12 books found
by Thomas Rabung, Jorge Molinero, David Garcia, Vanessa Montoya
2012 · KIT Scientific Publishing
by David W. Parker
1911 · Washington, D.C : Carnegie institution of Washington
by Arthur Benjamin Conner, George Russell Warren, George Stronach Fraps, Henry Jonathan Reinhard, Jacob Joseph Taubenhaus, Jay Laurence Lush, John McKinley Jones, Joseph McKinley Jones, David Thornton Killough, John H. Jones, R. E. Dickson
1922
The PARIS 4 conference, which took place at the National Museum of Denmark in 2011, attracted over 100 participants from 18 countries. Delegates presented and discussed the latest developments in the field of Preserving Archaeological Remains In Situ. These proceedings explore four major themes: rates of degradation in archaeological remains and the limits of acceptable change; the techniques and duration of monitoring on archaeological sites; the role of multinational standards when the sites and national legislations are so variable; reviewing the effectiveness of in situ preservation, after nearly two decades of research. A special issue of Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites (Vol 14 Nos 1-4).
We are facing an epidemic of work stress. This study combines a critique of the scientific evidence relating to work stress, with an account of the social, historical and cultural changes that produced this phenomenon.
by Arthur Benjamin Conner, David Thornton Killough, George Lemuel Crawford, George Stronach Fraps, Harris Bradley Parks, Henry Jonathan Reinhard, John McKinley Jones, Letcher P. Gabbard, Roy Harrison Stansel, William Bradford Lanham
1927
For years Mark Hanna could not obtain an unprejudiced hearing, unless it were from his political allies. He was denounced as the living embodiment of a greedy, brutalized and remorseless plutocracy; and this denunciation infected the opinion of many members of his own party who had no knowledge of the man. Gradually, however, the public estimate of him improved. As his personality became better known, and as his political opinions became more fully expressed, the popular caricature of Mark Hanna began to fade from the public mind. The fair-dealing characteristic of his own attitude towards other men aroused a corresponding attitude towards him on the part of a large part of the public. The man himself began to obtain tributes of personal appreciation even from his enemies. - Introduction.