The unusual printing and publishing arrangements of Hugh Miller (1802–1856)

2021 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 298-309 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. Taylor

John Johnstone was an Edinburgh printer and publisher, from 1849 in partnership with Robert Hunter. In 1839, Johnstone and the printer Robert Fairly established a separate firm, Johnstone & Fairly, to publish the Witness, a newspaper edited by the geologist Hugh Miller. The firm became Miller & Fairly in 1844 when Miller bought out Johnstone's share. The editorial office was in the High Street. The steam-powered printing office was in Horse Wynd, in the former gatehouse of Minto House and later also in the former house of the physician Dr John Clerk of Listonshiels. Johnstone's own publishing business specialized in religious and ecclesiastical works. Nevertheless, Miller chose that firm to publish The Old Red Sandstone (1841), and later books, until the firm ran into financial trouble in the mid-1850s, and Miller placed The testimony of the rocks (1857) with Shepherd & Elliot of Edinburgh. Miller's original choice of Johnstone was perhaps to protect the reputation of Miller and the Witness when geology was often regarded with suspicion on religious grounds. It may also have given Miller more creative freedom. Miller & Fairly printed many, but not all, impressions of Miller's books for Johnstone and other publishers. This was to Miller's, and Miller's heirs', presumed double profit as copyright holder and printer, with implications for his relationships with publishers. Miller's dual role may help explain his reluctance to resign the newspaper's editorship even at the cost of his health and life.

Author(s):  
David Whetham

Between 2007 and 2011, Wootton Bassett, a small Wiltshire town in the UK, became the focus of national attention as its residents responded to the regular repatriations of dead soldiers through its High Street. The town’s response came to symbolize the way that broader attitudes developed and changed over that period. As such, it is a fascinating case study in civil–military relations in the twenty-first century. Success may be the same as victory, but victory, at least as it has been traditionally understood, is not a realistic goal in many types of contemporary conflict. Discretionary wars—conflicts in which national survival is not an issue and even vital national interests may not be at stake—pose particular challenges for any government which does not explain why the cost being paid in blood and treasure is ‘worth it’.


Author(s):  
Ester Blay ◽  
Johan Boxstaens

This chapter focuses on the professional practices and skills employed by probation officers (PO) during first interviews with individuals serving probation orders. Its focus is comparative and it draws on the results of research conducted by the authors in two different jurisdictions, Belgium and Spain (Catalonia). The study employed an observation schedule to observe first interviews. The schedule was collaboratively developed by researchers from various European jurisdictions in the context of the COST Action Offender Supervision in Europe (Boxstaens et al., 2015). This chapter includes some methodological reflections on the strengths and limitations of using structured observation as a method for collecting comparable data and focuses on the actual results of employing the observation schedule and interviewing POs in the two jurisdictions. Data will be analysed comparatively to assess the skills the practitioners employed, and attention will also be paid to variations within jurisdictions and between individual practitioners. Results and implications are discussed in terms of the different cultural, legal, and institutional aims and settings existing in the two jurisdictions involved, and interpreted in terms of POs' dual role (support and control), and the working alliance between the professional and the sentenced individual.


Songings ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-29
Author(s):  
Anhuai Yu

Welcome and thank you for considering Songings to submit your manuscript. Since 2021, Evidence Based Communications (EBC) don’t use any peer-review systems, it is good for minimizing the time required for the submission and peer review process, and the cost of publication. You should directly submit your manuscript to the editorial office via email at [email protected] with proper preparations.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roderic Broadhurst

This study provides a snapshot of the availability of weapons across eight omnibus or ‘High Street’ and 12 specialist darknet or illicit cryptomarkets between July and December 2019. Overall, 2,124 weapons were identified, of which 11 percent were found on niche markets. On all markets, weapons for sale included 1,497 handguns, 218 rifles, 41 submachine guns and 34 shotguns. Also available were ammunition (n=79), explosives (n=37) and accessories such as silencers (n=24). Omnibus markets also sold other weapons (n=70) such as tasers, pepper spray and knives, and digital products (n=112), mostly DIY weapon manuals, as well as chemical, biological, nuclear and radiological weapons (n=12). The data allowed for estimates of the cost of weapons and some description of the 215 vendors identified, 18 (8.4%) of whom were active across more than one market.


1992 ◽  
Vol 55 (7) ◽  
pp. 279-281
Author(s):  
Allison J Taylor

Since the introduction of the Disabled Facilities Grant system, clients in the community who are house-owners have been required to contribute substantial sums of money toward the cost of large home adaptations. In many cases, this financial demand has been too great for the household to accept and the adaptation has been cancelled. This study used hypothetical clients and financial details to assess the feasibility of obtaining a loan for the required sum. A selection of high street banks and building societies were canvassed. The results confirmed the problems facing many clients in securing a loan, and highlighted the failings of the financial assessment procedure used to calculate the potential loan ability of householders.


Author(s):  
James F. Mancuso

IBM PC compatible computers are widely used in microscopy for applications ranging from control to image acquisition and analysis. The choice of IBM-PC based systems over competing computer platforms can be based on technical merit alone or on a number of factors relating to economics, availability of peripherals, management dictum, or simple personal preference.IBM-PC got a strong “head start” by first dominating clerical, document processing and financial applications. The use of these computers spilled into the laboratory where the DOS based IBM-PC replaced mini-computers. Compared to minicomputer, the PC provided a more for cost-effective platform for applications in numerical analysis, engineering and design, instrument control, image acquisition and image processing. In addition, the sitewide use of a common PC platform could reduce the cost of training and support services relative to cases where many different computer platforms were used. This could be especially true for the microscopists who must use computers in both the laboratory and the office.


Author(s):  
H. Rose

The imaging performance of the light optical lens systems has reached such a degree of perfection that nowadays numerical apertures of about 1 can be utilized. Compared to this state of development the objective lenses of electron microscopes are rather poor allowing at most usable apertures somewhat smaller than 10-2 . This severe shortcoming is due to the unavoidable axial chromatic and spherical aberration of rotationally symmetric electron lenses employed so far in all electron microscopes.The resolution of such electron microscopes can only be improved by increasing the accelerating voltage which shortens the electron wave length. Unfortunately, this procedure is rather ineffective because the achievable gain in resolution is only proportional to λ1/4 for a fixed magnetic field strength determined by the magnetic saturation of the pole pieces. Moreover, increasing the acceleration voltage results in deleterious knock-on processes and in extreme difficulties to stabilize the high voltage. Last not least the cost increase exponentially with voltage.


1994 ◽  
Vol 58 (11) ◽  
pp. 832-835 ◽  
Author(s):  
ES Solomon ◽  
TK Hasegawa ◽  
JD Shulman ◽  
PO Walker
Keyword(s):  

1998 ◽  
Vol 138 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-205
Author(s):  
Snellman ◽  
Maljanen ◽  
Aromaa ◽  
Reunanen ◽  
Jyrkinen‐Pakkasvirta ◽  
...  
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