1000 resultados para Lodge, Henry Cabot, 1850-1924.
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(Con't.) Washington's farewell address (1796) -- Treaty with France (1803) -- Treaty with Great Britain (1814) -- Arrangement as to the naval force to be respectively maintained on the American lakes (1817) -- Treaty with Spain (1819) -- The Monroe doctrine (1823) -- Treaty with Great Britain (1842) -- Treaty with Mexico (1848) -- Fugitive slave act (1850) -- Lincoln's first inaugural address (1861) -- Emancipation proclamation (The Batle of Gettysburg / by Frank Aretas Haskell -- Lincoln's Gettysburg address (1863) -- Proclamation of anmesty (1863) -- Lincoln's letter to Mrs. Bixby (1864) -- Terms of Lee's surrender at Appomattox (1865) -- Lee's farewell to his army (1865) -- Lincoln's second inaugural address (1865) -- Procdeclaring the insurrection at an end (1866) -- Treaty with Russia (1867) -- Annexation of the Hawaiian Islands (1898) -- Recognition on the indepence of Cuba (1898) -- Convention between the United States and the Republic of Panama (1904).
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Includes also remarks upon the life and character of Hon. Robert H. Foerderer, late a representative from Pennsylvania.
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v. 1. Phillis, by T. Lodge. Licia, by G. Fletcher.--v. 2. Delia, by S. Daniel. Diana, by H. Constable.--v. 3. Idea, by M. Drayton. Fidessa, by B. Griffin.--v. 4. Caelia, by F. Greville, Lord Brooke.
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Memoir of Henry Fitzmaurice Hallam, by Henry Summer Maine and Franklin Lushington.
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Horses pulling automobile out of mud. Photo album title: Detroit to San Francisco over Lincoln Highway. May 27-June 18, 1915. Henry B. Joy; A.F. Bement; E. Eisenhut
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top row: Ellsworth Gillard, Hugo H. Rose, Henry Ferenz, Robert Rice mgr., coach Barker
front row: George L. Defoe, George Meads, Ralph Doty
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Back Row (standing): Joseph Pickarski, Raymond Heym, Walter Kunow, Foster Hall, Harry Hawkins, Richard Dewey, Richard Babcock, William Heath, Philip Marion, Paul Samson, John Ryrholm, Todd Rockwell, Edgar Madsen, William Ullman, Robert Brown, ? Kurston, Harold Steele, Barney Koplin, Edliff Slaughter, Ernest Ratliff, Frederick Parker, Charles Grube, Howell White, William Herrnstein, Charles Munz, James K. Miller, Herbert Steger
Midle Row: H.S. Maentz, Harold MacGregor, Hupert Goebel, Floyd McCaffree, William McMillan, Lowell Palmer, Harlan Froemke, William Flora, Lyman Savage, Wilfred Kilpatrick, Victor Domhoff, Carl Stamman, Ben Friedman
Front Row: Thomas Edwards, Leo Hoffman, William Coventry, Kent McIntyre, Charles Sommers, Russell Davis, Henry Ferenz, Elmer Langguth, John Lovette, Dwight Kellar
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Back Row: head coach Gerald Barnes, Henry Johnson, Robert Rice, manager, Alfred Meilziner, assistant coach Matt Mann
Middle Row: Louis A. Vaupre, John L. Gow, captain John W. Kearns, Albert G. Seidman,
Front Row: Manfred G. Whittingham, Eric C. Mildner
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Supersedes the Occasional Bulletin of the Iowa Masonic Library, 1897
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"Published by order of the International Lodge of North America."
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This dissertation traces the ways in which nineteenth-century fictional narratives of white settlement represent “family” as, on the one hand, an abstract theoretical model for a unified and relatively homogenous British settler empire and on the other, a fundamental challenge to ideas about imperial integrity and transnational Anglo-Saxon racial identification. I argue that representations of transoceanic white families in nineteenth-century fictions about Australian settler colonialism negotiate the tension between the bounded domesticity of an insular English nation and the kind of kinship that spans oceans and continents as a result of mass emigration from the British isles to the United States, Canada, New Zealand, and the Australian colonies. As such, these fictions construct productive analogies between the familial metaphors and affective language in the political discourse of “Greater Britain”—-a transoceanic imagined community of British settler colonies and their “mother country” united by race and language—-and ideas of family, gender, and domesticity as they operate within specific bourgeois families. Concerns over the disruption of transoceanic families bear testament to contradictions between the idea of a unified imperial identity (both British and Anglo-Saxon), the proliferation of fractured local identities (such as settlers’ English, Irish Catholic, and Australian nationalisms), and the conspicuous absence of indigenous families from narratives of settlement. I intervene at the intersection of postcolonial literary criticism and gender theory by examining the strategic deployments of heteronormative kinship metaphors and metonymies in the rhetorical consolidation of settler colonial space. Settler colonialism was distinct from the “civilizing” domination of subject peoples in South Asia in that it depended on the rhetorical construction of colonial territory as empty space or as land occupied by nearly extinct “primitive” races. This dissertation argues that political rhetoric, travel narratives, and fiction used the image of white female bourgeois reproductive power and sentimental attachment as a technology for settler colonial success, embodying this technology both in the benevolent figure of the metropolitan “mother country” (the paternalistic female counter to the material realities of patriarchal and violent settler colonial practices) and in fictional juxtapositions of happy white settler fecund families with the solitary self-extinguishing figure of the black aboriginal “savage.” Yet even in the narratives where the continuity and coherence of families across imperial space is questioned—-and “Greater Britain” itself—-domesticity and heteronormative familial relations effectively rewrite settler space as white, Anglo-Saxon and bourgeois, and the sentimentalism of troubled European families masks the presence and genocide of indigenous aboriginal peoples. I analyze a range of novels and political texts, canonical and non-canonical, metropolitan and colonial. My introductory first chapter examines the discourse on a “Greater Britain” in the travel narratives of J.A. Froude, Charles Wentworth Dilke, and Anthony Trollope and in the Oxbridge lectures of Herman Merivale and J.R. Seeley. These writers make arguments for an imperial economy of affect circulating between Britain and the settler colonies that reinforces political connections, and at times surpasses the limits of political possibility by relying on the language of sentiment and feeling to build a transoceanic “Greater British” community. Subsequent chapters show how metropolitan and colonial fiction writers, including Charles Dickens, Anthony Trollope, Marcus Clarke, Henry Kingsley, and Catherine Helen Spence, test the viability of this “Greater British” economy of affect by presenting transoceanic family connections and structures straining under the weight of forces including the vast distances between colonies and the “mother country,” settler violence, and the transportation system.
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Universidade Estadual de Campinas . Faculdade de Educação Física
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Artificial reproduction and gamete fertilization were evaluated in Salminus hilarii wild and domesticated broodstocks. Wild and domesticated broodstocks were artificially induced to reproduction using a carp pituitary treatment. Four groups were considered: Group 1 (G1), fish caught in the wild maintained for three years in the same conditions as the domesticated broodstocks and spawned naturally; Group 2 (G2), broodstock born and raised in captivity and spawned naturally; Group 3 (G3), wild broodstocks, which were manually stripped for gamete collection and dry fertilization; and Group 4 (G4), domesticated males and females, also manually stripped. Oocytes, eggs, and larvae were sampled at different time intervals throughout embryonic development. Yolk sac absorption occurred approximately 24-29 h after hatching. Twenty-six h after hatching, the larvae mouths opened. Cannibalism was identified just 28-30 h after hatching. There was no morphological difference in embryonic development among all groups. The number of released eggs per gram of female was: G1: 83.3 ± 24.5 and G2: 103.8 ± 37.4; however, the fertilization success was lower in G2 (42.0 ± 6.37 %) compared with G1 (54.7 ± 3.02%) (P = 0.011). Hand-stripping of oocytes was not successful and the fertilization rate was zero. The reproduction of this species in captivity is viable, but it is necessary to improve broodstock management to enhance fertilization rates and obtain better fingerling production for restocking programs.
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This paper analyses the applicability of the main enterprise internationalization theories to the entry of the multinational corporations into Brazil, throughout five phases of Brazilian economy, from 1850 to nowadays. It seeks to verify the explanation power of each theory over the FDI flows in Brazil. It concludes that there is a contingency relation between the theories and the phases of the economy, and. it shows such relationship in a table. In addition, it concludes that the most powerful theory along the researched period was Dunning`s eclectic paradigm, mainly due to the Localization considerations. Theoretical propositions are put forward as a contribution to future research.