Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
Alternativ können Sie versuchen, selbst über Ihren lokalen Bibliothekskatalog auf das gewünschte Dokument zuzugreifen.
Bei Zugriffsproblemen kontaktieren Sie uns gern.
2489 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: National identities, Band 15, Heft 3, S. 313-314
ISSN: 1469-9907
In: National municipal review, Band 24, Heft S3, S. 762-763
Περιέχει τη περίληψη ; Greece is trying to raise its library standards to the same level as those of other Western nations. It still has no national bibliography, no link with international interloans and little modern technology. In 1984 the First edition of a quarterly librarianship periodical waspublished, Bibliothekes kai Pliroforisi (Libraries and Information). Themes covered so far: include Greek librarianship training, public library development, the possibilities of using data banks, international document exchange, plans for a Greek national library and library legislation. Concern has been expressed over the shortage of library posts.
BASE
Περιέχει τη περίληψη ; Greece is trying to raise its library standards to the same level as those of other Western nations. It still has no national bibliography, no link with international interloans and little modern technology. In 1984 the First edition of a quarterly librarianship periodical waspublished, Bibliothekes kai Pliroforisi (Libraries and Information). Themes covered so far: include Greek librarianship training, public library development, the possibilities of using data banks, international document exchange, plans for a Greek national library and library legislation. Concern has been expressed over the shortage of library posts.
BASE
In: Routledge Studies in Cultural History Ser.
Cover -- Half Title -- Series -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of figures -- List of tables -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- I Creating -- 1 The international exhibitions of Antwerp (1885) and Paris (1889) in the magazine A Ilustração (1884-1892) -- 2 Representations of Africa and Africans in the magazine Portugal em África (1894-1910) -- 3 The press of the Methodist Episcopal Church (MEC) in Mozambique and its colonization of African minds (1890-1968) -- 4 Literary discourses in the Portuguese colonial press -- 5 The official press in Equatorial Guinea: tracing colonial and postcolonial governance in Ébano -- II Debating -- 6 Portuguese public opinion at the time of the Boletim e Annaes do Conselho Ultramarino -- 7 The Asian colonies in the newspaper A Capital -- 8 Portuguese colonial agents and models: metropolitan colonial periodicals (1912-1937) -- 9 Africa in the Jornal da Europa -- III Opposing -- 10 Anticolonial struggles and resistance in the African press (1870-1926) -- 11 African press censorship in Mozambique: the case study of Brado Africano in the twentieth century -- 12 'Reaching the hearts of the sons of Portugal with the longings and aspirations of the sons of India' -- 13 Speaking critically of Goa through Gandhi or how to circumvent political censorship at the end of Portuguese colonialism -- 14 The press and the colonial war/liberation struggle in Mozambique: the case of the newspaper RESSURGIMENTO, 1968-1973 -- Bibliography -- Contributors' biographies -- Index.
In: http://hdl.handle.net/10605/320178
Box 3, Folder 5 ; Born in Dublin, Ireland, in 1869, Thomas Aloysius Hickey arrived in America in 1892. Hickey joined the Socialist Labor party and the Knights of Labor in 1893 and became an ardent speaker, organizer, and writer, as well as private secretary to Eugene V. Debs. In 1900, he left the Socialist Labor Party and went on to cocreate the Socialist Trade and Labor Alliance and helped arrange several machinist strikes in New Jersey, which led to his blacklisting by employers. Moving to Butte, Montana, Hickey joined the Western Federation of Miners and helped recruit for the Socialist party. ; In 1911, he moved to Hallettsville, Texas, and started a weekly newspaper called The Rebel. Over time, Hickey became a prominent figure in the socialist movement and the slogan of his paper became the official slogan of the Socialist party in Texas. He served as the socialist candidate for lieutenant governor in 1912 and was married to Clara E. Boeer that same year. The government suppressed The Rebel in 1917 under the Espionage Act and in 1918, the Nonpartisan League fired Hickey as an organizer. ; In October 1919, he and other socialists organized the National Workers Drilling and Production Company. Hickey continued writing, serving as an advertising manager of the Desdemona Oil News and a correspondent for fourteen more newspapers such as the Texas Oil World and the Independent Oil and Financial Reporter. Withdrawing from the company in 1920, he moved to a farm near Stamford, Texas, and was publishing Tom Hickey's Magazine until his death on May 7, 1925, of throat cancer. ; The Handbook of Texas has published a more in-depth online biography of Thomas Aloysius Hickey at http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/search.html ; The collection contains correspondence, printed material, news clippings, financial and legal material, literary productions, and scrapbook material. The bulk of the collection is correspondence, including letters from Hickey's readers and from Socialist leaders such as Theodore Debs. The printed materials include newsletters, pamphlets, periodicals, and circulars. Principal subjects of this collection are the Socialist Party, World War I, and pacifism. ; Conservation Note: In 1985 and 1986, a large number of the papers in this collection were encapsulated within Mellinex polyester film and/or deacidified using Wei I'o aerosol solution. Those pages that were not treated remain fragile and brittle. Also, some of the double-sided tape used for the encapsulation is either coming loose or sticking to other pages. Additionally, the two volume German medical book set is in very fragile condition, with the binding falling apart and pages loose. The covers are also fading and deteriorating.
BASE
In: http://hdl.handle.net/10605/320181
Box 4, Folder 1 ; Born in Dublin, Ireland, in 1869, Thomas Aloysius Hickey arrived in America in 1892. Hickey joined the Socialist Labor party and the Knights of Labor in 1893 and became an ardent speaker, organizer, and writer, as well as private secretary to Eugene V. Debs. In 1900, he left the Socialist Labor Party and went on to cocreate the Socialist Trade and Labor Alliance and helped arrange several machinist strikes in New Jersey, which led to his blacklisting by employers. Moving to Butte, Montana, Hickey joined the Western Federation of Miners and helped recruit for the Socialist party. ; In 1911, he moved to Hallettsville, Texas, and started a weekly newspaper called The Rebel. Over time, Hickey became a prominent figure in the socialist movement and the slogan of his paper became the official slogan of the Socialist party in Texas. He served as the socialist candidate for lieutenant governor in 1912 and was married to Clara E. Boeer that same year. The government suppressed The Rebel in 1917 under the Espionage Act and in 1918, the Nonpartisan League fired Hickey as an organizer. ; In October 1919, he and other socialists organized the National Workers Drilling and Production Company. Hickey continued writing, serving as an advertising manager of the Desdemona Oil News and a correspondent for fourteen more newspapers such as the Texas Oil World and the Independent Oil and Financial Reporter. Withdrawing from the company in 1920, he moved to a farm near Stamford, Texas, and was publishing Tom Hickey's Magazine until his death on May 7, 1925, of throat cancer. ; The Handbook of Texas has published a more in-depth online biography of Thomas Aloysius Hickey at http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/search.html ; The collection contains correspondence, printed material, news clippings, financial and legal material, literary productions, and scrapbook material. The bulk of the collection is correspondence, including letters from Hickey's readers and from Socialist leaders such as Theodore Debs. The printed materials include newsletters, pamphlets, periodicals, and circulars. Principal subjects of this collection are the Socialist Party, World War I, and pacifism. ; Conservation Note: In 1985 and 1986, a large number of the papers in this collection were encapsulated within Mellinex polyester film and/or deacidified using Wei I'o aerosol solution. Those pages that were not treated remain fragile and brittle. Also, some of the double-sided tape used for the encapsulation is either coming loose or sticking to other pages. Additionally, the two volume German medical book set is in very fragile condition, with the binding falling apart and pages loose. The covers are also fading and deteriorating.
BASE
In: Vestnik Permskogo universiteta: Perm University herald. Serija Istorija = Series History, Heft 3(50), S. 100-108
The case of the Soviet military periodicals during the Red Army's campaign in Europe (March 1944 – May 1945) is analyzed in the paper based on the materials from the Central Archives of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation (TsAMO RF) and the Russian State Archive of Socio-Political History (RGASPI). The author analyzes the structure of military periodicals, characterizes the norms established by the Main Political Directorate of the Red Army (GlavPURKKA) regulating the work of military periodicals, and traces the relationship between editorial boards and war correspondents. It is stated that the editorial boards of military periodicals consisted, as a rule, of 27 employees: 19 military personnel and 8 civilian employees. GlavPURKKA controlled the military periodical press. The circulation of military newspapers was determined by the orders of the chief of GlavPURKKA and was repeatedly increased or reduced. The content was controlled by the political administrations of the fronts. GlavPURKKA regulated the main directions of newspapers' development and revealed shortcomings in the work of editorial boards. Constant supervision by GlavPURKKA and political administrations of the fronts protruded "relations" between editorial boards and war correspondents. The political administrations urged the editorial boards to establish a comprehensive contact with war correspondents and to eliminate the existing shortcomings in working with them. On the whole, the institute of military periodicals was a rather complex "organism" that underwent various changes and improvements throughout the period.
In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/nyp.33433104900299
No more published. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Gift of G.W. Maynard.
BASE
At head of title, Apr.-Dec. 1978: NFR. ; Title from cover. ; Index to U.S. Government periodicals ; Public Affairs Information Service bulletin ; BioBusiness ; Bibliography of agriculture ; Trade & industry index ; Business periodicals index ; Vols. for 1988-1990 called v. 11, issue 1-v. 13, issue 4. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Vols. for spring 1979-summer 1980 issued by: National Economics Division, Economics, Statistics, and Cooperatives Service ( with the Information Division, Economics, Statistics, and Cooperatives Service); fall 1980-spring 1981 by: National Economics Division, Economics and Statistics Service; summer 1981-198 by: National Economics Division, Economic Research Service; -Oct.-Dec. 1990 by: Commodity Economics Division, Economic Research Service, U.S. Dept. of Agriculture.
BASE