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Topic: Charles Fellows


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In the News (Wed 30 Dec 09)

  
 FELLOWS, SIR CHARLES - LoveToKnow Article on FELLOWS, SIR CHARLES   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
At other universities the term is applied to themembers of the governing body or to the holders of certain sumsof money for a fixed number of years to be devoted to specialstudy or research.
By analogy the word is also used of themembers of various learned societies and institutions.FELLOWS, SIR CHARLES (17991860), British archaeologist, was born in August 1799 at Nottingham, where his family had an estate.
Late in 1839 Fellows, under the auspices of the British Museum, again set out for Lycia, accom- panied by George Scharf, who assisted him in sketching.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /F/FE/FELLOWS_SIR_CHARLES.htm   (1229 words)

  
 CHARLES FELLOWS CORRESPONDENCE, 1820-1879 (bulk 1839-1852)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Sir Charles Fellows (1799-1860) was an English explorer and archaeologist, best known for his expeditions in Asia Minor, especially in the district of ancient Lycia (in present-day Turkey).
The Firman was obtained in 1842 while Fellows was on his third expedition to the area.
Fellows argued that the artifacts should be arranged according to archaeological principles, and bitterly criticized the display the sculptor Sir Richard Westmacott produced for the museum.
www.getty.edu /research/conducting_research/finding_aids/fellows1_m4.html   (268 words)

  
 Charles Fellows -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Sir Charles Fellows (August, 1799 - 8 November, 1860) was a (The people of Great Britain) British (An anthropologist who studies prehistoric people and their culture) archaeologist.
Fellows was born at (Click link for more info and facts about Nottingham) Nottingham, where his family had an estate.
Late in 1839 Fellows, under the auspices of the British Museum, again set out for Lycia, accompanied by (Click link for more info and facts about George Scharf) George Scharf, who assisted him in sketching.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/c/ch/charles_fellows.htm   (507 words)

  
 The Fellows Family of Shelburne   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Fellows over and said 'No', thinking that he did not look like any of 'our folks', and what possible interest could I have in a man who came from Fennsylvania, and who could not be any relation.
Fellows of Stroudsburg, for Mary Fellows continued the narrative in her letter, as follows: - "Then I departed to go down stairs to my machine to write out the sales agreement, but in a few minutes both Mr.
Fellow s came down to tl!e door of the room where I was typing and Mr.
home.southernct.edu /~wienerj1/146.html   (461 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Fellows Clara I. Pine Ridge Cemetery Unknown Unknown Unknown Brock Fellows Clyde P. Pine Ridge Cemetery Unknown Unknown 11/16/1897 CemRcd ae:19yrs Fellows Cyrus Fellows Cemetery Unknown Unknown 02/19/1871 gravestone ae:80y.
Fellows Hiram Pine Ridge Cemetery Unknown Unknown Unknown Brock Fellows Homer (infant) Pine Ridge Cemetery Unknown Unknown Unknown Brock Fellows Inez South Onondaga Cem.
Fellows Ruth F. Pine Ridge Cemetery Unknown Unknown 09/03/1898 CemRcd ae:69 yrs Fellows Ruth Kenyon Pine Ridge Cemetery Unknown Unknown Unknown Brock Fellows Sarah Sophia Pine Ridge Cemetery Unknown Unknown Unknown Brock Fellows Sarah Spencer Pine Ridge Cemetery Unknown Unknown Unknown Brock Fellows Sheila Anne Walnut Grove Cem.
www.townononhist.org /text_files/Burials_E_I.txt   (9692 words)

  
 Obituary (1888)
Collected Essays II [253] Charles Robert Darwin was the fifth child and second son of Robert Waring Darwin and Susannah Wedgwood, and was born on the 12th February, 1809, at Shrewsbury, where his father was a physician in large practice.
Charles Darwin found the proposal agreeable, none the less, probably, that a good deal of natural history [264] and a little shooting were by no means held, at that time, to be incompatible with the conscientious performance of the duties of a country clergyman.
Darwin became a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1839; one of the Royal Medals was awarded to him in 1853, and he received the Copley Medal in 1864.
aleph0.clarku.edu /huxley/CE2/DarwObit.html   (8978 words)

  
 webGED: Family Information   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
His baptism in Godalming, Surrey, England confirms that Charles Fellows Faggotter was the illegitimate son of Harriet Faggotter.
Before the death of Charles there was an advertisement in an Adelaide newspaper calling for Charles Lovell Fellowes Faggotter, sailor to contact a London address, as he was entitled to a share of his fathers estate.
Charles felt that it was foolhardy to return to England because of the fact he had jumped ship and feared that he would be arrested and penalised.
www.earthling.mcmail.com /genealog/newworld/wgainfo.html   (200 words)

  
 Johns Hopkins Gastroenterology & Hepatology Resource Center
The typical duration of training is between two to three years in which the fellows will have the opportunity to work under the guidance of individual faculty preceptors to conduct in-depth investigation in digestive diseases.
Fellows are encouraged to obtain formal instructions in biochemistry, statistics, and research methodology.
In addition, fellows are exposed to the field of alcoholism investigation through interaction with and lectures by established investigators.
www.hopkins-gi.org /pages/latin/templates/index.cfm?pg=research6   (428 words)

  
 African American Registry: Charles Scrutchin, an early Minnesota lawyer!
One of his most dramatic cases was his representation of William Miller, one of the 11 accused Black American circus workers who were charged with the rape of a white woman in Duluth.
Three of Millers fellow workers were lynched on the night of June 14, 1920, by a white mob of 5,000.
Charles W. Scrutchin died of dropsy/apoplexy on July 14 1930 in Beltrami Co. MN.
www.aaregistry.com /african_american_history/1995/Charles_Scrutchin_an_early_Minnesota_lawyer   (334 words)

  
 CPCS - Philanthropy.org   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Fellows are based at The Graduate Center of The City University of New York, where they design and pursue an individualized research project and participate in a seminar with Third-Sector leaders.
Fellows will participate in a 3-month seminar (March 1 to May 31, 2006) on the U.S. and international voluntary sectors.
Fellows are expected to produce a 25-40 page paper on their findings, which will be presented in the seminar.
www.philanthropy.org /programs/intnl_fellows_program.html   (360 words)

  
 (Surnames from Fay, Maria Kate ) San Francisco Call Newspaper Vital Records for 1869-1891
Feistoorn, Charles A. married in 1880 to Figer, Elizabeth...
Fellows, Mary A. married in 1872 to McKibbin, Harry J.B. Fellows, Mary E. married in 1881 to Lillie, Charles W. Fellows, Minnie F. died in 1884...
Fellows, Nellie A. married in 1881 to Dale, R.C. Fellows, S.E. married in 1876 to Rowell, Joseph C. Fellows, Samuel S. married in 1875 to Gray, Amelia...
feefhs.org /FDB2/6991/6991-127.html   (1256 words)

  
 Society of Fellows names four new members   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
The fellows were chosen for the importance and quality of their scholarship, and for their interest in interdisciplinary intellectual work.
Fellows appointed in previous years who will continue their affiliation with the Society of Fellows are Charles Davis, biology; Maya Jasanoff, history; Matthew Hull, anthropology; Stella Nair, history of art; Shanan Peters, geological sciences; Neil Safier, history; Megan Williams, Near Eastern studies; and Jonathan Zwicker, Asian languages.
The Society of Fellows was founded in 1970 with grants from the Ford Foundation and the Horace H. and Mary Rackham Funds.
www.umich.edu /~urecord/0304/May10_04/23.shtml   (387 words)

  
 NEA News Room: 2004 NEA National Heritage Fellows - CHARLES CHUCK T. CAMPBELL
CHARLES "CHUCK" T. Gospel steel guitarist, Rochester, NY Charles "Chuck" T. Campbell is known as a master of the sacred steel.
In the 1930s a number of these churches began using the electric steel guitar to function as the central musical instrument of the religious service, easing the congregants through contemplative moments and propelling them to ecstatic celebration at other times.
Charles Campbell, whose father was a bishop in the church, began playing steel guitar at age 11 and today is recognized as a great innovator and teacher in the tradition.
arts.endow.gov /news/news04/Heritage/Campbell.html   (207 words)

  
 [No title]
The names of Fellows who were tutors, instructors or professors during the whole or part of their fellowships are italicized.
SOCIETY OF FELLOWS The Society of Fellows, founded in 1932, is managed by five Senior Fellows, together with the President of the University and the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, who annually select Junior Fellows and recommend them to the Corporation for appointment.
Junior Fellows are selected for their promise of notable contribution to knowledge and thought and devote their whole time to productive scholarship, or preparation therefor, free from academic regulations for degrees.
www.math.harvard.edu /history/officers/officers.txt   (6831 words)

  
 Sir Charles Fellows --  Encyclopædia Britannica   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Fellows, pencil and chalk drawing by W. Brockedon; in the National Portrait Gallery, London
British author, mathematician, and logician Charles Dodgson, best known by his pen name of Lewis Carroll, is renowned for writing two of the most famous and admired children's books in the world, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and its sequel, Through the Looking-Glass.
It was he who, early in the 19th century, devised the theories, methods, and principles on which the modern science is based.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9033954?tocId=9033954   (672 words)

  
 Kelly Writers House Fellows - Charles Fuller   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Charles Fuller reading - A digital recording of the April 15, 2002 event where Fuller read from a draft of a new play.
Charles Fuller interview/conversation - A recording of the April 16, 2002 audiocast of the interview and conversation with Charles Fuller, moderated by Lorene Cary and
Charles Fuller's previous trip to the Writers House
www.writing.upenn.edu /~whfellow/fuller.html   (283 words)

  
 
Rice Cousins who emigrated to Nova Scotia
- Person Page 30
Eugenia Phebe Fellows was born circa 1863 at Nova Scotia.
George L Fellows was the son of George Fellows and Susanna Morse Bent.
Nina Amelia Fellows was born circa 1859 at Nova Scotia.
www.widomaker.com /~gwk/Planter/p30.htm   (3672 words)

  
 William Fellows Family
Charle's father, Hiram was a gifted singer and Deborah Case also had gifted vocal cords.
Charles and Lola's 1st son Freddie H Humphrey, b.1870 d.
According to US Census 1920 Charles Humphreys was 71 b.1849 and Dennis Humphrey was 47 b.1873, wife of Dennis, F. Raymond was 39b.1881.
home1.gte.net /sackew/fellows.html   (603 words)

  
 Three Named Gaius Charles Bolin Fellows at Williams for 2005-06 - iBerkshires.com - Home
Fellows devote the bulk of their residency at Williams College to the completion of dissertation work and teach one course as a faculty member in one of the college's academic departments or programs.
Nicole Castor, the Gaius Charles Bolin Fellow in anthropology.
Her dissertation is titled "Invoking the Spirit: Public Culture and the Politics of Nationhood in Trinidad." Castor has conducted her fieldwork in Port of Spain, Trinidad, and Caracas, Venezuela.
www.iberkshires.com /story.php?story_id=18455   (453 words)

  
 CET: Faculty Fellows: Charles McKenna
Charles McKenna is Professor of Chemistry in the College of Letters, Arts and Sciences and holds a joint appointment as Professor of Pharmaceutical Sciences in the College of Pharmacy at USC.
After receiving a BA degree in French Literature (Departmental Honors) from Oakland University and a PhD in Chemistry from the University of California, San Diego, he was a National Institutes of Health Postdoctoral Fellow at Harvard University and a National Academy of Sciences Exchange Scholar in Moscow.
In 2005 he was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science for "important studies in bioorganic chemistry, particularly creation of innovative chemical probes of nitrogenase, highly useful and biologically important fluorinated phosphate analogs, and novel anti-viral prodrugs."
www.usc.edu /programs/cet/faculty_fellows/mckenna.html   (538 words)

  
 Harvard Gazette: Charles Warren Center announces 2003-04 fellows
Cohen noted that the Warren Center continues to attract fellows from disciplines outside history and from professional schools, as well as from departments of history: "We are pleased that our outstanding group of fellows includes professors from law and business schools and that one of our workshop coordinators comes from the Kennedy School.
Professor of History and Social Policy at the Kennedy School of Government, concentrates on the evolution of different forms and institutions of power in the United States as well as on the intersection of economic change with politics.
Fellows and invited speakers investigate the shifting relations between state and society, the shaping of political institutions, the relationships among business, labor, and the state, the definition of property rights, and, most generally, the processes through which political and economic power has been acquired, distributed, and exercised in the United States.
www.news.harvard.edu /gazette/2004/01.29/08-warren.html   (539 words)

  
 FELLOWS, SIR CHARLES (1799-1860) - Online Information article about FELLOWS, SIR CHARLES (1799-1860)
Late in 1839 Fellows, under the auspices of the British Museum, again set out for Lycia, accompanied by See also:
Account of Discoveries in Lycia, being a Journal kept during a Second Excursion in Asia Minor.
A third visit was made late in 1841, after Fellows had obtained a f rran by See also:
encyclopedia.jrank.org /FAT_FLA/FELLOWS_SIR_CHARLES_1799_1860_.html   (711 words)

  
 UI College of Liberal Arts names six Alumni Fellows
Alumni Fellows are distinguished alumni of the college who will return to campus for a few days the week of April 12 to meet with faculty members, teach classes, give lectures, and, in one case, present a concert of original musical works.
Linda Maxson, dean of the College of Liberal Arts, initiated the Alumni Fellows program this year with funds from the new endowed Dean's Chair in Liberal Arts, which was created through a gift from the UI Alumni Association.
The inaugural class of alumni fellows includes: Charles Dodge, BA, music, 1964; Kevin Doyle, BA geography, 1980; James Hickman, Ph.D. mathematical statistics, 1961; Mark Rosenthal, Ph.D. art history, 1979; Roger Thurow, BA, journalism, 1979; and James Van Allen, Ph.D. physics, 1939.
www.uiowa.edu /~ournews/1999/april/0406alumni.html   (748 words)

  
 UK Recognizes 224 New Fellows
The University of Kentucky recognized 224 new Fellows who have given or pledged $10,000 or more during the annual Development Council and Fellows Society weekend.
Presidential Fellows BB and T Corporation, Winston-Salem, N.C.; James K. Patterson Trust, Lexington; SECAT, Inc., Lexington; and Greg and Noreen Wells, Hazard.
James Kenneth Patterson Fellows John I. and Patricia J. Buster, In Memoriam; Charles W. Hammond, In Memoriam; John H. and Betty Jo Heick, In Memoriam; and Roger E. and Barbara Mick, Brentwood, Tenn.
www.uky.edu /PR/News/041112_fellows.htm   (240 words)

  
 CHARLES FELLOWS CORRESPONDENCE, 1820-1879 (bulk 1839-1852)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
The Charles Fellows correspondence consists of letters, notes, inventories, and cash accounts, dating from 1820-1879, and including undated items.
Letters to and from Fellows, dated after 1842, reflect his dispute with the Trustees of the British Museum over the display of the Xanthus marbles at the museum.
The collection is arranged in one series, organized by date, with undated items at the end: Series I. Correspondence, 1820-1879, n.d.
www.getty.edu /research/conducting_research/finding_aids/fellows1_m5.html   (322 words)

  
 Faggotter Family history in Australia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Over the decades the Faggetter/Faggotter surname has varied depending upon who was writing the name, whether it was the Vicar or person writing down a Will.
In the case of the Faggotter family in Australia, they are all descended from Charles Fellows Faggotter known as Charles Lovell Faggotter in Australia.
His baptism in Godalming, Surrey confirms that Charles Fellows Faggotter was the illegitimate son of Harriet Faggotter (but the date is 27 May 1832 which is at odds with his supposed birth date).
www.earthling.mcmail.com /faggeter/faggotter.htm   (373 words)

  
 Search Results for fellow - Encyclopædia Britannica
That revolutionizing idea, which constitutes the basis of Christian ethics, also becomes comprehensible through the foundation of Christian anthropology in the image of God: in the eye of Christian...
Shari'ah duties are broadly divided into those that an individual owes to Allah (the ritual practices or 'ibaa) and those that he owes to his fellow men (mu'aa).
Biographical sketch of this teacher of mathematics and a Fellow of the Royal Society.
www.britannica.com /search?query=fellow&submit=Find&source=MWTEXT   (379 words)

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