822 resultados para Industries and mechanic arts, Italy: Naples.
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pt. 1. Northern Italy, including Leghorn, Florence, Ravenna, the Island of Corsica, and routes through France, Switzerland, and Austria. 8th remodelled ed. 1889. -- pt. 2. Central Italy and Rome. 10 rev. ed. 1890. -- pt. 3. Southern Italy and Sicily, with excursions to the Lipari Islands, Malta, Sardinia, Tunis, and Corfu. 10 rev. ed. 1890.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Pt. 2-3: 13th rev. ed.
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Signatures: A-D⁸ E⁴.
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Running title: The toilet and cosmetic arts. Originally published as the last part of that title.
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On back: Bohn's standard library.
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Issues for 1979-1983 cover 1954-1982; 1984-<1987> cover 1958-<1985>.
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Title varies slightly: some issues have title: Journal of the Franklin Institute; or: Journal of the Franklin Institute devoted to science and the mechanic arts.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"A monthly record of events of interest to printers, publishers, stationers, lithographers, book-binders, paper makers, and kindered industries."
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Editor: R.S. Menamin.
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University of Illinois bookplate: "From the library of Conte Antonio Cavagna Sangiuliani di Gualdana Lazelada di Bereguardo, purchased 1921".
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Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06
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Since the start of last century, methanol synthesis has attracted great interests because of its importance in chemical industries and its potential as an environmentally friendly energy carrier. The catalyst for the methanol synthesis has been a key area of research in order to optimize the reaction process. In the literature, the nature of the active site and the effects of the promoter and support have been extensively investigated. In this updated review, the recent progresses in the catalyst innovation, optimization of the reaction conditions, reaction mechanism, and catalyst performance in methanol synthesis are comprehensively discussed. Key issues of catalyst improvement are highlighted, and areas of priority in R&D are identified in the conclusions.
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This paper investigates media representations of international insecurity through a selection of newspaper cartoons from some of the major daily Australian broadsheets. Since 2001, cartoonists such as Bruce Petty, John Spooner and Bill Leak (in The Age and The Australian) have provided an ongoing and vehement critique of the Australian government’s policies of ‘border protection’, the ‘war on terror’ and the words of mass distraction associated with Australia joining the war in Iraq. Cartoonists are often said to represent the ‘citizen’s perspective’ of public life through their graphic satire on the editorial pages of our daily newspapers. Increasingly, they can also be seen to be fulfilling the role of public intellectuals, defined by Richard A. Posner as ‘someone whose place it is publicly to raise embarrassing questions, to confront orthodoxy and dogma, to be someone who cannot easily be co-opted by governments and corporations’. Cartoonists enjoy an independence and freedom from censorship that is rarely extended to their journalistic colleagues in the print media and it is this independence that is the vital component in their being categorised as public intellectuals. Their role is to ‘question over and over again what is postulated as self-evident, to disturb people’s mental habits, to dissipate what is familiar and accepted, to re-examine rules and institutions’ (Posner, 2003: 31). With this useful — if generalised — definition in mind, the paper considers how cartoonists have contributed to debates concerning international insecurity in public life since 2001.