765 research outputs found

    Lorna Cook

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    Lorna Cook is the daughter of William and Dora Cook. She married William Breed Searle

    Poem by Lorna Pietsch

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    Newspaper Article - Poem by Lorna PietschAlberta Women's Institutes; AWI Collection: I was talked into attending 1 a meeting. For women calledfyw. p. I haven't looked back tor one minute, And love it till this very day. It's run with a wonderful spirit, Of Godliness, honour and peace. With contacts all the world over, Like India, Paris and Greece. The Song of Peace has a meaning, Which stirs something in my heart. For it holds our world's women closer, Though many miles apart. With these words you know how I think. And feel about ^ jSt. A. W// I hope you all have the same feeling, Today and every day. Lorna Pietsc

    Faba Bean Cook Book

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    This ICARDA Internal Document was prepared by Lorna Hawtin. It is based on recipes appearing in various publications as well as some original ones. A bibliography is provided at the end of the book

    Chickpea Cook Book

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    The earliest chickpeas found on the Hacilar site near Burdur in Turkey, have been estimated to be seven and a half thousand years old. It is not known if these were cultivated or collected from the wild but it is near this area of the fertile crescent that chickpeas are believed to have been first domesticated and from where the wild progenitor "Cicer Reticulatum" was recently discovered. This document was prepared by Lorna Hawtin. It Is based on recipes appearing In various publications as well as some original ones. A bibliography Is provided at the end of the book

    Lorna Sage writing: a reader's view

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    Lorna Sage was a British literary critic and university professor whose writing for public media during the last three decades of the 20th century contributed to the postwar dialogue on feminist literary criticism. Lorna Sage Writing: A Reader's View presents an interpretive history of her writing, organized around the time line of her childhood years, her entrance into a professional world unavailable to women in previous generations, and her thirty years of writing criticism, entertaining, scholarly, and focused on fiction and rhetoric by and about women. To this day, her writing creates as a bridge between the author and the reader, informing and encouraging both to meet somewhere between

    Lorna Sage writing: a reader's view

    No full text
    Lorna Sage was a British literary critic and university professor whose writing for public media during the last three decades of the 20th century contributed to the postwar dialogue on feminist literary criticism. Lorna Sage Writing: A Reader's View presents an interpretive history of her writing, organized around the time line of her childhood years, her entrance into a professional world unavailable to women in previous generations, and her thirty years of writing criticism, entertaining, scholarly, and focused on fiction and rhetoric by and about women. To this day, her writing creates as a bridge between the author and the reader, informing and encouraging both to meet somewhere between

    Voz y verso en la poesía de Lorna Crozier

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    This essay is a biographical sketch of the Canadian poet Lorna Crozier (Saskatchewan 1948) and a description of which are, in my opinion, her more significant poetical procedures. The analysis, which conclusions I present here, is based primarily on the translation labor I carried out of 60 of her poems. It has as main sources the very texts of the author as well as a series of personal conversations I had with her about her literary career and her aesthetics conceptions

    Dancing With the Doctor: Dimensions of Gender in the Doctor Who Universe

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    Lorna Jowett delves into the distinctive stories and characters, including the Doctors themselves, their female and male companions, Captain Jack Harkness, Missy, Sarah Jane and her young comrades. She considers the showrunners, directors, producers and writers and the problems this flagship science fiction series has had in offering alternative gender models. Constructions of masculinity, the author function, and how gender intersects with the other facets of identity, race, ethnicity and age, are just some of the areas explored in this accessible and wide-ranging re-view of these hotly debated elements of the successful BBC franchise

    Book review: On voter competence

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    A half century of research shows that most citizens are shockingly uninformed about public affairs, liberal-conservative ideologies, and the issues of the day. This has led most scholars to condemn typical voters and to conclude that policy voting lies beyond their reach. On Voter Competence breaks sharply from this view, with author Paul Goren providing analysis of opinion data from the past six presidential elections. Lorna Walker writes that this book challenges some aspects of the negative view of American voters, it by no means exonerates them on the charge of incompetence

    Book review: Lorna M.Hughes (ed.) Evaluating and measuring the value, use and impact of digital collections

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    This volume is a collection of articles which discuss the issue of the impact of digital collections. Introduced by Lorna Hughes, author of an earlier volume Digitising Collections: Strategic Issues for the Information Manager (Hughes, 2003), it is in three parts – Part 1 describing the digital transformation in libraries, museums and archives, Part 2 on understanding and measuring the use, impact and value of digital collections, and Part 3 on enhancing the future impact and value of digital collections
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