... is also an admirable piece of work,
but he had not the advantage ofthe stores of material which are now available.
Through the indefatigable enthusiasm ofthe late Dr. Hocken the journals of ...
Museum I have to thank the Board of Governors of Canterbury College; and for the
loan ofa rare and valuable pamphlet on the death ofthe Rev. C. S. Volkner I am
The character ofthe man thus ... before the ship
reached Australia, Ruatara was once again a man, and now almost a Christian.
This meeting was momentous in its results. "Mr. Marsden and Ruatara," as Carleton
says,...
... Grand Aya-
tollah Ali Husseini al-Sistani, Iraq’s leading Shi’ite cleric. As a result,
it had to be amended once again to eliminate both the caucuses and
the transitional assembly. Instead, a ... Baghdad was
occasioned by the mounting chaos there and was accompanied by an
inclination to assert a firmer American grip, one result of which was
the selection and dispatch of Bremer.
What ... CJTF-7,
the CPA was slow to adjust the pace and refocus this training to meet
the mounting internal threat. It was far from alone in this regard.
Washington was even slower to appreciate what was...
... that tothe judges.
Then we are entertained with a great deal of ingenious talk about whigs
and tories, and at last are told, that some ofthe whigs owed all their importance to
popularity. ... excite a resentment against the friends of
liberty, for tyrannically depriving their antagonists of so important a branch
of freedom; and a compassion towards the tories, in the breasts ofthe ...
almost all the wild mock pranks of this desperate triumvirate have been attended to and
adopted, and we are now as miserable as
tyranny can well make us. That Bernard came here with the affections...
... the advocates ofthe education
of the Negroes endeavored to give them such practical training as their peculiar needs demanded. In the
agricultural sections the first duty ofthe teacher ofthe ... has passed into thehistoryof our nation and age." Miss
Crandall was tried the 23d of August, 1833, at Brooklyn, the county seat ofthe county of Windham. The jury
failed to agree upon a ... often taught to mistreat and malign each other
to keep alive a feeling of hatred. The bad traits oftheAmerican Negroes resulted then not from an instinct
common tothe natives of Africa, but...
... scope of their
research far afield, and the latter half ofthe twentieth century saw attempts
to relate Japanese not only to Korean and Altaic, but also to Austronesian,
Dravidian, Tibetan, and to ... Japanese.
Some of these linguists have pursued comparative work in the context of
Macro-Altaic – that is, a relationship of Japanese to Korean was treated as
subsidiary tothe grander comparative ... those systems. Although the amount of print space in
Lee’s original book devoted to that stage ofthe language was nearly as great
as that used for all the other stages ofthe language combined,...
... offered an array of practical in-
formation about administration, law, and systematic procedure as well as
knowledge of literacy and the traditions of other lands. This was a valu-
able aid to early ... Silla tothe south, and China from the sea. Silla in
the southeast corner of Korea, however, had easier boundaries to defend
and was out of reach of direct assault by China. China assisted in the ... conquered a region in southern Korea and set up the Mimana ter-
ritory, which was administered by a Japanese official. Later the territory
was turned over to Yamato’s ally Paekche and then lost to...
... Latin and Romance
2.6 Tardarsan por jmplire (l.7) appears not to translate the Latin exactly, but
to have the meaning ‘they tarry, are slow, in observing’.
2.6.1 Tardarsan illustrates the analytic ... University of London
A Historyofthe Spanish Language through Texts examines the evolution ofthe Spanish
language from the Middle Ages tothe present day.
Including chapters on Latin American Spanish, ... newspaper articles and political documents, toa Buñuel
film script and a love letter.
A Historyofthe Spanish Language through Texts presents the formal historyof the
language and its texts in a...
... conversion of cel-
lulose to sugars was again investigated by Battelle-Geneva on a pilot plant basis,
particularly of separation ofthe hydrochloric acid and sugars, as well as re-
concentration ofthe ... billion tons per year. If it can be converted into
chemicals and materials, human population will be able to enjoy material
abundance for ages to come. Biomass materials are renewable. Their utilization
creates ... when they find certain super micro-
organisms capable of synthesis and accumulation ofa valuable metabolite.
Soon, they realize that the product cannot be marketed and it has to be purified
to...
... Other Australia
United American Asian and
States Canada Countries Europe Africa China Korea India Countries Oceania
51.7 < 1 < 1 3.6 1.2 26.1 5.5 3.1 6.9 < 1
Report ofthe AAA/AAPLG Ad ... 100.0%
Report ofthe AAA/AAPLG Ad Hoc Committee to Assess the Supply and Demand for Accounting Ph.D.s 9
Percentage ofthe Specialty Percentage ofthe Specialty Percentage ofthe Specialty
TABLE 3
Percentage ... recognition” and “earning potential.” Students appear to disagree on the impor-
tance of pursuing a career in teaching, relative tothe importance ofa career in academic re-
search, as motivational factors....
... 1460. His great
work was training seamen. Many men afterward famous as discoverers and navigators, as Dias (dee'ahss), Da
Gama (dah gah'ma), Cabral (ca-brahl'), Magellan, and Columbus, ... which to
make the voyage, and on Friday, the 3d of August, 1492, the Santa Maria (sahn'tah mah-ree'ah), the Pinta
(peen'tah), and the _Ni a_ (neen'yah) set sail from Palos (pah'los), ... width of the
Pacific. It showed that America was probably not a part of Asia, and changed the geographical ideas of the
time. [12]
THE COAST OF FLORIDA EXPLORED What meantime had happened along the...
... to call a representative assembly ofthe people to share in the making of laws. The land
warrants were issued at the rate ofa hundred acres on each share of stock and a similar amount to each
colonist ... the plantations from one another and often separated the several fields on the same
estate; but the cause of this was not so much the paucity of population as the character ofthe land and the
prevalent ... of
perhaps a dozen factors, as many sub-factors, twice as many assistants, and a few bookkeepers and auditors,
as well as a corps of white artisans and an abundance of native interpreters, boatmen, carriers...
... d'Amours, the youngest ofthe quartette, came to Acadia rather later than his brothers and was granted
a seigniory at Canibecachice (Kennebecasis), a league and a half along each side ofthe ... Frontenac sent to Acadia in October, 1693, to lead the savages against the English.
This new lieutenant spent the winter at the Nashwaak fort and as soon as the ice was out ofthe river went in a
canoe ... like a broad natural roadway, which affords an
easy ascent tothe upland. This no doubt was the commencement ofthe famous portage by which bands of
savages in ancient days took their way westward...