Lectures and Lecturing
Found in 399 Collections and/or Records:
Printed text of Ewart's Introductory Lecture at Aberdeen University, 1879
Contains syllabuses and programs of lecture series delivered by Ewart, catalogues of horse sales and various reports.
Program of the Fourth Session of the Graduate School of Agriculture, Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa, 04-29 July 1910, 1910
Programme signed by Ewart. Ewart delivered a lecture course as part of the 'Animal Husbandry' topic.
Publication proofs and lecture syllabuses, 1867-1881
The Publication proofs and lecture syllabuses series consists of:
- lecture syllabuses, 1867-1869
- publication proofs, 1879 and 1881.
'Quantitative changes in penicillinase production due to spontaneous mutation or induction by penicillinase', 1956
The material consists of manuscript notes for a lecture 'Quantitative changes in penicillinase production due to spontaneous mutation or induction by penicillinase' by Martin Rivers Pollock, given in Glasgow, 3 February 1956.
Regeneration and Conversion, 1955
Carnaban Lectures given by John Baillie in 1955. These were subsequently published posthumously as Baptism and Conversion, 1964).
Reports of activities, 1909-1960
Files of items relating to John Baillie, compiled by Florence Jewel Baillie and/or other members of the Baillie family, to indicate periods in John Baillie's life. Includes items relating to awards achieved, lectures given and events attended.
Revelation, 1952
Sir D. Owen Evans lectures given by John Baillie in 1952, examining the theological concept of revelation. These were subsequently published as The Idea of Revelation in Recent Thought, 1956).
Rotation, Philosphy, c1780-c1803
Volume contains lecture notes, with only one or two diagrams, of the physics of rotating bodies, and of the nature of physics itself.
Royal Institution , 25 April 1833 - 6 June 1833
Royal Institution of Great Britain: Syllabus of a Course of Three Lectures on the Origin of Land-Surfaces by Archibald Geikie, FRS, 1867-1868
Syllabus for a series of 3 lectures Sir Archibald Geikie gave to The Royal Insitution of Great Britain in 1869, broadly focusing on valleys, hills and mountains, erosion, geological structure and related subjects.