994 resultados para Snelus, George James, 1837-1906.
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Title in red and black: title vignettes.
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"Bibliography of selected references": p. 607-609.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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1. Maladies microbiennes en général. -- 2. Fièvres éruptives. -- 3. Fièvre typhoïde. -- 4. Maladies communes à l'homme et aux animaux. -- 5. Paludisme et trypanosomiase. -- 6. Maladies exotiques. -- 7. Maladies vénériennes. -- 8. Rhumatismes. -- 9. Grippe, coqueluche, oreillons, diphtérie. -- 10. Streptococcie, staphylococcie, pneumococcie, colibacillose. -- 10. Septicémies: streptococcie ..., 1922. -- 11. Intoxications. -- 12. Maladies de la nutrition. -- 13. Cancer. -- 14. Maladies de la peau. -- 15. Maladies de la bouche, du pharynx et de l'oesophage. -- 16. Maladies de l'estomac. -- 17. Maladies de l'intestin. -- 18. Maladies du péritoine. -- 19. Maladies du foie et de la rate. -- 20. Maladies des glandes salivaires et du pancréas. -- 21. Maladies des reins. -- 22. Maladies des organes génito-urinaires de l'homme et de la femme. -- 23. Maladies du coeur. -- 24. Maladies des artères et de l'aorte. -- 25. Maladies des veines et des lymphatiques. -- 27. Maladies du nez et du larynx. -- 28. Sémiologie de l'appareil respiratoire. -- 29. Maladies des bronches et des poumons. -- 30. Maladies des plèvres et du médiastin. -- 31. Sémiologie nerveuse. -- 32. Maladies du cerveau. -- 33. Maladies de l'isthme de l'encéphale. -- 34. Maladies des méninges. -- 35. Maladies de la moelle épiniere. -- 37. Névroses. -- 38. Maladies des muscles. -- 39. Maladies des os. -- 40. Maladies du corps typhoïde, du corps pituitaire, et des capsules surrénales.
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Vols 1-2, 4th ed., carefully rev. and enl.; v. 3, 3d ed., carefully rev. and enl.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Last page blank.
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Bibliography: p. [373]-376.
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Lean manufacturing is now widely accepted amongst UK based manufacturers as a valuable aid to achieving competitiveness. The associated principles, tools and techniques have been well documented since the 1980s and there are many competent practitioners, consultants and academics promoting Lean manufacturing. Therefore, it is useful to ask how well UK manufacturers are progressing along the Lean journey? This paper therefore provides an insight into this question by presenting the results, based on indepth case studies of five representative companies, that reflect progress being made within the UK manufacturing sector.
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This article aims to investigate the possibilities of building puppets in art therapy workshop, for this it realizes a tour of the primitive use of the puppet as a magical twin and potential towards the study of authors who have used the puppets as a therapeutic tool from the first half of the twentieth century. It’s raised an own theoretical organization, which includes the consideration of the significance of the body in the construction and management of the puppet and the puppet transitional perspective, halfway of external reality and psychic reality as an object that makes fantasy and reality arises built.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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George Arthur Chapman [in uniform] and Samuel James Chapman on horseback, 1918.
Group portrait with Charles Clarke Chapman, Samuel James, and George Arthur Chapman Sr., circa 1900.
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Copy of a damaged group portrait with Charles Clarke Chapman on the left, Samuel James on the right, and young man in front with hat and tie is George Arthur Chapman Sr., circa 1900.
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Dr. James A. Gibson was born in Ottawa on January 29, 1912 to John W. and Belle Gibson. At an early age the family moved to Victoria, B.C. where John W. Gibson was a director of the Elementary Agricultural Education Branch, Department of Education. Gibson received his early education in Victoria, receiving a B.A. (honours) at UBC in 1931. In 1931 he was awarded the Rhodes scholarship and received his B.A., M.A., B.Litt and D. Phil at New College, Oxford. This was to be the beginning of a long and dedicated relationship with the Rhodes Scholar Association. Upon his return to Canada, Dr. Gibson lectured in Economics and Government at the University of British Columbia. In 1938 he was married to Caroline Stein in Philadelphia, and the same year joined the staff of the Department of External Affairs as a Foreign Service officer. Within twenty minutes of his arrival he was seconded to the Office of the Prime Minister and Secretary of State for External Affairs, W. L. Mackenzie King in charge of War Records and Liaison Officer. This was a critical time in the history of Canada, and Dr. Gibson experienced firsthand several milestones, including the Royal Visit of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in 1939. Dr. Gibson was present at the formation of the United Nations in San Francisco in 1945, being part of the Prime Minister’s professional staff as well as attending conferences in Washington, Quebec and London as an advisor to the Canadian delegation. Gibson contributed many articles to the publication bout de papier about his experiences during these years. After his resignation in 1947, Gibson joined the staff of the fledgling Carleton College, as a lecturer. In 1949 he was appointed a professor and in 1951 became Dean of Arts and Sciences. Dr. Gibson acted as President from 1955 to 1956 upon the sudden death of Dr. MacOdrum. In 1963 Dr. Gibson accepted the invitation of the Brock University Founders’ Committee, chaired by Arthur Schmon, to become the founding president. Dr. Gibson guided the new University from a converted refrigeration plant, to an ever expanding University campus on the brow of the Niagara Escarpment. Dr. Gibson remained firmly “attached” to Brock University. Even after official retirement, in 1974, he retained the title President Emeritus. Gibson’s final official contribution was an unpublished ten year history of the University. In retirement Gibson remained active in scholarly pursuits. He was a visiting scholar at the Center of Canadian Studies, University of Edinburgh; continued his ongoing research activities focusing on W. L. Mackenzie King, the Office of the Governor General of Canada, and political prisoners transported to Van Dieman’s Land. He remained active in the Canadian Association of Rhodes Scholars, becoming editor from 1975 to 1994 and was appointed Editor Emeritus and Director for Life in 1995 in honour of his dedicated and outstanding service. In 1993 he was awarded one of Canada’s highest achievements, the Order of Canada. Gibson retained close ties with Brock University and many of its faculty. He maintained an office in the Politics Department where he became a vital part of the department. In 1996 Brock University honoured Gibson by naming the University Library in his honour. James A. Gibson Library staff was instrumental in celebrating the 90th birthday of Gibson in 2002, with a widely attended party in the Pond Inlet where many former students, including Silver Badgers. The attendees also included former and current colleagues from Brock University, Canadian Rhodes Scholars Association, family and friends. Gibson was later to remark that the highlight of this event was the gift of his original academic robe which he had personally designed in 1964. In 2003 Dr. Gibson moved to Ottawa to be near some of his children and the city of his birth and early career. In that year “two visits to Brock ensued: the first, to attend a special celebration of the James A. Gibson Library; his late to attend the 74th Convocation on Saturday, October 18, 2003. A week later, in Ottawa, he went for a long walk, returned to his residence, Rideau Gardens, went into the lounge area, took off his coat and folded it up, put it on the back of his chair, sat down, folded his hands in his lap, closed his eyes, and died”. With sources from: Carleton University The Charlatan, Gibson CV, and Memorial Service Programme
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Ann Eliza Hepburne was born in Chippawa, Ontario, in 1821, to William Hepburne and Susan Shannon. In 1842, she married William Anthony Rooth in St. James Cathedral in Toronto. They continued to live in different parts of the Niagara region, including Drummondville, Welland and Port Colborne. William was the editor and proprietor of the Drummondville Reporter, as well as an accountant and insurance agent, and later worked for the Customs Service in Port Colborne. He died in 1878, and Eliza in 1899. Both are buried in Drummond Hill Cemetery in Niagara Falls, Ontario.