated. That mission was to identify and review books suitable for college libraries. The intended [...]
- Published
- 2009
27. An Early Attempt at Flight
- Author
-
Lederle, Cheryl
- Subjects
Engineers -- Aims and objectives ,Human powered aircraft -- Design and construction -- History ,Ornithopters -- Design and construction -- History ,Education ,Science and technology ,Design and construction ,Aims and objectives ,History - Abstract
Orville and Wilbur Wright are known as the brothers who first solved the problem of powered, controlled, and sustained human flight, but few remember the inventors who tried but didn't [...]
- Published
- 2018
28. Recorded history meets geologic history in the Columbia River Gorge
- Author
-
Tint, Mikki
- Subjects
Columbia River Gorge -- Natural history ,Gorges -- Natural history ,History ,Regional focus/area studies ,Natural history - Abstract
RECORDED HISTORY MEETS geologic history in the Columbia River Gorge. Millions of years ago, flows of volcanic basalt covered the landscape, then Ice Age floods carved a channel through the [...]
- Published
- 2008
29. OregonScape
- Author
-
Tint, Mikki
- Subjects
Oregon -- Natural history ,Coasts -- Natural history ,History ,Regional focus/area studies ,Natural history - Abstract
Oregon has many geologic landmarks: Crater Lake, Mount Hood, the Columbia River Gorge, Fort Rock, and others. They were formed so long ago that most people think of them as [...]
- Published
- 2008
30. In Writing and in Sound
- Author
-
Sabiha Göloğlu
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,History ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,Ottoman empire ,Ancient history ,Sound (geography) - Abstract
Copies of Dalāʾil al-Khayrāt (Proofs of Good Deeds) by the Moroccan Sufi saint Muḥammad b. Sulaymān al-Jazūlī (d. 870/1465) were in high demand in the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Ottoman Empire. This required producing manuscripts in large numbers and, later, printing the text. These mostly lithographic copies and corpora of the Dalāʾil al-Khayrāt, when combined with references to biographical dictionaries, inheritance records, inventories, library catalogues, and endowment deeds, reveal a great deal of information about the public and private prevalence of the text, within and beyond the empire. The Dalāʾil al-Khayrāt appealed to many individuals, from Ottoman sultans to royal women, and from madrasa students to members of the learned class. Its copies were endowed to mosques and libraries, held in different book collections of the Topkapi palace, and were available from booksellers. Be it silently or aloud, the Dalāʾil al-Khayrāt could be read in private homes and in mosques from Istanbul to Medina, a feature of pious soundscapes across the empire.
- Published
- 2021
31. RISE AND FALL
- Author
-
McCallister, Kathleen
- Subjects
Collection development (Libraries) -- Forecasts and trends ,Border security -- Analysis ,Walls -- History -- Social aspects ,Fortifications -- History ,Library and information science ,Market trend/market analysis ,Social aspects ,Analysis ,History ,Forecasts and trends - Abstract
The principles of a barrier wall are simple. On one side are yourself and the things you wish to defend and on the other are the dangers you wish to [...]
- Published
- 2019
32. PERSONAL BOOK COLLECTION OF THE HISTORIAN, ARCHAEOLOGIST, NUMISMAT, PROFESSOR OF THE ODESSA UNIVERSITY P. KARYSHKOVSKYI–IKAR IN THE STOCKS OF THE SCIENTIFIC LIBRARY OF THE ODESSA I. I. MECHNIKOV NATIONAL UNIVERSITY
- Author
-
T. M. Bykova and N. M. Kupriyanova
- Subjects
Numismatics ,History ,Ukrainian ,language ,Black sea ,Middle Ages ,Scientific literature ,Commission ,Archaeology ,Byzantine architecture ,language.human_language ,Epigraphy - Abstract
The main purpose of the article is a subject-thematic analysis of the personal book collection of an outstanding Odessa historian-antiquarian, specialist in numismatics, Greek and Latin epigraphy of the Northern Black Sea littoral, Byzantine scholar, brilliant lecturer, professor of Odessa I. I. Mechnikov National University, Head of the Department of History of the Ancient World and the Middle Ages Petr Yosypovych Karyshkovskyi-Ikar (1921–1988) held in the stocks of the Scientific Library. The article tells the story of the delivery of the personal book collection to the Scientific Library of Odessa I. I. Mechnikov National University in 2019. The collection contains 208 units of periodicals, 10 pictorial units, there are also cartographic atlases (6 units). The main part of the collection (1710 units) consists of books on historical sciences mainly on archeology, numismatics, history of the ancient world and Byzantium. Reference editions (38 units) as well as materials of domestic and international conferences (29 units) make an important part of the collection. Special attention is paid to some rare and valuable publications of the first half of the 20th century, such as the Bulletin of the Odessa Commission of Local Lore at the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences and the Chersonese Collection. It can be noted that this collection is of great importance for the research and educational process of the university, as it contains important books on historical and other sciences carefully selected by the owner, as well as foreign scientific literature, which has not been republished and sometimes is not available in Ukrainian libraries. The collection also gives an idea of the range of scientific interests of its owner.
- Published
- 2021
33. In search of C.B. wade, research director and labour historian, 1944-1950
- Author
-
Frank, David
- Subjects
Historians -- Social aspects ,Labor movement -- History ,Coal miners ,Business ,Human resources and labor relations ,Business, international ,Social aspects ,History - Abstract
HE DROVE INTO GLACE BAY OVER DIRT ROADS, through clouds of coal dust and past rows of housing in disrepair. It was a "bleak and dreary scene," he later recalled, [...]
- Published
- 2017
34. The judicial presumption of police expertise
- Author
-
Lvovsky, Anna
- Subjects
Presumptions (Law) -- Research -- History -- Analysis ,Expert evidence -- Research -- History -- Analysis ,Police officers -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Powers and duties -- Evidence ,Expertise -- Research -- Influence ,Judicial bias -- Research -- Analysis ,Searches and seizures -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Evidence ,Law ,Government regulation ,Influence ,Powers and duties ,Analysis ,Research ,Evidence ,History ,Laws, regulations and rules - Abstract
This Article examines the unrecognized origins and scope of the judicial presumption of police expertise: the notion that trained, experienced officers develop insight into crime sufficiently rarefied and reliable to justify deference from courts. That presumption has been widely criticized in Fourth Amendment analysis. Yet the Fourth Amendment is in fact part of a much broader constellation of deference, one that begins outside criminal procedure and continues past it. Drawing on judicial opinions, appellate records, trial transcripts, police periodicals, and other archival materials, this Article argues that courts in the mid-twentieth century invoked police expertise to expand police authority in multiple areas of the law. They certified policemen as expert witnesses on criminal habits; they deferred to police insights in evaluating arrests and authorizing investigatory stops; and they even credited police knowledge in upholding criminal laws challenged for vagueness, offering the officer's trained judgment as a check against the risk of arbitrary enforcement. Complicating traditional accounts of judicial deference as a largely instrumental phenomenon, this Article argues that courts in the midcentury in fact came to reappraise police work as producing rare and reliable "expert" knowledge. And it identifies at least one explanation for that shift in the folds and interconnections between the courts' many diverse encounters with the police in these years. From trials to suppression hearings to professional activities outside the courtroom, judges experienced multiple sites of unique exposure to the rhetoric and evidence of the police's expert claims. These encounters primed judges to embrace police expertise not only through their deliberative content, but also their many structural biases toward police knowledge. This development poses important and troubling consequences for the criminal justice system, deepening critiques of police judgment in criminal procedure and raising novel concerns about the limits of judicial reasoning about police practices., CONTENTS INTRODUCTION I. THE PROFESSIONALIZATION MOVEMENT A. Bureaucracy and Individual Expertise B. Police Academies and the Semiotics of Crime C. Police Reformers and the Courts D. The Public Limits of [...]
- Published
- 2017
35. Black Society in Spanish Florida
- Author
-
HOFFMAN, PAUL E.
- Subjects
History ,Regional focus/area studies - Abstract
Black Society in Spanish Florida. By Jane Landers. Foreword by Peter H. Wood. Blacks in the New World. (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, c. 1999. Pp. xvi, 390. [...]
- Published
- 2001
36. Jewish Religious Music in Nineteenth-century America.
- Author
-
Planer, John H.
- Subjects
CHURCH music ,JEWISH music ,COMMUNITY music ,HISTORY ,SACRED vocal music ,HYMNALS - Published
- 2020
37. Aetiological doctrines and prevalence of pellagra: 18th century to middle 20th century.
- Author
-
Viljoen, Margaretha, Bipath, Priyesh, and Roos, Johannes L.
- Subjects
PELLAGRA ,ETIOLOGY of diseases ,DEFICIENCY diseases ,NIACIN ,CORN breeding ,SKIN inflammation ,PUBLIC health ,HISTORY - Abstract
The article discusses the pellagra, a nutrition-deficiency disease, which is caused by dermatological and gastrointestinal and neuropsychiatric manifestations. It is noted that pellagra is the syndrome of a severe deficiency of the water-soluble vitamin niacin and its symptoms include dermatitis, diarrhoea and dementia. Topics include the history of the disease, diagnosis of Pellagra in South Africa among Zulu rebel prisoners in 1906 and the link between maize and pellagra.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Eating history: a United States history project
- Author
-
Lewis, Christopher
- Subjects
History education -- Methods ,United States history -- Study and teaching ,Education ,History ,Study and teaching ,Methods - Abstract
Our lives are enlivened by sensory experience. Memories are constructed with the building blocks of what we see, touch, taste, smell, and hear. Learning occurs best when our minds and [...]
- Published
- 2015
39. Right to the Source: exploring science and history with the library of congress
- Author
-
Smith, Trey
- Subjects
Cartographers -- Works ,Education ,Science and technology ,Design and construction ,Works ,History - Abstract
"Texting" in the 19th Century Texting around the world may seem like a recent innovation, but real-time electronic communication between continents actually started more than a century and a half [...]
- Published
- 2016
40. The Intersection between Real and Virtual in Contemporaneity through 3D modeling for the São João da Bahia Theater in Brazil.
- Author
-
GOMES, Maria Antonia Lima
- Subjects
THREE-dimensional modeling ,COGNITIVE psychology ,DIALOGISM (Literary analysis) - Abstract
This article is the result of the experience as a teacher and historian, and especially of the doctoral thesis, defended in the year 2017, through the Graduate Program in Education and Contemporaneity at the State University of Bahia, construction of a 3D modeling solution for the São João da Bahia Theater, considered as a pole and reflection of the praxis of the Savior of the Nineteenth and Twentieth centuries. The conception was developed from the problem of the inexistence of a modeling in the socio-constructivist perspective for the São João da Bahia Theater. In this way, the research aimed at possibilities for the subject, understood here as intellectual in the Gramscian perspective, to be a historian of oneself (subject subject), to build new knowledge (metacognition) through meaningful learning, mediated by the practice of visitation and interaction with the museum proposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
41. ARCHIVING THE PAST, DEFINING THE PRESENT: OPEN SOCIETY ARCHIVES, BUDAPEST.
- Author
-
Kharkina, Anna
- Subjects
HISTORY of archives ,PUBLIC relations ,RUSSIAN history ,HISTORY - Published
- 2017
42. THE FIRST POLISH CHILDREN'S MAGAZINES (1824-1830).
- Author
-
KOLASA, WŁADYSŁAW MAREK
- Subjects
CHILDREN'S periodicals ,PERIODICAL publishing ,PROGRESSIVE education ,CONTENT analysis ,THEMATIC approach in education - Abstract
Copyright of Media Research / Zeszyty Prasoznawcze is the property of Jagiellonian University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. THE COTTON TEXTILE MACHINE INDUSTRY.
- Author
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Lincoln, Jonathan T.
- Subjects
TEXTILE machinery ,INDUSTRIES ,COTTON machinery industry ,TEXTILE machinery industry ,INDUSTRIAL concentration ,BUSINESS conditions ,COTTON textile industry equipment ,ECONOMIC stabilization ,UNITED States manufacturing industries ,HISTORY ,HISTORY of industries - Abstract
The article focuses on the economic state of the cotton textile machine industry in the U.S. and its attempts at stabilization. The author gives a brief history of the textile industry in the U.S. and how it spawned the textile machine building industry in the mid 1800's. Particular focus is given to the start up of the Saco-Lowell Shops in New England, which the author uses as an example of a firm that recently consolidated all its plants into one location. According to the author, the Saco-Lowell Shops' history is representative of many other textile machine building industries.
- Published
- 1932
44. Letters of Medieval Women
- Author
-
Hicks, Michael
- Subjects
Letters of Medieval Women (Book) ,Books -- Book reviews ,History ,Regional focus/area studies - Abstract
ed. Anne Crawford (Stroud: Sutton Publishing, 2002: pp. 262. 20 £). This edition conveniently republishes 104 letters from women between 1130 and 1506 otherwise available only in manuscript, in antiquarian [...]
- Published
- 2003
45. Türkiye Çocuk Hekimliğinin İlk Dergisi: La Pédiatrıe En Turquie / Türkiye'de Emraz-ı Etfal
- Author
-
DİNÇ, Gülten and ETKER, Şeref
- Subjects
Tarih ,History ,G.B.Violi,Turkey,pediatrics,children’s hospital,medical journal,vaccination,Italy ,G.B. Violi,Türkiye,çocuk hekimliği,pediatri,çocuk hastanesi,tıp dergisi,aşılama,İtalya - Abstract
Dr. Giovanni Battisa Violi (Modena 1849–İstanbul 1928), who practiced pediatrics in Turkey for more than fifty years, was the founder of the first vaccine institute (Etablissement Vaccinogène, 1881), as well as the first children’s hospital (l’Hôpital SaintGeorges pour les Enfants Malades, 1895) in the Ottoman Empire. Dr. Violi established a new children’s hospital in Istanbul in 1905 (l’Hôpital International des Enfants à Chichli), and published a monthly journal for child health (consisting of two separate parts in French and Turkish) entitled: La Pédiatrie en Turquie / Türkiye’de Emrazi Etfal between 1909 and 1914.The periodical edited by Dr. Violi displayed an international editorial board of renowned pediatricians from Europe (Ausset, Baginsky, Bokay, Escherich, Fischl, Hutinel, Monti, and others), and prominent local physicians from different communities. The journal aimed at promoting stateoftheart knowledge in child health, addressing both professionals and parents. Another equally important objective of La Pédiatrie en Turquie / Türkiye’de Emrazi Etfal was to publicise the humanitarian work accomplished in the children’s hospital under Dr. Violi’s direction. The journal included health and mortality statistics issued by the Medical Office (Conseil de Santé) for the Ottoman capital, a world review of the pediatric literature, notes on therapeutics, medical and child care consultations with mothers, as well as articles on clinical research, some of them being of historical significance.The publication of La Pédiatrie en Turquie / Türkiye’de Emrazi Etfal was interrupted by international political events in 1911, and the enterprise came to an end with the outbreak of World War I in 1914. Extensive research conducted todate has revealed that a complete collection is not available in libraries. The table of contents of the collated copies has been appended for this reason. Also noteworthy is the fact that the publication of this pioneering journal (in French and Turkish) came much earlier than English periodicals in pediatric medicine., Dr. Giovanni Battisa Violi (Modena 1849–İstanbul 1928), who practiced pediatrics in Turkey for more than fifty years, was the founder of the firstvaccine institute (Etablissement Vaccinogène, 1881), as well as the firstchildren’s hospital (l’Hôpital SaintGeorges pour les Enfants Malades, 1895) in the Ottoman Empire. Dr. Violi established a new children’s hospital in Istanbul in 1905 (l’Hôpital International des Enfants à Chichli), and published amonthly journal for child health (consisting of two separate parts in French and Turkish) entitled: La Pédiatrie en Turquie / Türkiye’de Emrazi Etfal between 1909 and 1914.The periodical edited by Dr. Violi displayed an international editorial board of renowned pediatricians from Europe (Ausset, Baginsky, Bokay, Escherich, Fischl, Hutinel, Monti, and others), and prominent local physicians from different communities. The journal aimed at promoting stateoftheart knowledge in child health, addressing both professionals and parents. Anotherequally important objective of La Pédiatrie en Turquie / Türkiye’de Emrazi Etfal was to publicise the humanitarian work accomplished in the children’s hospital under Dr. Violi’s direction. The journal included health and mortality statistics issued by the Medical Office (Conseil de Santé) for the Ottoman capital, a world review of the pediatric literature, notes on therapeutics, medical and child care consultations with mothers, as well as articles on clinical research, some of them being of historical significance.The publication of La Pédiatrie en Turquie / Türkiye’de Emrazi Etfal was interrupted by international political events in 1911, and the enterprisecame to an end with the outbreak of World War I in 1914. Extensive research conducted todate has revealed that a complete collection is not available in libraries. The table of contents of the collated copies has been appended for this reason. Also noteworthy is the fact that the publication of this pioneering journal (in French and Turkish) came much earlier than English periodicals in pediatric medicine.
- Published
- 2004
46. Parchman women write the blues? What became of black women's prison music in Mississippi in the 1930s
- Author
-
Shankar, Shobana
- Subjects
Women prisoners -- Works ,Music, Black -- History ,Musicology -- Analysis ,Arts and entertainment industries ,Music ,Analysis ,Works ,History - Abstract
If I were a catfish swimming deep dawn in the see I could have all these Parchman men fishing after me. ... When a woman takes the blues she goes [...]
- Published
- 2013
47. The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Folktales and Fairy Tales.
- Author
-
Hitchcock, Eloise
- Subjects
FAIRY tales ,NONFICTION ,HISTORY - Abstract
A book review is presented for "The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Folktales and Fairy Tales," edited by Donald Haase.
- Published
- 2008
48. Letters to Lucy Johnston: addressing the need for literature on the Kansas prairies
- Author
-
Weaver, Diana
- Subjects
Kansas -- Educational aspects ,Association executives -- Beliefs, opinions and attitudes -- Records and correspondence ,Women's organizations -- Social aspects -- Services ,Women -- Societies, clubs, etc. ,Libraries -- Social aspects -- Services ,History ,Library and information science ,Educational aspects ,Beliefs, opinions and attitudes ,Social aspects ,Services ,Records and correspondence - Abstract
A majority, of the pioneer settlers of Kansas migrated from cities in the eastern United States. A profound hardship to the newcomers was the lack of books. Women's clubs quickly [...]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. DIGITIZATION WORK AT THE LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES OF THE BENEDICTINE MONASTERY IN RAJHRAD.
- Author
-
RICHTROVÁ, EVA
- Subjects
BENEDICTINE monasteries ,DIGITIZATION of archival materials ,HISTORY - Abstract
The NAKI project "The Benedictine Monastery in Rajhrad as a Cultural Phenomenon", whose main aim is cataloguing books from the historic monastery library hall and compiling the history and cultural influence of this prominent Moravian monastic institution, involves digitization of title pages of catalogued books, collections of graphic art and photographs, maps and atlases, as well as archival documents from the property of the Benedictine Abbey in Rajhrad. Digital copies of all documents, along with detailed catalogue records, have been made available online through the catalogues Aleph and VuFind, web storage Imageserver and the digital library Kramerius of the Moravian Library in Brno. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
50. The Prehistory of Serendipity, from Bacon to Walpole.
- Author
-
Silver, Sean
- Subjects
SERENDIPITY ,SCIENTIFIC terminology ,EMPIRICISM ,TERMS & phrases ,HISTORY ,EIGHTEENTH century ,SIXTEENTH century ,SEVENTEENTH century - Abstract
During the past four decades there has developed a burgeoning literature on the concept of serendipity, the name for sudden insights or conceptual breakthroughs that occur by chance or accident. Studies repeatedly note that it was Horace Walpole, the eighteenth-century man of letters, who coined the word. None of them, however, notice that Walpole' s term is itself indebted to a much older tradition, invoking a formula developed by Francis Bacon. Recovering the prehistory of the term suggests that "serendipity," rather than being a name for a special mode of discovery invented by Walpole, has all along accompanied empiricism as the name for an essential gap in its epistemology. Serendipity bears directly on the "induction problem," or what has more recently been called the "conceptual leap." Though Walpole gave it its current name, versions of the concept have all along isolated a critical gap in the method of the sciences inaugurated by Bacon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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