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Quarterly and first
English philosopher and historian of science William Whewell coined the term scientist in 1833, and it was first published in Whewell's anonymous 1834 review of Mary Somerville's On the Connexion of the Physical Sciences published in the Quarterly Review.
The University of Southern Mississippi and the University of Florida supported the Ulam Quarterly, which was active from 1992 to 1996, and which was one of the first online mathematical journals.
* Forestry Quarterly first published in 1902 by the New York State College of Forestry at Cornell, Ithaca, New York ; Bernhard Fernow was one of the editors
Quarterly, first and fourth Or a pelican displayed sable, second and third gules two increscents in fess argent ; for a crest, on a barred helmet affronty or, mantled azure doubled Or, the Royal Crown of Syldavia proper ; behind the shield the Royal Sceptre of Syldavia and a sceptre of justice in saltire ; the motto " Eih bennek, eih blavek " on a scroll below the shield, pendent therefrom the badge of the Order of the Golden Pelican.
Some date the start to earlier events in the 1930s: The Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide's regular publication The Golden Age Quarterly lists comic books from 1933 onwards ( 1933 saw the publication of the first comic book in the size that would subsequently define the format ); some historians, including Roger Sabin ( in Comics, Comix and Graphic Novels: a History of Comic Art ), date it to the publication of the first comic books featuring entirely original stories rather than re-prints of comic strips from newspapers ( 1935 ), by the company that would become DC Comics.
In 2005, the first of a series of reprint books, Walt and Skeezix, was published by Drawn and Quarterly and edited by Chris Ware.
The committee was composed of an " A list " of powerful U. S. citizens including former ambassador and first NCFE chairman Joseph Grew ; Central Intelligence Agency ( CIA ) director Allen Dulles ; Reader's Digest owner Dewitt Wallace ; former diplomat and the co-founder of Public Opinion Quarterly Dewitt Clinton Poole ; and prominent New York investment banker Frank Altschul.
Barnaby received much critical praise when it first appeared, and it has been reprinted in Barnaby Quarterly ( three issues, 1940s ), by Henry Holt and Company ( two hardcover books, with strips redrawn ), Dover books ( reprinting the first hardcover, 1960s ), Ballantine Books ( six paperbacks, 1980s ) and in Comics Revue magazine.
Manuscript Press published two volumes of late-1980s Romero strips in 2003 ( Live Bait and Lady in the Dark ); it also published all of the stories not reprinted elsewhere in serialized form in its magazine publications Comics Revue and Modesty Blaise Quarterly, the former of which, as noted above, also published The Dark Angels for the first ( and, to date, only ) time in English.
These ideas first appeared in their article " Economics and Identity ", published in Quarterly Journal of Economics in 2000.
Buckingham wrote occasional verses, pamphlets, lampoons, satires and plays showing undoubted ( but undeveloped ) poetic gifts, a collection of which, containing however many pieces not from his pen, was first published by Tom Brown in 1704 ; while a few extracts from a commonplace book of Buckingham of some interest are given in an article in the Quarterly Review of January 1898.
" His last published scholarly article appeared in the first volume of The Review of Austrian Economics ( now, The Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics ) in 1987.
It was first published in The CoEvolution Quarterly / Journal for the Protection of All Beings co-issue, Fall 1978.
His only notable publications were a masterly essay in the Quarterly Review of January 1878 on " Democracy in Europe ;" two lectures delivered at Bridgnorth in 1877 on " The History of Freedom in Antiquity " and " The History of Freedom in Christianity " — these last the only tangible portions put together by him of his long-projected " History of Liberty ;" and an essay on modern German historians in the first number of the English Historical Review, which he helped to found ( 1886 ).
The arms used in England were: Quarterly, I and IV, quarterly 1st and 4th Azure three fleurs de lys Or ( for France ), 2nd and 3rd Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or ( for England ); II Or a lion rampant within a tressure flory-counter-flory Gules ( for Scotland ); III Azure a harp Or stringed Argent ( for Ireland, this was the first time that Ireland was included in the royal arms ).
According to a 1998 article published in the Queens Quarterly ( 105 / 4 ), by Ross Kilpatrick entitled " Winnie the Pooh and the Canadian Connection ," the first chapter of Milne's book entitled " Winnie-the-Pooh ", was adapted by Milne from " Teddy Bear's Bee Tree ," by Canadian author Charles G. D. Roberts.
Her youthful ambition had been to be the greatest English poetess, and her first publications were poems in the manner of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Walter Scott ( Miscellaneous Verses, 1810, reviewed by Scott in the Quarterly ; Christina, the Maid of the South Seas, a metrical tale based on the first news of discovery of the last surviving mutineer of the H. M. S. Bounty and a generation of British-Tahitian children on Pitcairn Island in 1811 ; and Blanche part of a projected series of ' Narrative poems on the Female Character ,' 1813 ).
His first comic-book work was inking the eight-page story " Snowman ", penciled by John Giunta, in the one-shot Tally-Ho Comics ( Dec. 1944 ), published by Swappers Quarterly and Almanac / Baily Publishing Company .< ref >
In his case, he was entitled to one by descent from armigerous ancestors, expressed in heraldic terminology as Quarterly gules and or a fleur de lis argent in the first quarter with a greyhound courant for the crest.

Quarterly and fourth
Starting again in 1948, the name The New Colophon: A Book Collectors ' Quarterly was used by Philip Duschnes and the quarterly was entirely printed by the Anthoensen Press of Portland, Maine, continuing publication until 1950 in a fourth and final format.
The town ’ s arms might be described thus: Quarterly, first and fourth gules a wheel spoked of six argent, second and third argent the letter M of the first.
* Kilsyth Community Council, Scotland: Quarterly, azure and gules: first, an open bible proper ; second, two swords in saltire argent, hilts uppermost, or ; third, two shuttles in saltire or, garnished with thread argent ; fourth, a miner's lamp argent, enflamed proper ; over all a fillet cross, nowy lozengy, argent.
* Blaenavon Town Council: Quarterly wavy Sable and Or in the first and fourth quarters a Key wards upwards and to the dexter and in the second and third quarters a Lozenge all counterchanged.
He also quartered the arms of de Burgh and Mortimer, emphasising his descent from Lionel of Antwerp, on which his brother's Yorkist claim to the throne was based: Quarterly, first, Quarterly France modern and England, a label of five points argent the two dexter points charged with lions rampant purpure and the three sinister points each with three torteaux ; second and third, de Burgh ; fourth, Mortimer.
: Quarterly first and fourth, a paly of six Or and Sable, a bend counterchanged ; quarterly second and third, quarterly Argent and Gules a cross bottony counterchanged.
Emblem:: Quarterly ; first Azure a seme ' of seven mullets Argent, second and third Or eleven lines radiant from honor point throughout Azure, fourth Azure two mullets in bend sinister Argent, overall a globe gridlines, surmounted by a stylized compass star Celeste outlined and detailed Blue ; all within a diminished bordure Or.
Quarterly gules and azure, on a fesse wavy argent three ravens volant paroper, between in the first quarter two branches of broom slipped of the third, in the second a sun in splendour, in the third an escallop shell or, and in the fourth a horse forcene argent.

Quarterly and Gules
Mary I's coat of arms was the same as those used by all her predecessors since Henry IV: Quarterly, Azure three fleurs-de-lys Or France and Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or ( for England ).
The Royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom are " Quarterly, I and IV Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or England ; II Or a lion rampant within a double tressure flory-counter-flory Gules Scotland ; III Azure a harp Or stringed Argent Ireland ".
The arms were Quarterly of twelve, 1st, Or, a semé of hearts Gules, a lion rampant Azure ( Lüneburg ); 2nd, Gules, two lions passant guardant Or ( Brunswick ); 3rd, Azure, a lion rampant Argent crowned Or ( Eberstein ); 4th, Gules a lion rampant Or, within a border componé Argent and Azure ( Homburg ); 5th, Or, a lion rampant Gules crowned Azure ( Diepholz ); 6th, Gules, a lion rampant Or ( Lauterberg ); 7th, Per fess, in chief Or, two bears ' paws erect Sable ( Hoya ), in the base a gyronny, Argent and Azure ( Old Bruckhausen ); 8th, Azure, an eagle displayed Argent, langued, beaked and membered Gules ( Diepholz eagle ); 9th, Chequy Argent and Gules ( Hohnstein ); 10th, Argent, a stag's attire in bend Gules ( Regenstein ); 11th, Argent, a stag trippant Sable ( Klettenburg ); 12th, Argent, a stag's attire in bend sinister Sable ( Blankenburg ).< ref >
As a Princess, Juliana bore the following arms: Quarterly, 1 and 3, Azure, billetty Or a lion with a coronet Or armed and langued Gules holding in his dexter paw a sword Argent hilted Or and in the sinister paw seven arrows Argent pointed and bound together Or ( the royal arms of dominion of the Netherlands, and thus her mother Queen Wilhelmina ), 2 and 4, Or, a Horn azure, langued gules, ( the arms of the Principality of Orange ) on an inescutcheon or, a Bull's head sable ( for her father's House of Mecklenburg ).
The arms were Quarterly of nineteen, 1st, Azure, a lion barry Argent and Gules ( Landgrave of Thuringia ); 2nd, Gules, an escarbuncle Or and a shield at the centre point Argent ( Cleves ); 3rd, Or, a lion rampant Sable ( Meissen ); 4th, Or, a lion rampant Sable ( Jülich ); 5th, Argent, a lion rampant Gules crowned Azure ( Berg ); 6th, Azure, an eagle displayed Or ( Palatinate of Saxony ); 7th, Or, two pales Azure ( Landsberg ); 8th, Sable, an eagle displayed Or ( Palatinate of Thuringia ); 9th, Or, semé of hearts Gules a lion rampant Sable crowned of the second ( Orlamünde ); 10th, Argent, three bars Azure ( Eisenberg ); 11th, Azure, a lion passant per fess Or and Argent ( Tonna in Gleichen ); 12th, Argent, a rose Gules barbed and seeded Proper ( Burgraviate of Altenburg ); 13th, Gules plain ( Sovereign rights ); 14th, Argent, three beetles ' pincers Gules ( Engern ); 15th, Or a fess chequy Gules and Argent ( Marck ); 16th, Per pale, dexter, Gules, a column Argent crowned Or ( Roemhild ), sinister, Or, on a mount Vert, a cock Sable, wattled Gules ( Hannenberg ); 17th, Argent three chevronels Gules ( Ravensberg ); and over all an inescutcheon barry Or and Sable, a crown of rue ( or a crancelin ) in bend Vert ( Saxony ).
The formal description, or blazon, of the Arms is: Quarterly Gules and barry wavy Argent and Azure a Fesse of the second charged with a Ram statant proper between in chief a Garb and a Thunderbolt and in base four Apples and a Branch of Hops all Or ; For the Crest On a Wreath Argent and Gules: A Lion statant Gules resting the dexter fore paw on a shovel and a Pick-axe in saltire proper: And for Supporters, on either side A Tasmanian Tiger proper, with the motto " Ubertas et Fidelitas "

Quarterly and three
in the east window of the north aisle of the presbytery, and in another window of the same aisle, where they are still remaining, and are thus blasoned: Quarterly gules and ermine, on the 1st and 4th three goat's heads erased argent, attired or.
Every three months, it publishes a technology report called Technology Quarterly or TQ.
Every three months, it publishes a " Technology Quarterly ," a special section focusing on recent trends and developments in science and technology.
Arms: Quarterly, 1st and 4th azure semée of fleur-de-lys or ( France Ancient ); 2nd and 3rd gules, three lions passant guardant or ( England ); overall a label of three points argent.
Royal seal of Eric of Pomerania ( 1398 ) depicting: ( Centre ): a lion rampant crowned maintaining an axe ( representing Norway ) within an inescutcheon upon a cross over all ; Quarterly: in Dexter Chief, three lions passant in pale crowned and maintaining a Flag of Denmark | Danebrog upon a semy of hearts ( representing Denmark ); in Sinister Chief: three crowns ( representing Sweden or the Kalmar Union ); in Dexter Base: a lion rampant ( Folkung lion ) ( representing Sweden ); and in Sinister Base: a griffin segreant to sinister ( representing Pomerania ).
In an article in Middle East Quarterly, he alleged that " extensive quotations from the reports of all three Jewish participants the meetings do not support Shlaim's account ... the report of Ezra Danin and Eliahu Sasson on the Golda Meir meeting ( the most important Israeli participant and the person who allegedly clinched the deal with Abdullah ) is conspicuously missing from Shlaim's book, despite his awareness of its existence ".
The Quarterly Review was the foremost intellectual journal of the age and of the twenty-six issues published between spring 1860 and summer 1866, Cecil had anonymous articles in all but three of them.
The heraldic blazon for the coat of arms of the dukedom is: Quarterly: 1st and 4th gules, three cinquefoils pierced ermine ( for Hamilton ); 2nd and 3rd argent, an ancient ship or lymphad, with one mast, the sail furled and oars out sable ( for Arran ).
Coat of Arms of the Seymour Dukes of Somerset: Quarterly: 1st and 4th Or, on a pile gules between six fleurs de lys azure three Lions in heraldry | lions of England ; 2nd and 3rd, Gules, two wings conjoined in lure or ( Seymour ) The paternal arms of Seymour concede the positions of greatest honour, the 1st & 4th Quartering ( heraldry ) | quarters, to a version of the Armorial of Plantagenet | arms of Plantagenet
The heraldic blazon for the coat of arms of the dukedom is: Quarterly, 1st and 4th, azure three fleurs-de-lys or ( for France ); 2nd and 3rd, gules three lions passant guardant in pale or ( for England ), all within a bordure compony argent and azure.

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