Library of Congress Classification
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Complete List of Books in Library Acc No Author Title of Book Subject Publisher Year R.No
Complete List of Books in Library Acc No Author Title of book Subject Publisher Year R.No. 1 Satkari Mookerjee The Jaina Philosophy of PHIL Bharat Jaina Parisat 8/A1 Non-Absolutism 3 Swami Nikilananda Ramakrishna PER/BIO Rider & Co. 17/B2 4 Selwyn Gurney Champion Readings From World ECO `Watts & Co., London 14/B2 & Dorothy Short Religion 6 Bhupendra Datta Swami Vivekananda PER/BIO Nababharat Pub., 17/A3 Calcutta 7 H.D. Lewis The Principal Upanisads PHIL George Allen & Unwin 8/A1 14 Jawaherlal Nehru Buddhist Texts PHIL Bruno Cassirer 8/A1 15 Bhagwat Saran Women In Rgveda PHIL Nada Kishore & Bros., 8/A1 Benares. 15 Bhagwat Saran Upadhya Women in Rgveda LIT 9/B1 16 A.P. Karmarkar The Religions of India PHIL Mira Publishing Lonavla 8/A1 House 17 Shri Krishna Menon Atma-Darshan PHIL Sri Vidya Samiti 8/A1 Atmananda 20 Henri de Lubac S.J. Aspects of Budhism PHIL sheed & ward 8/A1 21 J.M. Sanyal The Shrimad Bhagabatam PHIL Dhirendra Nath Bose 8/A2 22 J.M. Sanyal The Shrimad PHIL Oriental Pub. 8/A2 Bhagabatam VolI 23 J.M. Sanyal The Shrimad PHIL Oriental Pub. 8/A2 Bhagabatam Vo.l III 24 J.M. Sanyal The Shrimad Bhagabatam PHIL Oriental Pub. 8/A2 25 J.M. Sanyal The Shrimad PHIL Oriental Pub. 8/A2 Bhagabatam Vol.V 26 Mahadev Desai The Gospel of Selfless G/REL Navijvan Press 14/B2 Action 28 Shankar Shankar's Children Art FIC/NOV Yamuna Shankar 2/A2 Number Volume 28 29 Nil The Adyar Library Bulletin LIT The Adyar Library and 9/B2 Research Centre 30 Fraser & Edwards Life And Teaching of PER/BIO Christian Literature 17/A3 Tukaram Society for India 40 Monier Williams Hinduism PHIL Susil Gupta (India) Ltd. -
Book of Abstracts
PICES Seventeenth Annual Meeting Beyond observations to achieving understanding and forecasting in a changing North Pacific: Forward to the FUTURE North Pacific Marine Science Organization October 24 – November 2, 2008 Dalian, People’s Republic of China Contents Notes for Guidance ...................................................................................................................................... v Floor Plan for the Kempinski Hotel......................................................................................................... vi Keynote Lecture.........................................................................................................................................vii Schedules and Abstracts S1 Science Board Symposium Beyond observations to achieving understanding and forecasting in a changing North Pacific: Forward to the FUTURE......................................................................................................................... 1 S2 MONITOR/TCODE/BIO Topic Session Linking biology, chemistry, and physics in our observational systems – Present status and FUTURE needs .............................................................................................................................. 15 S3 MEQ Topic Session Species succession and long-term data set analysis pertaining to harmful algal blooms...................... 33 S4 FIS Topic Session Institutions and ecosystem-based approaches for sustainable fisheries under fluctuating marine resources .............................................................................................................................................. -
Sino-Tibetan Numeral Systems: Prefixes, Protoforms and Problems
Sino-Tibetan numeral systems: prefixes, protoforms and problems Matisoff, J.A. Sino-Tibetan Numeral Systems: Prefixes, Protoforms and Problems. B-114, xii + 147 pages. Pacific Linguistics, The Australian National University, 1997. DOI:10.15144/PL-B114.cover ©1997 Pacific Linguistics and/or the author(s). Online edition licensed 2015 CC BY-SA 4.0, with permission of PL. A sealang.net/CRCL initiative. PACIFIC LINGUISTICS FOUNDING EDITOR: Stephen A. Wunn EDITORIAL BOARD: Malcolm D. Ross and Darrell T. Tryon (Managing Editors), Thomas E. Dutton, Nikolaus P. Himmelmann, Andrew K. Pawley Pacific Linguistics is a publisher specialising in linguistic descriptions, dictionaries, atlases and other material on languages of the Pacific, the Philippines, Indonesia and southeast Asia. The authors and editors of Pacific Linguistics publications are drawn from a wide range of institutions around the world. Pacific Linguistics is associated with the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies at the Australian National University. Pacific Linguistics was established in 1963 through an initial grant from the Hunter Douglas Fund. It is a non-profit-making body financed largely from the sales of its books to libraries and individuals throughout the world, with some assistance from the School. The Editorial Board of Pacific Linguistics is made up of the academic staff of the School's Department of Linguistics. The Board also appoints a body of editorial advisors drawn from the international community of linguists. Publications in Series A, B and C and textbooks in Series D are refereed by scholars with re levant expertise who are normally not members of the editorial board. -
Download TRI News Vol 20
A Message from the TRI News Editors The 20th issue of TRI News contains articles on a broad array of tropical research topics, ranging from the economics of water provi sion in Columbo, Sri Lanka, to carbon sequestration in Panamanian forest plantations. Each study in this volume tackles key environ mental science and management questions; the results and conclu sions herein provide critical insight on these issues and form an important foundation of case-studies for future projects in these areas. The editors of TRI News are proud to present this year's issue. We hope that the readership of this joumalleams as much from reading these articles as we have gleaned from working with ,I the contributing authors. 1 Enjoy, Douglas, Rachel, and Sarah TRI News Staff: Douglas Monon and Rachel Roth, Editors, and Sarah Osterhoudt, graphic design A Message from the TRI Directors The School of Forestry and Environmental Studies has been celebrating its centennial this year. When the School was founded, the forests of the United States were being harvested rapidly, carelessly, and wastefully, with little attention to their regeneration. "It had not dawned upon [the American people]", Gifford Pinchot wrote, "that timber can be cut without forest destruction, or that the forest can be made to produce crop after crop for the ser vice of men." There were no professional forest managers in North America, and Pinchot, in founding the School, wanted to establish a skilled group of professional foresters in this country. In determining direction for the School, he realized it was important, then as now, to look at the needs of people living in forested communi ties, and not only the biophysical aspects of forests. -
District Census Handbook, Kameng, Part X, Series-24, Arunachal Pradesh
CENSUS OF INDIA- 1971 Series No. 24 ARUNACHAL PRAI)ESH PART X DISTRICT CENSUS HANDBOOK KAMENG DISTRICT Part A: TOWN & VILLAGE--DIREGTORY Part B : ,URBAN BbOCK I VILLAGEWISE PRIMARY CENSUS ABSTRACT J. K. Barthakur, of tke Indian Frontier Administratwe Service~ Director of Census Operat~ ~unoohal-prau~--- , Shillong-3 ·A'P.(u. ~ Statements made. views expressed or con clusions drawn in this report are wholly the responsibil ity of the author alone in his perso nal capacity and do not necessarily represent the views of the Government. Arunachai ~ad* is til thinly pbpuitilted hiIiy tract lying touah1v be'" ween the latitudes ~ and 29"3O'N and the longitudes 91.°3O'E and,97°30'E on the north east extremity of India, compi-ising roughly of 83,578 kilometre squares of area. bordering the international boundaries of Bhutan. Tibet, China and Burma. The Pradesh is known to be rich in flora. fauna, power and mine ral potentia1. When the 1971 Census was taken in Arunachal Pradesh, the area was known as the North East Frontier Agency (NEFA in short) which was consti tutionally a part of ~e State of AsSam. At that time NEFA was directly_ ad ministered by the President of India through the Governor of Assam as his agent, who was assisted by an adviser. The office_ of the Adviser to the Gover· nor of AssQUl was situated at Shillong, t~e capital of the Assam. State. On the 21st -JanUary, 1972, NEFA haa been ttlade into a Union Territory under the provision of the North-Eastern Areas (Reorganisation) Act. -
BRIEF HISTORY of KOREA —A Bird's-Eyeview—
BRIEF HISTORY OF KOREA —A Bird's-EyeView— Young Ick Lew with an afterword by Donald P. Gregg The Korea Society New York The Korea Society is a private, nonprofit, nonpartisan, 501(c)(3) organization with individual and corporate members that is dedicated solely to the promotion of greater awareness, understanding and cooperation between the people of the United States and Korea. In pursuit of its mission, the Society arranges programs that facilitate dis- cussion, exchanges and research on topics of vital interest to both countries in the areas of public policy, business, education, intercultural relations and the arts. Funding for these programs is derived from contributions, endowments, grants, membership dues and program fees. From its base in New York City, the Society serves audiences across the country through its own outreach efforts and by forging strategic alliances with counterpart organizations in other cities throughout the United States as well as in Korea. The Korea Society takes no institutional position on policy issues and has no affiliation with the U.S. government. All statements of fact and expressions of opinion contained in all its publications are the sole responsibility of the author or authors. For further information about The Korea Society, please write The Korea Society, 950 Third Avenue, 8th Floor, New York, NY 10022, or e-mail: [email protected]. Visit our website at www.koreasociety.org. Copyright © 2000 by Young Ick Lew and The Korea Society All rights reserved. Published 2000 ISBN 1-892887-00-7 Printed in the United States of America Every effort has been made to locate the copyright holders of all copyrighted materials and secure the necessary permission to reproduce them. -
Dis/Locating an Intellectual in Colonial Korea: the Case Ofyi In-Hwa in Mansejon (1924)
UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII LIBRARY Dis/Locating an Intellectual in Colonial Korea: The Case ofYi In-hwa in Mansejon (1924) A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE DIVISION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI'I IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS IN EAST ASIAN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES (KOREAN) AUGUST 2005 By Min Koo Choi Thesis Committee: Theodore lun Y00, Chairperson Ho-min Sohn Dong Jae Lee ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I realize that the scholarly process is not merely dependent on the individual's effort and devotion, since I feel that I am indebted to so many people for the completion of this thesis. My committee members, colleagues, and family have inspired and encouraged me so that I could go through the process ofwriting this thesis. First of all, I want to express my deep gratitude to my committee members. Professor Ho-min Sohn led me to start my work in Korean studies and to recognize the significance and possibility of Korean studies in United States. Through his guidance, I acquired a proud mission to introduce the subject of Korean studies, especially Korean language and literature, to English speakers. Professor Theodore Jun Yoo has inspired and encouraged me throughout my research. By taking his class, I became interested in the subject of colonialism and post colonialism, and it resulted in my choosing a topic of a modem Korean intellectual presented in a modem Korean novel during the Japanese colonial period (1910-1945). He has been like a considerate older brother throughout my graduate study too. I am also deeply inspired by his passion and love for the field of Korean studies. -
Tracing the Korean Orphan and Adoptee Through South Korean and American National Narratives
Orphan, Adoptee, Nation: Tracing the Korean Orphan and Adoptee through South Korean and American National Narratives By Kira Ann Donnell A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Ethnic Studies in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Elaine H. Kim, Chair Professor Catherine Ceniza Choy Professor Jinsoo An Professor Grace J. Yoo Fall 2019 Abstract Orphan, Adoptee, Nation: Tracing the Korean Orphan and Adoptee through South Korean and American National Narratives by Kira Ann Donnell Doctor of Philosophy in Ethnic Studies University of California, Berkeley Professor Elaine H. Kim, Chair The transnational adoption industrial complex established between South Korea and the United States following the Korean War initiated what is sometimes called the “Quiet Migration.” Since then, over 200,000 Korean children have been sent abroad, and the transnational, transracial adoption industry has operations set up in dozens of developing countries worldwide which takes thousands of children annually from their natal homes and places them in adoptive families in Western countries. For the past seventy years, the figures of the Korean orphan and adoptee have held significant meaning in the imaginations of by South Korean and American citizens. The sentimental figure of the Korean orphan became the conduit through which both South Koreans and Americans defined their experiences in the Korean War. The transnational Korean adoptee has become an icon of the United States’ commitment to humanitarianism and diversity and South Korea’s modern branding as a sophisticated and internationally-networked nation. This dissertation explores how United States and South Korean culture and society have used the figures of the Korean orphan and Korean adoptee to construct national identities that reflect its citizens as virtuous, cosmopolitan, and unified. -
University Microfilms, Inc., Ann Arbor, Michigan the UNIVERSITY of OKLAHOMA
This dissertation has been microfilmed exactly as received 66-10,191 RO, Kwang Hai, 1936- POWER POLITICS IN KOREA AND ITS IMPACT ON KOREAN FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC AFFAIRS, 1882-1907. The University of Oklahoma, Ph.D., 1966 Political Science, international law and relations University Microfilms, Inc., Ann Arbor, Michigan THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA GRADUATE COLLEGE POWER POLITICS IN KOREA AND ITS IMPACT ON KOREAN FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC AFFAIRS, 1882-1907 A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE FACULTY in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY BY KWANG HAI RO Norman, Oklahoma 1966 POWER POLITICS IN KOREA AND ITS IMPACT ON KOREAN FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC AFFAIRS, 1882-1907 APPROVED A (© .IJj _ ___ DISSERTATION COMMITTEE TABLE OP CONTENTS Page INTRODUCTION .......... ». ........... 1 Chapter I. 5IN0-JAPANE5E RIVALRY, 1882-1894 5 Factional Struggle within the Korean Court .......... 5 The Tonghak Rebellion ................. ...... 19 The End of Chinese Influence .................... 32 II. RUSSO-JAPANESE INFLUENCE AFTER THE SINO-JAPAIMESE WAR, 1895-1897 39 Japanese Active Interference and Assassination of Queen Min ....................... 39 The King's Escape to the Russian Legation .......... 60 Japanese Compromise Policy with Russia ........ 69 III. RUSSIAN ACTIVE INTERFERENCE AND ITS FAILURE ........ 76 Russian Aggressive Interference with the Korean G o v e r n m e n t ................. 76 The Rise of the Dok Rip Hyup Huai ("Independence C l u b " ) ....................................... 89 Suppression of the Progressive Reform Movement .... 95 IV. RUSSO-JAPANESE DIPLOMATIC COMPETITION, 1899-1904 .... 101 The Nishi-Rosen Protocol ............... 101 The Renewal of Rivalry .......................... 106 The Final Negotiation ............. 117 V. DEMISE OF THE KOREAN K I N G D O M ................... -
History Distorted Part III Lunatic Korean Anti-Japanese Sentiment
History distorted Part III Lunatic Korean Anti-Japanese Sentiment Due intensive anti-Japanese education since the Syngman-Rhee administration, Korean anti-Japanese sentiment has encouraged self-destruction. When someone thinks up a “Japanese atrocity,” claiming that “Japan has done such a cruel thing,” others will agree: “The atrocious Japanese must have surely done that,” and will go on and on until groundless rumor becomes fact, incorporated into living memory and runs on its own. The film Gunkanjima is a typical example of this fact creating process. Thus, every time Koreans demand that Japan look at the face of history, holding up its fabricated history, Japan, so far, has simply apologized without making an effort to verify the authenticity of the history that Korea presents. Consequently, the Koreans fall into false credulousness, that they are always in the right. Part III will describe the process in which Korean anti-Japanese sentiment heightened and at the same time clarify the true circumstance of conceited Korean anti-Japanese actions which have now reached levels similar to that of occult religions. 1 Chapter 9: Korean history distorted after World War II Historical fabrication by Syngman Rhee It was, in fact, after World War II that intensive anti-Japanese sentiment as we know it was born. It all started with the first President, Syngman Rhee, who distorted historical fact. At the very least, if the Korean Peninsula was to become independent, it would have been natural for the Korean Empire, which succeeded the Joseon Dynasty and concluded the Treaty of Annexation with Japan, to be revived. -
Language Monograph, Survey of Kanauri in Himachal Pradesh
CENSUS OF INDIA 1971 MONOGRAPH NO. 3 SERIES I LANGUAGE MONOGRAPH (1961 SERIES) FOREWORD A. MITRA OF THE INDIAN CIVIL SERVICE REGISTRA R GENERAl AND CENSUS COMMISSIONER, INDIA. ~URVEY OF KANAURI GENERAL SUPERVISION AND GUIDANCE IN R. C. NIGAM, LlNG1!IST. INVEST/GArrON AND Hflt'IACHAL PRADESH '''IVANAN, LANGUAGE DIVISION OFFICE l_ 'THE REGISTRAR GENERAL, INDIA CONTENTS PAGES FOREWORD-DR. ASOK MITRA • • • i NOTE-SHRI R. C. NIGAM • iii INTRODUCTION • • • 1 PHONOLOGY . 10 MORPHO-PHONEMICS 24 MORPHOLOGy 21 CURRENT TRENDS AND ARYAN INFLUENCE • 45 KANAURI GLOSSARY (KALPA DIALECT) • 59 UNCONNECTED TEXTS 80 CONNECTED TEXTS 81 FREE TRANSLATION 88 " FOREWORD This Survey of Kanauri in Himachal Pradesh is one of several undertaken by Sri R. C. Nigam, Assistant Registrar General and Linguist, and his colleagues in pursuance of a decision taken in the early years of the last decade to conduct inquiries into specific speeches belonging to the Himalayan Group along the lower slopes of the Himalayas on the lines of the great Linguistic Survey of India. The reason why certain languages along the lower slopes of the Himalayas were chosen for particular inves ... tigation has been explained in Sri Nigam's Prefatory Note. The chief aim was to inquire into the uncertainties of their origins, affiliations, specific features as contact languages and to assess how these speeches were themselves being gradual1y transformed through a variety of contacts over time. The inquiries could be entrusted only to trained specialists who would be prepared to undertake field inves .. tigation of adequate duration and satisfactory coverage. The investigators were, in addition, to have the right aptitude to be sufficiently accepted in the life of the particular language group to be initiated into their idiom. -
Download: Brill.Com/Brill‑Typeface
Śaivism and the Tantric Traditions Gonda Indological Studies Published Under the Auspices of the J. Gonda Foundation Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Edited by Peter C. Bisschop (Leiden) Editorial Board Hans T. Bakker (Groningen) Dominic D.S. Goodall (Paris/Pondicherry) Hans Harder (Heidelberg) Stephanie Jamison (Los Angeles) Ellen M. Raven (Leiden) Jonathan A. Silk (Leiden) volume 22 The titles published in this series are listed at brill.com/gis Alexis G.J.S. Sanderson Śaivism and the Tantric Traditions Essays in Honour of Alexis G.J.S. Sanderson Edited by Dominic Goodall Shaman Hatley Harunaga Isaacson Srilata Raman LEIDEN | BOSTON This is an open access title distributed under the terms of the CC BY-NC 4.0 license, which permits any non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited. Further information and the complete license text can be found at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ The terms of the CC license apply only to the original material. The use of material from other sources (indicated by a reference) such as diagrams, illustrations, photos and text samples may require further permission from the respective copyright holder. Cover illustration: Standing Shiva Mahadeva. Northern India, Kashmir, 8th century. Schist; overall: 53cm (20 7/8in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Bequest of Mrs. Severance A. Millikin 1989.369 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Sanderson, Alexis, honouree. | Goodall, Dominic, editor. | Hatley, Shaman, editor. | Isaacson, Harunaga, 1965- editor. | Raman, Srilata, editor. Title: Śaivism and the tantric traditions : essays in honour of Alexis G.J.S.