1,722,147 research outputs found
Andrew Taylor House
Photograph of the front of the Andrew Taylor house located at South Main St and Marion St
Collected Poems / Andrew Taylor
In this major work, Andrew Taylor gathers in one place all of his poetry published since the late 1960s, leading in part to his receiving the awards of the Commonwealth Poetry Prize (regional) 1986 and the 1995 WA Premier’s Prize. This body of work had contributed to some dozen books of previously-published poetry, and to this he adds a substantial collection of new and unpublished material
A Little Journey to the Home of Andrew Taylor Still
Cover:
A Little Journey to the Home of Andrew Taylor Still
By Elbert Hubbard
Title page:
Andrew Taylor Still: Being a Little Journey to the Home of the Founder of Osteopathy
By Elbert Hubbard
Done into a Book by the Roycrofters, at their Shop, which is in East Aurora, New York, mcmxii
Photographs:
THE OLD DOCTOR AND ELBERT HUBBARD On the veranda at Kirksville
DR. C.E. STILLhttps://digitalcommons.kansascity.edu/literature/1015/thumbnail.jp
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The long road back to the start : the writing process of "The sleeping prince of Manhattan"
textThis report concerns the creative process – initial inspiration, development, writing, and rewriting – that went into the creation of Andrew Taylor Lanham’s screenplay “The Sleeping Prince of Manhattan.” The following pages also examine the overall creative process of screenwriting in relation to the author. Radio-Television-Fil
Funeral Service for Mr. Andrew Taylor
Funeral program for Mr. Andrew Taylor. The funeral was held January 3, 1984 at Second Baptist Church, officiated by Rev. S. H. James. Funeral arrangements were made through the Lewis Funeral Home, and he was buried in Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery near San Antonio, Texas
Andrew Taylor Still Statue
Photograph depicting a bronze statue of Andrew Taylor Still, the founder of osteopathy. The sculptor was Mexican artist Juan Lombardo-Revera, who also sculpted the Pioneer Woman statue for the National Frontier Trails Museum in Independence, Missouri. The Still statue was originally displayed in the lobby of University Hospital. When that hospital closed it was moved to the KCU Administration Building. During the renovation of that building in 2015/16 the statue was moved to the D\u27 Angelo Library. With the destruction of the Pioneer Woman statue, and other Lombardo-Revera statues being held in private collections, the KCU campus is the only place in Kansas City that this famous Mexican sculptor\u27s work can be publicly viewed.https://digitalcommons.kansascity.edu/photographs/1073/thumbnail.jp
Book review : Andrew Taylor the world of Gerard Marcator : the mapmaker who revolutionised geography
Book review : Andrew Taylor the world of Gerard Marcator : the mapmaker who revolutionised geograph
Perfect storm brewing for mosquito-borne viruses
A combination of climate factors and the development of northern Australia creates a perform storm for arboviruses to emerge as a potential public health concern over the coming decades, writes Andrew Taylor-Robinson
Still, Andrew Taylor, D.O. - 1828-1917, Founder of Osteopathic Medicine
In 1874 Dr. Andrew Taylor Still, a frontier physician, announced his theories about a new system of structural therapeutics that he called osteopathy. His revolutionary theories rejected traditional medical practice (allopathy) that relied heavily on drugs. Instead, Still associated disease with disorders of the musculoskeletal system which, through mechanical correction, could be prevented or treated. His system of medicine soon attracted supporters. It also elicited opponents who labeled the new alternative medicine quackery, cultism and charlatanism. In so doing, these naysayers fueled a long history of struggles for the osteopathic profession, a struggle mirrored in the 100-year history of Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine.https://digitalcommons.pcom.edu/portraits/1028/thumbnail.jp
Dr. Andrew Taylor Still, Compliments of the Still-Hildreth Sanatorium, Macon, Mo.
Undated postcard of Dr. Andrew Taylor Still wearing a fur hat, labeled Compliments of the Still-Hildreth Sanatorium, Macon, Mo.
Still-Hildreth was the first osteopathic neuropsychiatric institution. It was established on March 1, 1914 by A.T. Still\u27s sons, Charles E. Still and Harry M. Still, along with A.G. Hildreth.https://digitalcommons.kansascity.edu/postcards/1022/thumbnail.jp
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