To Subscribers

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

To Subscribers 599 SOCIETY OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE, 11, Chandos- street, Cavendish-square, W. EDITORIAL NOTICES. FRIDAY.-5.30 P.M., Paper:—Captain H. J. McGrigor, R.A.M.C.: IT is most important that communications relating to the Some Experiences in the Treatment of Syphilis in the Army, Editorial business of THE LANCET should be addressed with Special Reference to the Administration of "606" in Con- centrated Solutions.-Dr. H. Bayon : Short Demonstration of exclusively "To THE EDITOR," and not in any case to any Sections and Cultures of Skin Diseases. with some Remarks on gentleman who may be supposed to be connected with the the Treatment of Syphilis in African Native Tribes and among Editorial staff. It is that attention should the Workers in the Rand Gold Mines. urgently necessary be given to this notice. - LBCTURES, ADDRESSES. DEMONSTRATIONS. &c I ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS OF LONDON, Pall Mall East. Ft is especially requested that early intelligenoe ot looal events TUESDAY AND THURSDAY-5 P.M., Milroy Lectures :—Dr. S. G. having a mediaal interest, or maioh it is desirable to bring Moore : Infant Mortality and the Relative Practical Values of under the notice of the be sent direct to Measures directed to Protecting Infant Lives. (Lectures II. profession, may and III.) this office. and should be written on ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS OF ENGLAND, Lincoln’s Inn Geatwres, original articles, reports Fields, W.C. one side ot the paper only, AND WHEN ACCOMPANIED Course of Lectures on the Anatomy of the Human Body, for First-aid BY BLOCKS IT IS REQUESTED THAT THE NAME OF THE and Ambulance Students (open to all members of ambulance com- AUTHOR, AND IF POSSIBLE OF THE ARTICLE, SHOULD panies and first-aid classes) - MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, AND FRIDAY.-5.30 P.M., Prof. A..Keith. BE WRITTEN ON THE BLOOKS TO FACILITATE IDENTI- 4 PM. to 7 P.M., Exhibition of Anatomical Preparations and FICATION. in the Theatre on lecture days, and between 10 A.M. Specimens Letters, whether intended for insertion or to’r informa- and 5 P.M. in the Hall of the Museum on the following day. private tion, must be authenticated the names and addresses POST-GRADUATE COLLEGE, West London Hospital, Hammersmith- by of road, W. their writers-not necessarily for publication. MONDAY.-2 P.M., Medical and Surgical Clinics. X Rays. Mr. Gray : We cannot prescribe or recommend practitioners. Mr. B. Harman : Diseases of the Dr. Operations. Eye. Simson: Looal or nenvs should be Diseases of Women. papers containing reports paragraphs marked and addressed " To the Sub-Editor."" TUESDAY.-2 P.M., Medical and Surgical Clinics. X Rays. Mr. Addison: Operations. Dr. Banks Davis: Diseases of the Throat, Letters relating to the publioation, sale, and advertising Nose. and Ear. Dr. Pernet: Diseases of the Skin. departments ot THE LANCET should be addressed " To the WEDENSDAY.-1O A.M., Dr. Saunders : Diseases of Children. Dr. Banks " Davis: Operations of the Throat, Nose, and Ear. 2 P.M., Medical Manager. and Surgical Clinics. X Rays. Mr. Pardoe: Operations. Dr. We oannot undertake to return MSS. not used Simson: Diseases of Women. THURSDAY.-2 P.M., Medical and Surgical Clinics. X Rays. Mr. Gray : Operations. Mr. B. Harman : Diseases of the Eye. MANAGER’S NOTICES. FRIDAY.-10 A.M., Dr. Simson: Gynaecological Operations. 2 P.M., THE INDEX TO THE LANCET. Medical and Surgical Clinics. X Rays. Mr. Addison: Opera- tions. Dr. Banks Davis: Diseases of the Throat, Nose, and Ear. THE Index and Title-page to Vol. II. of 1915 were given. Dr. Pernet : Diseases of the Skin. in THE LANCET of Dec. 25th. 1915. SATURDAY.-10 A.M., Dr. Saunders: Diseases of Children. Dr. Banks Davis. Operations of the Throat, Nose, and Ear. Mr. B. Harman: Bye Operations. 2 P.M., Medical and Surgical Clinics. X Rays. VOLUMES AND CASES. Mr. Pardoe: Operations. VOLUMES for the second half of the year 1915 are NORTH-EAST LONDON POST-GRADUATE COLLEGE, Prince of now ready. Bound in cloth, gilt lettered, price 16s., Wales’s General Hospital, Tottenham, N. extra. MONDAY.-Clinics:-10.30 A.M., Surgical Out-patients (Mr. E. carriage Gillespie). 2.30 P.M., Medical Out-patients (Dr. T. R. Whipham) : Cases for binding the half-year’s numbers are now ready. Gynæcological Out-patients (Dr. Banister). 3 P.M., Medical Cloth, lettered, 2s., 2s. 4d. In R. M. gilt price by post patients (Ur. Leslie). To be obtained on to the TUESDAY.-2.30 P.M., Surgical Operations (Mr. Carson). Clinics:- application Manager, accompanied Medical A. G. remittance. Out-patients (Dr. Auld); Surgical Out-patients by -- (Mr. Howell Evans); Nose, Throat, and Ear Out-patients (Mr. C. H. Hayton). Radiography (Dr. Metcalfe). 3.30 P.M., Medical A. J. TO In-patients (Dr. Whiting). - SUBSCRIBERS. - WEDNESDAY.-Clinics:-2.30 P.M., Throat Operations (Mr. C. H. WILL Subscribers please note that only those subscriptions Hayton). Children Out-patients (Dr. T. R. Whipham); Eye Out- which are sent direct to the of THE LANCET at patients (Mr. R. P. Brooks); Skin Out-patients (Dr. H. W. Proprietors Barber). 5.30 P.M., Eye Operations (Mr. R. P. Brooks). their Offices, 423, Strand, London, W.O., are dealt with by THURSDAY.-2.30 P.M., Gynaecological Operations (Dr. A. E. Giles). them? Subscriptions paid to London or to local newsagents A. J. Clinics:-Medical Out-patients (Dr. Whiting); Surgical none of whom have the any connexion what- Out-patients (Mr. Carson); Radiography (Dr. Metcalfe). 3 P.M., (with Proprietors Medical In-patients (Dr. R. M. Leslie). ever) do not reach THE LANCET Offices, and consequently fMDAY.-2.30 P.M., Surgical Operations (Mr. Howell Evans). inquiries concerning missing copies, &c., should be sent to Clinics :-Medical Out-patients (Dr. A. G. Auld); Surgical Out- the to whom the is and not to (Mr. E. B. P. Agent subscription paid, patients Gillespie) ; Eye Out-patients (Mr. Brooks). THE LANCET Offices THE THROAT HOSPITAL, Golden-square, W. their direct to MONDAY.-5.15 P.M., Special Demonstration of Selected Cases. Subscribers, by sending subscriptions THURSDAY.-5.15 P.M., Clinical Lecture. THE LANCET Offices, will ensure regularity in the despatch ROYAL INSTITUTION OF GREAT BRITAIN, Albemarle-street, of their Journals and an earlier delivery than the majority of Piccadilly, W Agents are able to effect. TUESDAY.-3 P.M., Prof. A. Keith : Sea Power as a Factor in the THE COLONIAL AND FOREIGN EDITION on thin Evolution of Modern Races. (printed (Lecture I.) is in time to catch the mails THURSDAY.-3 P.M., Prof. H. E Armstrong : Organic Chemistry in paper) published weekly Friday Products used as Propulsive and Explosive to all of the world. War-Organic parts - Agents. (Lecture I.) For further particulars of the above Lectures, &c.,see Advertisement Pages. ALTERATION OF INLAND SUBSCRIPTION RATES. METEOROLOGICAL READINGS. OWING to the alteration in the Inland Newspaper Postal the on each of THE LANCET will in future (Taken daily at 8.80 a.m. by Steward’s Instruments.) rate, postage copy be ld., and sometimes 1½d. The revised Inland Subscription rates are :— One Year .............El1 3 3 Six Months ............ 0 13 8 Three Months ............ 0 7 0 The rates for the Colonies and Abroad (thin paper edition) will be as usual :- One Year ... ... ... ...£11 5 0 Six Months ............ 0 14 0 Three Months............ 0 7 0 Subscriptions (which may commence at any time) are The following magazines, journals, &c., have been received :- in advance. and Post Office Orders Medical Review, Bulletin of the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Tbera- payable Cheques (crossed peutic Gazette. Edinburgh Medical Journal, Lyon Chirurgical, " London County and Westminster Bank, Covent Garden Indian Medical Gazette, Brist 1 Medico-Chirurgical Journal, Archives Branch ") should be made payable to the Manager, de Medecine et de Pharmacie Militaires, Miciland Medical Journal, Mr. CHARLES THE LANCET British Journal of Dental Science, Man, British Dental Journal, Goon, Offices, 423, Strand, Cleveland Medical Journal, Journal of Physiology. London, W.C. 600 TO COLONIAL AND FOREIGN SUBSCRIBER. The Pabtisher of Tns LANCET has obtained the required permission of the War Office, and he will forward copies SUBSORIBERS ABROAD ARE PARTICULARLY REQUESTED direct from the Office to any neutral country on receipt of TO NOTE THE RATES OF SUBSORIPTIONS GIVEN ABOVE instructions. The Manager will be pleased to forward copies direct from ____ the Offices to places abroad at the above rates, whatever ADVERTISEMENT RATES. the of of the so be weight any copies supplied. Books and Publications. .. ... ... ...} NEWSPAPERS FOR NEUTRAL COUNTRIES. Official and General Announcements Five lines and Trade and Miscellaneous Advertise- under ... 4s. Od. of the War Office has issued the following THE Secretary ments and Situations Vacant ... order :- J Every additional line, 6d. The public are informed that on and after Saturday, Situations Wanted: First 30 words, 2s. 6d. November 6th, newspapers, magazines, books, and other Per additional 8 word, 6d. than trade circulars) will not printed publications (other £1 10s. Half a S3 15s. be sent forward to neutral European countries unless Quarter Page, Page, posted direct from the office of publishers or newsagents Entire Page, £5 5s. who have obtained permission from the War Office for this Special terms for Position Pages. purpose. Persons desiring to send newspapers, &c., to neutral European countries should, therefore, give their Advertisements (to ensure insertion the same week) should orders for execution to publishers or newsagents who have be delivered at the Office not later than Wednesday, obtained such permission. accompanied by a remittance. H. n. Rushton, Lond ; Royal In- Truslove and Hanson, Lond,; stitution of Great Britain, Lond.; Messrs.
Recommended publications
  • I664 Wm I Am LETTERS, NOTES, and ANSWERS
    I664 Wm I_am LETTERS, NOTES, AND ANSWERS. [Nov. 19,. lgo.. COLLOIDS. DR. H. OPPENHEIMER (London) writes: " D.G.D." will find an Br Med J: first published as 10.1136/bmj.2.2603.1664-a on 19 November 1910. Downloaded from account, by Dr. Max Joseph, of colloids, including colloidal calomel, in Dermatologisches Zentralblatt, vol. x. CoMmunIATIoNs respecting Editorial matters should be addressed to . AUSTRALIA FOR ASTHMATIC PATIENTS. the Editor, 429, Strand, London, W.C.: those coneerning business F. A. writes: In reply to "L. I. C." (BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, matters, advertisements, non-delivery of the JouxNAL, etc.. should November 5th, p. 1480), I resided in Melbourne, Australia, for addressed to the Office, 429, Strend, London, W.C. some years, and remember the case of an old gentleman, a be sufferer from asthma, which may be of use. He was com- pelled to leave Melbourne and live in Ballarat, an elevated country town. While there he was quite free from his com- Er Queries, answers, and communication relating to subjects plaint, but staying only a single night in Melbourne invariably to which-special departments of the BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL brought on a recurrence. Melbourne is only a few miles from are devoted wiU be found under their respective headings. the sea. QUERIES, !LTTURK. NOT!E. RTC. ARTHRITIS writes: I am anxious to have some help in the ERRATA.-In the artiole by Drs. D. A. Welsh and H. G. Chapman treatment of a troublesome case of rheumatoid arthritis. A " On the- Interpretation of the Precipitin Reaction," in the slight temperature is running, the right knee and right elbow JOURNAL of November 12th, p.
    [Show full text]
  • Year Book 1951
    YEAR BOOK 1951 EDITED BY W. R. PRICE. F.L.S. BOTANICAL SOCIETY of the BRITISH ISLES Victoria regis Floreat Flora YEAR BOOK 1951 EDITED BY W. R. PRICE AUGUST 1951 Printed for the Society by T. Buncle & Co. Ltd., Market Place, Arbroath, Angus. OBTAINABLE FROM THE BOTANICAL SOCIETY OF THE BRITISH ISLES, c/o DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY, THE UNIVERSITY. OXFORD. PRICE 7/6 i — CONTENTS i'AGE OFFiCEiis, Council and Committeeh ... ... ... ... ... 5 Editoiual 7 List oe Membehs and Subschujeks to 31st Mahch 1951 ... ... 8 Minutes of Annual Genekal Meeting^ 30th Makch 1950 ... ... 21 Annual Genehal Meeting, 14th Apiul 1951 ... ... ... ... 25 Oeeicers' 1 Reports for 1950 ... ... ... ... ... ... 27 Field Meeting 1949 37 Field Meetings; 1950 ... 66 Conference, 31st March to 2nd April 1950 , ... ... 74 « Exhibition Meeting^ 1950 ... ... ... ... ... ... 75 " " Victoria iiegia The Emblem of the Society ... ... 89 Notices to Members : Miscellaneous ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 96 List of County Floras in Preparation ... ... ... 99 Local Secretaries and Recorders ... ... ... ... 101 Panel of Specialists ... ... 103 Programme of Field Meetings for 1951 ... 106 Personalia , ... 107 Obituaries ... 109 News of Other Societies ... ... ... ... ... ... 112 International Botanical Congress, Stockholm, 1950 ... 114 Coupe Botanique des Alpeis, 1950 116 'Distributor's Report for 1950 119 Rules ;.VUv 126 OFFICERS. COUNCIL AND COMMITTEES BOT.ANICAL SOCIETY of the BRITISH ISLES rafroiiess : H.ll.H. The Princess Ixoyal OFFICERS FOR 1951-52 ELFXTED AT THE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING, APRIL 14th, 1951 President: Rev. Canon C. E. Raven Vice-Presidents : Dr R. W. B n teller ; J. F. G. Chappie; J. S. Jj. Gilmour Honorary General Secretary J. E. Lonsley Honorary Treasurer E. L. Swann Honorary Editor Dr E.
    [Show full text]
  • Glossary of Spiritualist Terms and Techniques
    A PPENDIX A Glossary of Spiritualist Terms and Techniques automatic writing. A Spirit uses the medium’s hand to write replies to any number of questions posed; also practiced by amateurs as a way of strengthening their spiritual powers. As an added feature, a magic pencil sometimes floats. In such instances, the Spirits are asking the medium to begin writing. How it is done: The pencil hangs on thin metal or glass wires. clairgustance or clairlience. A taste or smell associated with the Spirit. For example, if you are trying to contact your mother, who was fond of gardening, a waft of rose water might be introduced. How it is done: aromatherapy. dermography, also known as skin writing. The Spirits literally write words or pictures on the medium’s flesh. How it is done: Invisible ink, likely lemon juice, is used. When held up to a candle, the ink grows increasingly visible. ectoplasm. A pale, filmy materialization of the soul, produced by the medium when in a trance state. Likely invented by Leah Fox (circa 1860). The last manifestation of ectoplasm seems to have taken place in 1939. Cambridge University has a sample; it looks and feels like cheesecloth or chiffon. Female mediums sometimes stuffed ectoplasm in their vaginas, necessitating strip- searches. See also soul and Spirit’s progress. lampadomancy. Flame reading. The messages might be conveyed by changes in flame intensity, color, or direction. How it is done: Chemicals can be added to a segment of the candle to make the flame flicker or change color. On the direction of the flame: a small hole in the table may allow 164 Glossary of Spiritualist Terms and Techniques for a flue to affect air- current.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ferocious Reticence of Georgette Heyern (Sunday Her Daughter Eustachia (Who Nq&.Es), and the Events Which Spring from Times Magazine [London], 5 October 1975, Pp
    I GEQRGMTE HEYER: A CRITICAL RETROSPECTIVE , I I Dragonmede, a selection this past spring of the American Literary Guild, muttered by the narrator are totally out of keeping with her supposed is an example. It is peculiarly undistinguished, mwkd only by a certain station, time and education, although they do add a certain spice to the imitative crispness. The plot has everything, including insanity, almost unimaginable blancmange that is the texture of the book. fratricide, and significant, deliberate, plotted coincidences, as well as I The real interest of this slight work is in the indisputable fact that it judicious doses of the 'purple heart throbs": i will have so many readers. And this in spite of the fact that unlike the I best romantic thrillers or romantic novels Dragonmede neither delights With one swift movement I was off the couch, us with facts or technical descriptions of specialized groups in society, restoring order to my disarranged skirts, smoothing nor interests us in the development and conflict of characters. Its only my hair, turning my back upon him as I drew my tom virtue is that it is smoothly and grammatically written, seldom a feature bodice over my breasts and hid from him the teqs of the present-day romantic novel. The lowest common denominators of which disillusion brought. the genre will interest future social and cultural historians; the authors' assumptions about what women really want to read, at least, are accurate It is an ingredient of such novels that 9e characters, unlike those of enough. It is Janet and John with sex thrown in, and if the results read as Mi% Heyer, exist in a vacuum, the subject of the novel being only their though they were written by committee or computer, it is this which own domestic needs and emotions.
    [Show full text]
  • Architecture & Allied Arts Library Secure
    ARCHITECTURE & ALLIED ARTS LIBRARY SECURE COLLECTIONS November 8, 2010 This list identifies books held in the AAA Library’s Secure Collection are behind the library’s service desk. For exact location and availability, consult the library catalog and library staff. An ‘x’ before a call number indicates an oversize book; the ‘xx’ signifies a double folio book. Periodicals, most non-book formats, and artist’s books are not included in this list. 25th anniversary portfolio : Mount Angel Abbey library, Derrière le miroir no. 214 designed by Alvar Aalto : 1970-1995 / photography, x N2.D4 no. 214 Vincent Zollner printing, Benedictine Press design, Susanna Lundgren and Barbara Phillippi Adria, Museo civico St. Benedict, Or. : Mt. Angel Abbey Library, [1995] [Roma] : Istituto poligrafico dello Stato, Libreria dello xx BX2525.S225 A13 1995 Stato, 1957- Corpus vasorum antiquorum. Italia. fasc. 28, 65 32 neutral matte swatches at 0.25 value intervals [kit.] NK4640.C6I7 fasc. 28 [etc.] [Baltimore : Munsell Color, 197-] ND1280.M92 Akashi, Kunisuke, 1887-1959 Ejiputo ko-bu-to senshoku zurōku 40 paintings from American universities : a sample of [1953] recent paintings by American student artists : [exhibition] / x NK8988.A35 [cosponsored by National Collection of Fine Arts, Smithsonian Institution, and University of Florida] Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition (1909 : Seattle, Wash.) [s.l. : s.n., 1975?] Official guide to the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition : xx ND212.F67 Seattle, Washington, June 1 to October 16, 1909 [Seattle] : Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition Pub. Co., 1909 ABC : beiträge zum bauen, 1924-1928 : reprint, kommentar T890.A1 A3 1909 / zusammengestellt von Werner Möller mit beiträgen von Claude Lichtenstein ..
    [Show full text]
  • Claude Cox Books, Ipswich] 2007
    CLAUDE COX Old & Rare Books ABA, ILAB, PBFA [email protected] www.claudecox.co.uk White House Farm, Kelsale, Saxmundham, IP17 2PQ UK Telephone: +44 (0)1728 602786 Cellphone: 07710 245262 Visitors welcome by appointment. A selection from our stock may also be seen at: H.G. Crisp, High Street, Saxmundham & Yoxford Antiques Centre. Vat Registered no. GB 304 7952 56 All books in this catalogue are 8vo., published in London, unless otherwise stated. Every effort has been made to collate and describe books accurately, but any item may be returned for unmentioned defects. Prices do not include postage & insurance. Payment by Visa, Mastercard or PayPal may be made at the time of ordering. Customers may prefer to remit £ sterling payment direct to our bank account: Sort: 53-61-24 Acc: 0388 1350 INTERNATIONAL: BIC: NWBK GB 2L IBAN: GB68 NWBK 5361 2403 8813 50 Catalogue 204 - Spring 2016 (Code-word CLARENCE which means: Send from catalogue 204 items no...) Our first catalogue to be distributed by digital means alone is not a move away from conventional printed catalogues distributed by Royal Mail to which we remain committed. Nor has the presence of stacks of books in virtually every room here at White House Farm necessitated our first ever sale catalogue. For, as we know, books do furnish a room. The inability to enter the parlour, however, has been something of a wake-up call. The wonderful Steve, the plasterer / builder / designer / improvisor who has worked for us on the restoration of three houses & the shop in Silent Street over the last 30 years, is now back in harness at White House Farm.
    [Show full text]
  • CHRISTMAS 2020 London Subject Index Christmas 2020 Opening Hours
    Peter Harrington CHRISTMAS 2020 london Subject Index Christmas 2020 opening hours: CHILDREN’S Fulham Road 1, 7, 18–19, 31–5, 42–3, 59, 64, 86–7, 97–9, 107–8, 110, 120–1, 140, 144, 148, 168, 173–4, 207, 216, 227–8, 243, 246, 255, 257, 261–4, 267 Mon 23 Nov – Wed 23 Dec COOKERY Mon, Fri, & Sat: 10am–6pm 26, 149, 186, 194, 232 Tue–Thu: 10am–7pm DETECTIVE FICTION & CRIME Sun: closed 14, 21–2, 118, 172, 223–4, 238 Thu 24 Dec: 10am–2pm ECONOMICS Fri 25 Dec – Mon 28 Dec: closed 29, 53, 61, 70–1, 83–4, 89, 94–5, 119, 125, 133, 145, 156, 162, 233, Tue 29 Dec & Wed 30 Dec: 10am–6pm 237, 247, 249, 266 Thu 31 Dec: 10am–2pm FANTASY & SCIENCE FICTION Fri 1 Jan – Sun 3 Jan 2021: closed 8, 80, 96, 105, 143–4, 166, 215 FINE BINDINGS Mon 4 Jan 2021: Normal business 20, 77, 93, 103, 109, 130–1, 154, 161, 203 hours resume LITERATURE 2–4, 10, 17, 30, 39–41, 44, 56–8, 62, 66–8, 72–3, 76, 81–2, 90, 101, 103, 122, 126, 137, 139, 142, 147, 154, 157, 158–9, 160, 163–4, 167, Dover Street 175–6, 180, 187–191, 193, 195, 197, 200–1, 203, 209–10, 212, 214, 220–2, 225, 230–1, 241–2, 244, 250–1, 254, 267, 270, 272, 280, 282 Mon 23 Nov – Wed 23 Dec PHILOSOPHY Mon–Fri: 10am–7pm 5, 15, 78–9, 91–2, 123, 252–3, 278 Sat: 10am–6pm Sun: closed POLITICS 23–5, 48–9, 69, 71, 92, 169, 178–9 Thu 24 Dec: 10am–2pm POETRY Fri 25 Dec – Sun 3 Jan 2021: closed 13, 16, 36, 38, 51, 65, 105, 109, 135, 161, 170–1, 182–3, 192, 199, 208, 213, 217, 236, 239–40, 245, 269, 276 Mon 4 Jan 2021: Normal business PLAYS hours resume 22, 52, 74, 77, 129–31, 151, 153, 181, 258–9, 265, 279 Opening hours are subject to government guidelines PRIVATE PRESS Please see our website for details 11, 51, 103–5, 122, 182, 192, 286 SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY 27, 155, 185, 202, 206, 211, 273 TRAVEL 10, 46, 106, 132, 138, 177, 226, 234, 284 WARTIME/MILITARY 11, 13, 23–5, 47, 84, 179, 198, 219, 235, 245, 257, 260, 276 WORKS BY WOMEN 26, 28, 30, 45, 101–2, 117, 136, 138, 140, 148, 156–60, 163–4, 166, 175, 182–4, 186, 196–7, 199, 206, 209–10, 217, 227–8, 230, 232, 234, 241–4, 246, 250–1, 254, 264, 277, 281–4, 286 VAT no.
    [Show full text]
  • Transition from Native Forest Rubbers to Hevea Brasiliensis (Euphorbiaceae) Among Tribal Smallholders in Borneo Author(S): Michael R
    Transition from Native Forest Rubbers to Hevea brasiliensis (Euphorbiaceae) among Tribal Smallholders in Borneo Author(s): Michael R. Dove Source: Economic Botany, Vol. 48, No. 4 (Oct. - Dec., 1994), pp. 382-396 Published by: Springer on behalf of New York Botanical Garden Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4255664 . Accessed: 14/09/2011 03:49 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. New York Botanical Garden Press and Springer are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Economic Botany. http://www.jstor.org TRANSITION FROM NATIVE FOREST RUBBERS TO HEVEA BRAsILIENSIS (EUPHORBIACEAE) AMONG TRIBAL SMALLHOLDERS IN BORNEO' MICHAEL R. DOVE Dove, Michael R. (East-West Center, Honolulu, HA 96848). TRANSmONFROM NATIVE FOREsT RUBBERS TO HEVEA BRASILIENSISAMONG TRIBAL SMALLHOLDERSIN BoRNEo. EconomicBotany 48(4):382-396. 1994. This is a study of the historictransition in SoutheastAsia, in particular Borneo,from the exploitationof nativeforest rubbersto Para rubber(Hevea brasiliensis,Eu- phorbiaceae).During the second half of the nineteenthcentury, booming international markets subjectedforest rubbersto more intensiveand competitiveexploitation. At the same time, the settlementpatterns of tribalrubber gatherers were becoming more sedentary and theiragriculture more intensive.Hevea spp.
    [Show full text]
  • Embroiderers' Guild of America Master Craftsman Program Crewel Step
    Embroiderers’ Guild of America Master Craftsman Program Crewel Step One Basic Crewel Embroidery Purpose: To exhibit mastery of basic embroidery technique. General Requirements: Please read your crewel information sheets. You must include with your piece a stitch diagram (a drawing of the design with stitches noted in their place.) On this diagram list the stitches you have used and your reference sources for these stitches. Any references you use that are not listed on the bibliography must be photocopied and included with your piece since the judges may not have access to the material. Fold and attach an identification tag (see information package) securely to the back of your work in such a way that your name is not visible. Design: Use the enclosed design. Design Size: Do not enlarge, reduce, or change the design. Fabric: Linen twill Fabric Size: Allow at least four inches on all sides of the design. Threads: Crewel wool – send samples of each color of wool, identified with color number and brand names. Colors: Complementary or split-complementary color scheme. You must include a written description specifying your color scheme. Stitches: Use all of the following stitches. They must be worked in their basic form with no variations. Buttonhole Long and Short (soft shading) French knot Chain Outline Three optional stitches Judging: Judging is based on the following: Accuracy in following directions Suitability of materials Fabric preparation and blocking Transfer of design Knowledge of color and design Overall presentation Balanced use of stitches Excellence in stitch execution Examples of successfully completed pieces: Pat Goaley Step 5: Elizabethan Elizabeth Gibson Step 1 Marguerite Gibson Step 1 Tana Dixon Midnight Fantasy Step 6 Elizabeth Gibson Step 2 Bibliography Alfred, Lady Marion, Needlework as Art, London, Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, and Rivington, 1886.
    [Show full text]
  • The Forum, Vol. 7, Issue 1
    Volume 7 Spring 2015 Phi Alpha Theta Alpha-Nu-Gamma Chapter California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo CALIFORNIA POLYTECHNIC STATE UNIVERSITY, SAN LUIS OBISPO Published in the United States of America by the Cal Poly History Department 1 Grand Avenue, Building 47, Office 27c San Luis Obispo, CA 93407 http://cla.calpoly.edu/hist/ Copyright © 2015 California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Cover art copyright © 2009 Danielle Steussy. Neither the editors nor Cal Poly assume responsibility for statements of fact or opinion made by the contributors. All Rights Reserved. Except in those cases which comply with the fair use guidelines of U.S. copyright law (U.S.C Title 17), no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, or otherwise, without the prior permission from the publisher. All articles appearing in this journal are simultaneously published electronically via the DigitalCommons@CalPoly and are therefore subject to the terms specified in the Non-Exclusive License Agreement for Use of Materials in the DigitalCommons@CalPoly. http://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/forum/ ISSN 2153-7178 ISSN 2153-7119 JOURNAL STAFF Executive Editor Austin J. Due Undergraduate History Student Assistant Editors Wendy Myren Graduate History Student Caitlin Cocuzzo Graduate History Student Sean Martinez Undergraduate History Student Soquel Filice Undergraduate History Student Madeleine Aitchison Undergraduate History Student Proofreader Andrew Gorman Undergraduate History Student Faculty Advisor Dr. Lewis Call Professor of History iii EDITORS NOTE Welcome to the 7th volume of The Forum. Some claim that seven is a lucky number, though I assure you more than luck has made this year’s journal one of the best in its short history.
    [Show full text]
  • The Professional Aunt
    The Professional Aunt Mary C.E. Wemyss The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Professional Aunt, by Mary C.E. Wemyss Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook. This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the header without written permission. Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is important information about your specific rights and restrictions in how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. **Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** **eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** *****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** Title: The Professional Aunt Author: Mary C.E. Wemyss Release Date: May, 2004 [EBook #5736] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on August 19, 2002] Edition: 10 Language: English Character set encoding: ASCII *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, THE PROFESSIONAL AUNT *** This etext was produced by Sean Pobuda. THE PROFESSIONAL AUNT Livros Grátis http://www.livrosgratis.com.br Milhares de livros grátis para download. By Mary C. E. Wemyss Chapter I A boy's profession is not infrequently chosen for him by his parents, which perhaps accounts for the curious fact that the shrewd, business-like member of a family often becomes a painter, while the artistic, unpractical one becomes a member of the Stock Exchange, in course of time, naturally.
    [Show full text]
  • Remaking the Landscape: Kelabit Engagements with Conservation
    REMAKING THE LANDSCAPE: KELABIT ENGAGEMENTS WITH CONSERVATION AND DEVELOPMENT IN SARAWAK, MALAYSIA by SARAH LYNNE HITCHNER (Under the Direction of J. Peter Brosius) ABSTRACT This research aims to document an indigenous culture in a remote place in the process of actively re-negotiating its identity and connections to a changing landscape. The Kelabit have always interacted with other ethnic groups and other places; they have never been completely isolated in the secluded Kelabit Highlands of Sarawak, Malaysia. But the nature and the pace of their engagements with the outside world have changed dramatically in recent decades; numerous external forces have acted upon the Kelabit community, from colonialism to missionization to globalization. They have had very little control over some of these forces, but neither have they been passive recipients of changes wrought by these forces. The Kelabit have always displayed great agency, ingenuity, pride, entrepreneurship, and political savvy during their interactions with the world outside the plateau, and these characteristics extend to their current engagements with conservation and development in the Kelabit Highlands. Building on recent advances in the historical ecology of anthropogenic landscapes and the political ecology of conservation, my research employed an array of ethnographic methods to address three main objectives: (1) to document the relationship between cultural sites and anthropogenic landscape modification in the Kelabit Highlands; (2) to advance a multidisciplinary methodology of gathering, monitoring, and analyzing spatial and temporal data from different sources; and (3) to promote a multi-level collaborative approach to participatory anthropological research methods in the context of planning for several possible alternative conservation and development scenarios in the Kelabit Highlands.
    [Show full text]