124,358 research outputs found
Etching of the House of Jesse K. Dubois in Springfield, Illinois by Bernhardt Wall
This print features an etching by Bernhardt Wall. This print was created in 1938. This etching is entitled House of Jesse K. Dubois, Springfield, Ill., where Lincoln had tea on June 15, 1860.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/fvw-artifacts/5828/thumbnail.jp
John A. Cone Correspondence
Entries include a handwritten letter on Office of Superintendent of Schools, Brunswick, Maine, stationery and a typed list of quotes about Cone\u27s book
Helminth fauna of Mt. Ontake. Part 1. Nematoda and Acanthocephala
I. Nematodes of fishes
1. Rhabdochona amago Yamaguti, 1935
II. Nematodes of frogs
2. Cosmocerca japonica Yamaguti, 1938
3. Cosmocercoides pulcher Wilkie, 1930
4. Oswaldocruzia bialata (Molin, 1860)
5. Rhabdias montana n. sp.
III. Nematodes of mammals
6. Protospirura muris (Gmelin, 1890)
7. Heterakis spumosa Schneider, 1866
8. Longistriata wolgaensis Schulz, 1926
IV. Acanthocephala of frogs
9. Acanthocephalus lucidus van Cleave, 1925</p
When did Latin America fall behind? : evidence from long-run international inequality
When did Latin America fall behind?. Has the gap between developed countries and Latin America widened over time?. This paper addresses these recurrent questions with the tools provided by the inequality literature. Long-run inter-country inequality is assessed in terms of real (purchasing power-adjusted) GDP per head and of an 'improved' human development index as an indicator of welfare for present-day OECD and Latin America. A long term rise in income inequality is observed for this sample of countries with the deepening gap between OECD and Latin America as its main determinant. Contrary to a widespread view, in terms of income, Latin America fell behind in the late twentieth century. Inequality in terms of human development declined over time, but the gap between OECD and Latin America remained largely unchanged
Harry Lyman Koopman Correspondence
Entries include typed and handwritten letters on the Library of Brown University and Providence Journal stationery, correspondence with Koopman concerning Elizabeth Akers Allen about whom Koopman had written a biographical editorial, the newspaper clipping of the editorial, and a photographic portrait of Koopman
- âŠ