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Phelsuma - novorum ab ill. Dr. Christ Rutenberg in insula Madagascar collectorum. Zool. Anz. Leipzig 4: 46-48. Boettger, O. (1881 b). Reliquiae Rutenbergiana II: Reptilien und Amphibien. Abl. bremer naturwiss. Ver. Bremen 7: 177-190. Boettger, O. (1881 c) Die Reptilien und Amphibien von Madagaskar. Dritten Nachtrag Abh. senck. naturfors. Gesellschaft 12: 435-558. Boettger, O. (1893). Katalog der Reptilien Sammlung im Museum der Senckenbergischen naturforschenden gesellschaft in Frankfurt am Main. I. Teil Frankfurt a/M.Gesellschaft 12: 435-558. Boettger, O. (1894). Diagnose eines Geckos und Chameleons aus Südmadagascar. Zool. Anzeiger (Leipzig) 17: 137-140. Boettger, O. (1913). Reptilien und Amphibien von Madagaskar, den Inseln und dem Festland Ostafrikas (Sammlung Voeltzkow 1889-1895 und 1903-1905) in: Voeltzkow, A. 1908-1917, Reise in Ostafrika. Stuttgart 3: 269-375. Böhme, W. & Meier, H. (1981) Eine neue form der madagascariensis-Gruppe der Gattung Phelsuma.

Louis Christophe François Hachette - Louis Christophe François Hachette Louis Christophe François Hachette (May 5, 1800 - July 31, 1864), French publisher, was born at Rethel in the Ardennes departement of France. After studying three years at a normal school with the view of becoming a teacher, he was in 1822 on political grounds expelled from the seminary. He then studied law, but in 1826 he established in Paris a publishing business for the issue of works adapted to improve the system of school instruction, or to promote the general culture of the community. He published manuals in various departments of knowledge, dictionaries of modern and ancient languages, educational journals, and French, Latin and Greek classics annotated with great care by the most eminent authorities. Subsequently to 1850 he, in conjunction.

Louis Renault - Louis Renault Louis Renault (1843 - 1918) was a French jurist and educator, the cowinner in 1907 (with Ernesto Teodoro Moneta) of the Nobel Prize for Peace. References more info.

Louis Rossetto - Louis Rossetto Louis Rossetto (born 1950) is an American journalist. He is best known as the founder and former publisher of Wired Magazine. Rossetto was born and grew up on Long Island, New York. He went to Columbia University as an undergraduate and later returned for an MBA. In the early 1970s, he wrote a novel called Takeover. Several years later, he ghostwrote a book about the making of the film Caligula called Ultimate Porno. In 1985, Rossetto joined the staff of a translation company in Amsterdam, INK Taalservice. INK launched an English-language magazine in 1987 with Rossetto as editor called Language Technology which covered the language business. The magazine was later renamed Electric Word and sold to a small Dutch media company. It was terminated.

Lorine Niedecker - take care of her ailing mother. She married in 1928, but this relationship lasted only two years. Early Writings Niedecker's earliest poetry was marked by her reading of the Imagists, whose work she greatly admired and of surrealism. In 1931, she read the Objectivist issue of Poetry. She was fascinated by what she saw and immediately wrote to Louis Zukofsky, who had edited the issue, sending him her latest poems. This was the beginning of what proved to be a most important relationship for her development as a poet. Zukofsky suggested sending them to Poetry, where they were accepted for publication. Suddenly, Niedecker found herself in direct contact with the American poetic avant garde. From the mid 1930s, Niedecker moved away from surrealism and started writing poems that engaged more directly.

Tau Kappa Epsilon - God; To Believe in the worthiness and dignity of my fellow man, and judge him solely upon his personal worth and character; To Believe with fidelity in the traditions and ideals of my Fraternity, and upon my sacred honor, to uphold them; To Believe in the constant search for truth, and through it, to seek the goal of wisdom; To Believe in the life based upon integrity, justice, sincerity, patience, moderation, culture, and challenge in order to serve as a responsible, mature member of society; To Believe in the cardinal principles of Love, Charity, and Esteem and to use them to guide my life; To Believe in my Fraternity as a brotherhood of gentlemen in perpetual quest of excellence as a way of life. Declaration of Principles William Wilson wrote the.

Biological cell - separates its interior from the surroundings, strictly controls what moves in and out and maintains the electric potential of the cell, A salty cytoplasm (the substance which makes up most of the cell volume) DNA, the hereditary material of genes, which guide the operations of the cell. RNA, through which DNA instructions are expressed. Enzymes and other protein machinery. A variety of biomolecules. They also share several abilities: The capacity to divide by mitosis. Metabolism, including the taking in of raw material, using it to build cell components, or breaking it down for energy, and releasing byproducts. Protein biosynthesis The ability to respond to external and internal stimuli These functions and abilities are expressed in the cell cycle: the "birth", growth, reproduction, and "death" of individual cells. Organisms vary from single.

Miami Beach, Florida - 64, and 19.2% who are 65 years of age or older. The median age is 39 years. For every 100 females there are 105.0 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there are 105.4 males. The median income for a household in the city is $27,322, and the median income for a family is $33,440. Males have a median income of $33,964 versus $27,094 for females. The per capita income for the city is $27,853. 21.8% of the population and 17.0% of families are below the poverty line. Out of the total people living in poverty, 25.2% are under the age of 18 and 24.5% are 65 or older. External Links Miami Beach Adventure Guide - info on local attractions, beach resorts, landmarks and the famous Art Deco District..

Antonio Carlos Gomes - musical tendency’s were soon stimulated by his father and by his older brother José Pedro de Sant'Ana Gomes, also a Conductor. José Pedro was the most dedicated guide and adviser in his brother’s artistic career. He convinced Antônio to visit the Court where he became a protegé of the Emperor Dom Pedro II, who, being notoriously interested in the carrers of Brazilian artists and intellectuals, made possible for Antônio Carlos to study at the Musical Conservatory of Rio de Janeiro. After having graduated with honors, Carlos produced his first opera, A Noite Do Castelo (September 1861). It was a big success. Two years later, he repeated it with his second opera, Joana De Flandres, which was considered superior to the first. These two pieces convinced the Emperor to offer him a.

List of people by name: Lo - List of people by name: Lo List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z La - Lb - Lc - Ld - Le - Lf - Lg - Lh - Li - Lj - Lk - Ll - Lm - Ln - Lo - Lp - Lq - Lr - Ls - Lt - Lu - Lv - Lw - Lx - Ly - Lz Loach, Ken, (born 1936), US film director Loaf, Meat, (born 1951), American singer and actor Lobachevsky,.

Lolita - A scholar, Humbert leaves Europe for America, and he eventually moves into a rented room in the home of Charlotte Haze, after meeting her, and spying her twelve-year-old daughter (Dolores Haze, affectionately shortened to "Lo", or Lolita) sunbathing in the garden. Charlotte Haze, a lonely widow, becomes Humbert's unwitting pawn in his silent quest to be near her young daughter. Charlotte soon marries Humbert. Upon a search of Humbert's room, she finds his diary, and Humbert's written confessions of indifference to his new wife and impassioned lust for her daughter. She runs away in disgust and, in fleeing the home, is hit and killed by a passing car. Humbert begins traveling around America with Lolita, with whom he is now having a sexual relationship, going from motel to motel. This relationship.

Lohengrin - Elsa herself does not know. Telramund also appears and claims to have been vanquished by fraud, as he does not know the name of his opponent. Lohengrin refuses to reveal his identity, saying that one only has the right to know his origin. To Elsa alone will he answer. Elsa assures him of her confidence, and they enter the church. ACT III. The bridal chamber. Elsa and Lohengrin are ushered in with the well-known bridal chorus. They express their love for each other, but Ortrud's words are impressed upon Elsa, and, despite Lohengrin's warning, she asks the fatal question. Telramund rushes in to attack the knight, but is slain by Lohengrin, who sorrowfully turns to Elsa, and asks her to follow him to the king, to whom he will now reveal.

Victor Hugo - world as a novelist, it was as a poet that he broke new ground. The French poetic traditions were as well-established in his time as the English ones were before the time of the Romantic poets, and Hugo's contribution may be compared with that of Wordsworth. He believed that the poet's purpose should be two-fold: to echo universal sentiment by revealing his own feelings, uniting the voices of mankind, nature and history. to guide the reader: "faire flamboyer l'avenir" - to lead the way. In his epic, La Légende des Siècles, he attempts, by reference to historical events, to depict humanity's struggle to emerge from obscurity into enlightenment. Honorary President and founder of the Association Littéraire et Artistique Internationale (ALAI) in 1878 in Paris which gave itself the objective of creating.

Jules Simon - and in 1844-1845 appeared the two volumes of his Histoire de l'école d'Alexandrie. He became a regular contributor to the Revue des deux mondes, and in 1847, with Amédée Jacques and Émile Saisset, founded the Liberti de penser, with the intention of throwing off the yoke of Cousin, but he retired when Jacques allowed the insertion of an article advocating the principles of collectivism, with which he was at no time in sympathy. In 1848 he represented the Côtes-du-Nord in the National Assembly, and next year entered the Council of State, but was retired on account of his republican opinions. His refusal to take the oath of allegiance to the government of Louis Napoleon after the coup d'état was followed by his dismissal from his professorship, and he devoted himself to.

Victor Cousin - the first great widening of his reputation is associated. In 1827 followed the Cours de I'histoire de la philosophie. In 1828, de Vatimesnil, minister of public instruction in Martignac's ministry, recalled Cousin and Guizot to their professorial positions in the university. The three years which followed were the period of Cousin's greatest triumph as a lecturer. His return to the chair was the symbol of the triumph of constitutional ideas and was greeted with enthusiasm. The hall of the Sorbonne was crowded as the hall of no philosophical teacher in Paris had been since the days of Pierre Abelard. The lecturer's eloquence mingled with speculative exposition, and he possessed a singular power of rhetorical climax. His philosophy showed strikingly the generalizing tendency of the French intellect, and its logical need of.

Hippolyte Taine - bear it no longer, and he applied for leave, which was readily granted him on October 9 1852, and renewed every year till his decennial appointment came to an end. It was in this painful year, during which Taine worked harder than ever, that the fellowship of philosophy was abolished. As soon as Taine heard of this he at once began to prepare himself for the fellowship in letters, and to work hard at Latin and Greek themes. On April 10 1852 a decree was published by which three years of preliminary study were necessary before a candidate could compete for the fellowship, but by which a doctor's degree in letters counted as two years. Taine immediately set to work at his dissertations for the doctor's degree; on June 8 (1852).

Fleeming Jenkin - the time, he gives a boyish account of the circumstances. The family were living in the Rue Caumartin, and on the evening of February 23 he and his father were taking a walk along the boulevards, which were illuminated for joy at the resignation of Guizot. They passed the residence of the Foreign Minister, which was guarded with troops, and encountered a band of rioters marching along the street with torches, and singing the Marseillaise. After them came a rabble, some armed with sticks and sabres. 'I remarked to papa' (he writes),'I would not have missed the scene for anything. I might never see such a splendid one ; when PONG went one shot. Every face went pale: R--R--R--R--R went the whole detachment [of troops], and the whole crowd of gentlemen.

Four Quartets - of harvest The time of coupling of man and woman And that of beasts. The second and third stanzas are a sad and melancholic evocation of those who were before as, which brings to mind our own weakness and nothingness; there is nothing left from them as there will be nothing left from us. There is only one escape, for the poet, and that is humility: The only widom we can hope to acquire Is the wisdom of humility: humility is endless. But then, what hope is there? That of hoping against all hope (from Romans 4:18) and hence going through the dark night of the soul; here Eliot quotes almost literally St. John of the Cross' Subida del Monte Carmelo: To arrive where you are, to get from where you.

François Guizot - Francois Guizot had substituted for her. The acquaintance ripened,into friendship and love, and in 1812 Mademoiselle de Meulan married her youthful ally. She died in 1827; she was the author of many esteemed works on female education. An only son, born in 1819, died in 1837 of consumption. In 1828 Guizot married Elisa Dillon, niece of his first wife, and also an author. She died in 1833, leaving a son, Maurice Guillaume (1833-1892), who attained some reputation as a scholar and writer. During the empire, Guizot, entirely devoted to literary pursuits, published a collection of French synonyms (1809), an essay on the fine arts (1811), and a translation of Edward Gibbon's work, with additional notes, in 1812. These works recommended him to the notice of de Fontanes, grand-master of the university.

Ardengus - for MSS see Landgraf, Introduction, p. 174 Bibliography Artur Michael Landgraf, Introduction à l'histoire de la littérature théologique de la scolastique naissante Edited by Albert-M. Landry, translated by Louis-B. Geyer. Université de Montréal, Publications de l'Institut d'Études médiévales, vol. 22. Montreal and Paris, 1973. U. Betti, "Il Maestro Ardengo, vescovo di Firenze," Divinitas 9 (1965): 161-70 F. Stegmüller, "Ardingus," LThK 1 (1957): 829 Glorieux, Répertoire, 1: 284-5, n. 120 Johannes Baptist Schneyer, Repertorium der lateinischen Sermones des Mittelalters. 11 volumes. (Beiträge zur Geschichte der Philosophie und Theologie des Mittelalters, 43/1-11.) Aschendorff: Münster, 1969-1990 Source Information derived from Gary Macy A Guide to Thirteenth Century Theologians http://www.sandiego.edu/~macy.


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