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Educational Institutions Established in 1891 (X)

       
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Report on Orphaned Works

By: Marybeth Peters

...er cannot be located. I am pleased to present our "Report on Orphan Works" in response to your request. The response from the public to this study was... ...t the use of orphan works. As you know, the roundtable discussions we held in Washington, D.C. and California were well-attended, and the participants... ...nnot be located. I write to support such an undertaking by your office. As established by Section 104 of the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act o... ...s, such as photographs. Some commenters proposed that user registries be established in which a user would file a notice that he intends to use a wo... ...nters also proposed that the use of orphan works be limited to non-profit educational or cultural institutions. Once a work has been designated as a... ...t the use of orphan works be limited to non-profit educational or cultural institutions. Once a work has been designated as an orphan work, several c... ...tion. In addition, to make absolutely sure that the concerns of nonprofit institutions like libraries, museums and universities about monetary relie... ...ion in 1999, in which the Office reported that when attempting to license educational materials, “it can be time-consuming, difficult or even imposs... ... available to the public during normal business hours. For example, from 1891 to 1982 the Copyright Office published the Catalog of Copyright Entri...

...m used to describe the situation where the owner of a copyrighted work cannot be identified and located by someone who wishes to make use of the work in a manner that requires permission of the copyright owner. Even where the user has made a reasonably diligent effort to find the owner, if the owner is not found, the user faces uncertainty – she cannot determine whether or...

...Many commenters were in favor of determining whether a search was reasonable on an “ad hoc” or case-by-case basis, whereby each search is evaluated according to its circumstances. This approach was offered as having the advantage of flexibility t...

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Report on Orphaned Works

By: Marybeth Peters

...er cannot be located. I am pleased to present our "Report on Orphan Works" in response to your request. The response from the public to this study was... ...t the use of orphan works. As you know, the roundtable discussions we held in Washington, D.C. and California were well-attended, and the participants... ...nnot be located. I write to support such an undertaking by your office. As established by Section 104 of the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act o... ...s, such as photographs. Some commenters proposed that user registries be established in which a user would file a notice that he intends to use a wo... ...nters also proposed that the use of orphan works be limited to non-profit educational or cultural institutions. Once a work has been designated as a... ...t the use of orphan works be limited to non-profit educational or cultural institutions. Once a work has been designated as an orphan work, several c... ...tion. In addition, to make absolutely sure that the concerns of nonprofit institutions like libraries, museums and universities about monetary relie... ...ion in 1999, in which the Office reported that when attempting to license educational materials, “it can be time-consuming, difficult or even imposs... ... available to the public during normal business hours. For example, from 1891 to 1982 the Copyright Office published the Catalog of Copyright Entri...

...m used to describe the situation where the owner of a copyrighted work cannot be identified and located by someone who wishes to make use of the work in a manner that requires permission of the copyright owner. Even where the user has made a reasonably diligent effort to find the owner, if the owner is not found, the user faces uncertainty – she cannot determine whether or...

... and copyright owner of the work if such attribution is possible and as is reasonably appropriate under the circumstances. The idea is that the user, in the course of using a work for which he has not received explicit permission, should make it as clear as possible to the public that the work is the product of another author, and that the copyright in the work is owned by...

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Terrorists and Freedom Fighters

By: Sam Vaknin

... All rights reserved. This book, or any part thereof, may not be used or reproduced in any manner without written permission from: Lidija Rangelovsk... ...unet.com.mk or to vaknin@link.com.mk Visit the Author Archive of Dr. Sam Vaknin in "Central Europe Review": http://www.ce-review.org/authorarchi... ...ished a poem "Macedonian Fairy" in 1878. The Young Macedonian Literary Society was established in 1891 and started publishing "Loza", its journal a... ...Macedonian Fairy" in 1878. The Young Macedonian Literary Society was established in 1891 and started publishing "Loza", its journal a year thereafte... ...to fight the wolf. The original "Macedonian Revolutionary Organization" (MRO) was established in Sofia. The distinction between being a Macedonian... ...vices, but only for relief from corruption and crime. The creation of new national institutions was not necessary, only the reform of existing inst... ...) under the guise of a "re-patriation" scheme. They confiscated land from religious institutions, from the deportees, from big landowners, from the ... ...and Milosevic to abolish the parallel Albanian education system and re-open all the educational facilities in Kosovo was thus frustrated. Kosovo fra... ...s were Catholicism and Islam. The former co-sponsored with the Orthodox Church the educational efforts of Cyril and Methodius. Even before the trau...

...The history of four terrorist organizations in the Balkans and a general introduction to terrorism and freedom fighting. Also includes essays about religious co-existence in the Balkans and about pathological narcissism as a precursor to terrorism....

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Report on Orphan Works

By: Library of Congress

...er cannot be located. I am pleased to present our "Report on Orphan Works" in response to your request. The response from the public to this study was... ...t the use of orphan works. As you know, the roundtable discussions we held in Washington, D.C. and California were well-attended, and the participants... ...nnot be located. I write to support such an undertaking by your office. As established by Section 104 of the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act o... ...s, such as photographs. Some commenters proposed that user registries be established in which a user would file a notice that he intends to use a wo... ...nters also proposed that the use of orphan works be limited to non-profit educational or cultural institutions. Once a work has been designated as a... ...t the use of orphan works be limited to non-profit educational or cultural institutions. Once a work has been designated as an orphan work, several c... ...tion. In addition, to make absolutely sure that the concerns of nonprofit institutions like libraries, museums and universities about monetary relie... ...ion in 1999, in which the Office reported that when attempting to license educational materials, “it can be time-consuming, difficult or even imposs... ... available to the public during normal business hours. For example, from 1891 to 1982 the Copyright Office published the Catalog of Copyright Entri...

...used to describe the situation where the owner of a copyrighted work cannot be identified and located by someone who wishes to make use of the work in a manner that requires permission of the copyright owner. Even where the user has made a reasonably diligent effort to find the owner, if the owner is not found, the user faces uncertainty – she cannot determine whether...

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The Williams Record

By: Student Media

...wns entirely suo- oessful, and despite its humorous side, tied a new itnot in tlie bond of ail Williams men. The parade, the fireworks, the transparen... ...parts of a cus- tom tliftt is no empty formalitj. The Parade 1910 gathered in front of the opera house shortly after 7 o'clock, clad in night-shirts, ... ...eeping in touch with such graduate news as should appear in these columns: established ibis ^rntlrmrn's jfumislitng moolie. BROADWAV COB.TWENTY-StCOHO... ..., Spring St., WilliamsiowR FIRE INSURANCE THE LONDON ASSURANCE CORPORATION ESTABLISHED A. D. 1720 Fire Insurance PoHoIbs Are issued t)y tliis company ... ...st of the even- ing, sjioke on "The Position of Williams Among New England Institutions of Ijoarning. " Other spooohos wore made by Dr. Will- iam C. P... ...many of her immediote rivals sucli as Brown, Amherst or Syracuse, in which institutions interfraternity base- ball is a highly developed institu- tion... ... Williams. Entering upon the duties of president with little experience in educational matters, Dr. Hopkins easily showed that his greater as- set was... ...n in size is not to be an indefinite policy, a prac- tical system from the educational stnndiioint would seem to demand that the size be limited to de... ...sh- man year. He then entered Yale law sohool from whioh he graduat- ed in 1891. Iin?nediately after graduation Mr. Root was sent tj the state legisla...

...ongest running independent newspaper at Williams is the Williams Record, a weekly broadsheet paper published on Wednesdays. The newspaper was founded in 1885, and now has a weekly circulation of 3,000 copies distributed in Williamstown, in addition to more than 600 subscribers across the country. The newspaper does not receive financial support from the college or from the...

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A Modern Utopia

By: H. G. Wells

...rge of any kind. Any person using this document file, for any purpose, and in any way does so at his or her own risk. Neither the Pennsylvania State U... ...ntained within the document or for the file as an electronic transmission, in any way. A Modern Utopia by H. G. Wells, the Pennsylvania State Universi... ... review the social organisation in a different way, to con- sider it as an educational process instead of dealing with it as a thing with a future his... ...articular work. It implies that the whole intellectual basis of mankind is established, that the rules of logic, the systems of counting and measure- ... ...ent, the general categories and schemes of resemblance and difference, are established for the human mind for ever— blank Comte-ism, in fact, of the b... ...ew into the sharpest antithesis. The old order is presented as a system of institutions and classes ruled by men of substance; the new, of enterprises... ...be sold at his death, and whatever he has not clearly assigned for special educational purposes will— with possibly some fractional concession to near... ...on- 130 A Modern Utopia senting persons. There is no sense in prohibiting institutions which no sane people could ever want to abuse. It is claimed—t... ...ago in a little paper that was printed in the Fortnightly Re- view in July 1891. It was called the “Rediscovery of the Unique,” and re-reading it I pe...

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Mankind in the Making

By: H. G. Wells

...Y H. G. WELLS A PENN STATE ELECTRONIC CLASSICS SERIES PUBLICATION Mankind in the Making by H. G. Wells is a publication of the Pennsylvania State Uni... ...e of any kind. Any per- son using this document file, for any purpose, and in any way does so at his or her own risk. Neither the Pennsylvania State U... ... authorities in the chapter on the biological problem, and to books in the educational chapter, the lacunar quality of his reading and knowledge is on... ... there men hold themselves bound by old party formulae, by loyal- ties and institutions, that are becoming, that have become, provincial in proportion... ...iscussion of the quality of the average birth and of the average home, the educational scheme, the sug- gestions for the organization of literature an... ..., I firmly believe, the crowning glory of the nineteenth cen- tury to have established this discovery for all time—that one generation does not follow... ...line and askew. And it is out of the conflict of the new view with the old institutions and formulae, that there arises the discontent and the need, a... ...itical parties that struggle to realize themselves within the forms of our established state. There is not in Great Britain, and I under- stand there ... ...um of infant mortality. One learns from the Register-General’s returns for 1891 that among the causes of death specified in the three counties of Dors...

...Preface: It may save misunderstanding if a word or so be said here of the aim and scope of this book. It is written in relation to a previous work, Anticipations,* and together with that and a small pamphlet, ?The Discovery of the Future,?** presents a general theory of social development and of social and political conduct. It is an attem...

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A Treatise on Government Translated from the Greek of Aristotle

By: William Ellis A. M.

...rge of any kind. Any person using this document file, for any purpose, and in any way does so at his or her own risk. Neither the Pennsylvania State U... ...ntained within the document or for the file as an electronic transmission, in any way. A Treatise on Government by Aristotle, trans. William Ellis, t... ...inspire poets or philosophers but have little direct effect upon political institutions. Plato’s Re- public is obviously impracticable, for its author... ...es the Politics in some respects a critical history of the workings of the institutions of the Greek city state. In Books IV ., V ., and VI. the idea... ... De Republics, Atheniensium: T ext and facsimile of Papyrus, F. G. Kenyon, 1891, 3rd edition, 1892; Kaibel and Wilamowitz - Moel-lendorf, 1891, 3rd ed... ..., 1891, 3rd edition, 1898; Van Herwerden and Leeuwen (from Kenyon’s text), 1891; Blass, 1892, 1895, 1898, 1903; J. E. Sandys, 1893. Politica: Susemihl... ...nt Classics for English readers), 1877; T. Davidson, Aristotle and Ancient Educational Ideals (Great Educators), 1892. A TREATISE ON GOVERNMENT BOOK I... ...HAPTER I AS WE SEE that every city is a society, and every society Ed. is established for some good purpose; for an apparent [Bekker 1252a] good is t... ... always an ox before a household slave. That society then which nature has established for daily sup- port is the domestic, and those who compose it a...

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