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ParadigmsPastPage491
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info:fedora/mu:69978
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such things as verb conjugations or noun declensions; some dictionaries define paradigm as “an example or archetype.” Neither definition is what I have in mind. In science, more specifically the philosophy of science, a paradigm is taken to mean, in simple terms, one’s view of how the world operates. In short, it constitutes the intellectual grounds upon which one meets experience (Kuhn 1977). A paradigm
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Joplin, Missouri, 1906 July, sheet 02
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Joplin, Missouri, July 1906. Streets: N. Byers Avenue, N. Pearl, N. Wall, N. Joplin, F Street, West E St.
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Savitar1937page196
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info:fedora/mu:167751
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From Left to Right . . . JOHN HOWIP], a campus leader, and probably one of the bet college drum majors in the United States. . . . MARY HILL and RHODA REINHOLD are two of the best known and mo t liked Independents on the rampus. . . . JOAN HOWP} and DAVID KEER are two of \Vorkshop’s administrative and dramatic leaders. . . . BEVERLY BRADISH during his term in ollice proved to be one of the best business managers the Savitar has“ever known. . . . BOB CASE and GIL SEIDEL, leaders of the two oflicial tampu publications, seem to enjoy a joke. . . . BAKER ATTERBURY and HAROLD THIEMAN, popular Ag School leader , give the tamera a big smile. * ~ t"‘- aumnuuuv .,-~.s.~ .
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lex014ziiip0202
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info:fedora/mu:107126
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202 NEW MEXICO MINES AND MINERALS. stone and porphvry. There is scarcely an exception to this rule. Occasionally, deposits are met with where, seemingly, no lime had ever occurred in juxtaposition with the iron; but a careful examination will either reveal this condition exist- ing, or it will show that the limestone has been removed by erosion; since the lime always forms the top covering or en- cases the iron. This top covering or hanging wall is in nearly all cases a very hard blue limestone of variable thickness and generally destitute of fossils, on account of metamorphism. The iron in most every instance, rests on an intrusive por- phyritic sheet or dike. This condition being so general, the first supposition by the writer was, that the genetic existence of the iron was due in some manner to the dike or intrusive sheet. A study of the origin of most of the New Mexico deposits of iron ore can best be made at the Jones iron group, in the Jones mining district, eastern Socorro county, which seems to be typical, in a general way, throughout the Territory. These deposits are, perhaps, the most extensive in the Terri- tory; extending as they do along a great monzonite dike which runs a little south of east, for a distance of ten miles, cutting’ at right angles across and through the north end of the Sierra Oscura. Nearly south of this main -deposit is a much smaller one occurring on a similar parallel monzonite dike; the geological conditions of the two are identical. It is more than probable that the gnesis of these deposits is due to the leaching of the iron values from the surrounding field of Car- boniferous limestone. The rounded and peculiar shape of many of these iron aggregations would indicate that they had previously filled a cavity; in other instances the iron appears to have replaced stratas of limestone of uniform thickness. Moreover, the accumulation of the deposits has a bedded or stratified appearance which would indicate the presence of water in the cavities at the time the iron was precipitated and laid down. a Further, the peculiarities in the roughness of the limestone and the many caverns and depressions or sinks indicate the circulationof much waterat one time. Underlying some of thelimestone covering or capping and in the horizontal bed- ded seams, all through the district, small isolated patches of
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Savitar1932page410
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info:fedora/mu:171881
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s was .72, .rm ‘v \evv‘- . rw-_v> , . c"‘ . ..~.,.-.,at..>... .39 wt»-«.3 aw ;..,. 4.» ,4. .....» ,. .» . Ky: *“'7‘»3$ co. 9 win. am‘
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Savitar1932page132
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info:fedora/mu:171881
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fix‘: . .,'.*,.$4';tr‘!“:€5.— L x '- ~. ~ ' * w VS‘) ~.3...ar,a"-‘ 4' “ __ 95. 3 \ it I ' g>,ém§~_r 1“, ’A"£,_ , __ VIA,“ -‘ '.V._ 5 F K. ._.,,. ‘57"*’**‘% - FOOTBALL team winning the charity game played in Kansas City, 38-6. It was a battle for the first five minutes, with Hatfield drilling through a hole at left tackle to gallop 51 yards
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GospelHymnsShapeNotePage130
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info:fedora/mu:46010
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No. 149. gm-r the Owl. “Put on the whole armour or God."—EPH. 6: 11. W. F. S. WM. F. Snnnwm, 1876, by per. A I March movement. J J F: L | J J‘ J . . 1 1 a 4— P" E’.:L:_fi;.l_ ‘ ' ‘I--—;2+5-I--—--1;‘?-I-i~;I—-—:I—~—-fi‘—:<——1—‘_~ oc*:r.:i _._ .— —— —— »— ——— — -——— —- — —+———— —— I 4 ’_ .6 | 2.‘. :+_=n__:1.:q g{,__r__f.3_‘,J \ 1. Lo! the day of God is breaking; See the gleaming
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MakeChristKingPage083
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info:fedora/mu:100952
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. . . . . .)‘Peaoe. dawn - ing of dawning of_ . No. 75. Full Surrender. . + ' 1. Lord, I make a full sur-ren -dar, All I have I yield to Thee; 2. Lord, my will I here pre-sent Thee,Glad-ly now no lon- get mine; 3. Lord, my life I lay be - fore Thee, Hear, thishonr, the sa-cred vow! ‘ I For Thy love, so great and ten-der, Asks the gift from me. gift from me. Let no e - vil thing pre-vent me Blending
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Farmington, Missouri, 1914 December, sheet 6
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Farmington, Missouri, December 1914. Streets: 1st (First) Street, 2nd (Second) Street, 3rd (Third) Street, 4th (Fourth) Street, Donnell, Warren, Overton, McIlvaine, Franklin, Jefferson, Washington, Eastern Avenue, Henry
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publicvitalstatmo1941p070
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info:fedora/mu:13433
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preacher of the gospel, magistrate or regularly ,,__.._. 1. M.L. 1921, pp. 469 f., sec. 1 (7299); 11.8. 1929, see. 2974; 12.9. S30.’ ~‘ - '~ ” 1 2o §3_!=_h_r_9_z v- Wetzel. 205 Mo. App. 664, 226 s.w. 626. 1 3- M-In 1921. pp» 469 11. sec. 1 (7299); R.S. 1929, see. 2974; 12.9. 1939, see; 3361. ’ ‘ -_,.» - 9 4. M.L. 1850-51, p. 244, sec. 1. 9 5. M.L. 1921, pp. 468 19., sec". 1 __(73o2); 3.3.1939
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Sturmmadox1985page124
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info:fedora/mu:14181
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fuggir mi stanco. (12-14) (so I, with that arrow in my left side which destroys me and at the same time delights me, am tormented by sorrow and weary myself with fleeing.) When the Laura of the poet’s fantasy comes to console him many years after her death (in poem 359), she sits on the left side of his bed, “in su la spoda manca.”'“ The equivalence between love and desire is clear once more
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CM1923Jan-270
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info:fedora/mu:126878
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"l""" ’ Al6. llivil '0. 151-186: a stuflag at the top at the atairn. one : ‘ Uricntal l‘.n.;.in-- lt|'_~- l-“.''.'l‘''- 131-» AI7. Abolition and lleeongtruetmn ol the Mac and or It 1, };.-N.-ti: \l«-«lit.-n.-mum m" mmlhlll" AIB. Western Statehood and Land Grant. duly anaae-at ot the me below i: .2. /mm... (;......- '”” '"d"“"“' V
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VetustaM7p073
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info:fedora/mu:111044
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mélange dans les oeuvres exéeutées en France sous le regne de Charles VI., d’une double influence, flamande d’une part, italienne de 1’autre.” Thus it is scarcely accurate to speak of art in France at this time as being purely French. It was in fact French art in the making. 2 Fondation Piot, iii. 73. 3 Labarte, Irwentaire dc Charles V., N0. 392- ‘ Gonse, L’Art gothique, p. 457. 5 Orgfévrcrie rcligieuse
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jasperinven1940p152
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info:fedora/mu:11773
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; School Fund Mortgage Record, 1837-G1, ntry 132; and (Dccds of‘Rolc¢sc), entry 135. Arr. chron. l857~86, indexed olph. by'numo of grontor; for index, 1887~-, soc entry 128. Hdv. on ntd. f., 1857-88; typed on ptdo fa. 1887*‘- 5OO pp. 18 X 15 r 5. 130. TRUST DEED RECORD, l883~-. 125 vols. 1857-82 in Mortgage Rocord, entry 129. Record of conveyances of real ostito to a trustee as security
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