6,865 research outputs found
Death on Scurvy Street / Ben Ames Williams. E. P Dutton & Company, 1929.
Ben Ames Williams. Death on Scurvy Street. New York: E. P Dutton & Company, 1929.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/ms_mystery/1013/thumbnail.jp
The Silver Forest / Ben Ames Williams. E. P. Dutton & Company, 1926.
Ben Ames Williams. The Silver Forest. New York: E. P. Dutton & Company, 1926.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/ms_mystery/1015/thumbnail.jp
Hostile Valley / Ben Ames Williams.
Ben Ames Williams. Hostile Valley. New York: E. P. Dutton & Company, 1934.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/ms_mystery/1014/thumbnail.jp
An End to Mirth / Ben Ames Williams.
Ben Ames Williams. An End to Mirth. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., c.1930.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/ms_mystery/1010/thumbnail.jp
Weisheit von Sirach
"Ben Sira, wisdom of (also called Ecclesiasticus), a work of the Apocrypha, which, though usually known by this name, may have been called by its author, "The Words of Simeon b. Jeshua," the title found on the Hebrew fragments" (Encyc. Judaica, CD-Rom Ed., 1997)Erscheinungsjahr nach Vorlage: 279 [i.e. 1519]Ben Sira folgen noch eine Reihe anderer Abhandlungen cf. Steinschneider p. 203 No. 1363. Die wichtigsten NZ!Siehe auch Karl Heinz Burmeister, Sebastian Münster, in: Basler Beiträge zur Geschichtswissenschaft, Bd. 91, 1963, S. 8
Clarence Benjamin Dutton
Clarence Benjamin Dutton was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on May 31, 1917. He was raised in Hammond, Indiana, where he graduated from Hammond High School in 1934. He received his B.S., with distinction, from Indiana University in 1938. Prior to receiving his undergraduate degree, he began taking classes at the Indiana University School of Law and ultimately received his LL.B., magna cum laude, in 1940. After graduating from law school Dutton spent a years teaching business law at the I.U. School of Business. He then worked briefly for the E. I. du Pont de Nemours Company (a.k.a. DuPont) in Wilmington, Delaware, before leaving to serve in the U. S. Navy during World War II.
After the war, Dutton returned to Indiana and became a faculty member at the I.U. Law School (1946-1947). In 1947, he entered private practice in Indianapolis, forming the firm of Dutton, Kappes and Overman. The firm flourished and over the years he and his partners earned the confidence of a wide clientele of both individuals and businesses.
Dutton served as President of the Indiana State Bar Association, as a member of the Board of Governors of the American Bar Association, and as Chairman of the ABA Section on General Practice. He was the Director of the American Judicature Society twice, Secretary of the Indiana Civil Code Committee, and was at the center of the re-codification of the Indiana civil code. Dutton was President of both the IU Alumni Association and the School of Law Alumni Association, as well as a long-standing member of the school’s Board of Visitors (1972; 1975-1987; 1994-1998). He was awarded an LL.D., the University’s highest honor, in 1970. Dutton was inducted into the Indiana University School of Law Academy of Law Alumni Fellows in 1988, and received the University’s Distinguished Alumni Service Award in 1995. In addition, Dutton endowed the C. Ben Dutton Chair in Business Law at the Law School in 1989. Clarence Benjamin Dutton died in Naples, Florida, on November 6, 2004.https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/notablealumni/1110/thumbnail.jp
Clarence Benjamin Dutton
Clarence Benjamin Dutton was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on May 31, 1917. He was raised in Hammond, Indiana, where he graduated from Hammond High School in 1934. He received his B.S., with distinction, from Indiana University in 1938. Prior to receiving his undergraduate degree, he began taking classes at the Indiana University School of Law and ultimately received his LL.B., magna cum laude, in 1940. After graduating from law school Dutton spent a years teaching business law at the I.U. School of Business. He then worked briefly for the E. I. du Pont de Nemours Company (a.k.a. DuPont) in Wilmington, Delaware, before leaving to serve in the U. S. Navy during World War II.
After the war, Dutton returned to Indiana and became a faculty member at the I.U. Law School (1946-1947). In 1947, he entered private practice in Indianapolis, forming the firm of Dutton, Kappes and Overman. The firm flourished and over the years he and his partners earned the confidence of a wide clientele of both individuals and businesses.
Dutton served as President of the Indiana State Bar Association, as a member of the Board of Governors of the American Bar Association, and as Chairman of the ABA Section on General Practice. He was the Director of the American Judicature Society twice, Secretary of the Indiana Civil Code Committee, and was at the center of the re-codification of the Indiana civil code. Dutton was President of both the IU Alumni Association and the School of Law Alumni Association, as well as a long-standing member of the school’s Board of Visitors (1972; 1975-1987; 1994-1998). He was awarded an LL.D., the University’s highest honor, in 1970. Dutton was inducted into the Indiana University School of Law Academy of Law Alumni Fellows in 1988, and received the University’s Distinguished Alumni Service Award in 1995. In addition, Dutton endowed the C. Ben Dutton Chair in Business Law at the Law School in 1989. Clarence Benjamin Dutton died in Naples, Florida, on November 6, 2004.https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/notablealumni/1110/thumbnail.jp
Bill notification, To: Mr. Peter Dupre, From: Ben Dutton on behalf of Capt. Hayes, April 28, 1802.
Autoworker and acclaimed author Ben Hamper speaks at the Michigan Writers Series
In an appearance at the Michigan State University Main Library, autoworker and acclaimed author Ben Hamper talks about his career at the General Motors Truck and Bus Plant in Flint, Michigan and reads from various works, including his forward to the book "Working words: punching the clock and kicking out the jams" by M. L. Liebler and from his most famous work, "Rivethead", a cynical and humorous view of life in an auto plant. A question and answer session follows. Hamper is introduced by Michigan State University Professor John P. Beck for the Michigan State University Libraries' Michigan Writers Series
Martin Loughlin, Public Law and Political Theory
In this chapter, Ben Yong discusses Martin Loughlin’s Public Law and Political Theory. Drawing in part on conversation with the author, Yong explores the significance of a book that, despite interrogating the nature of public law as a discipline in a novel and methodologically important way, is often poorly understood
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