15,117 research outputs found

    Mary G. Farrell\u27s Director\u27s Notes for The Lower Rooms

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    Providence College Department of Theatre, Dance & Film Mary G. Farrell\u27s Director\u27s Notes for The Lower Rooms.https://digitalcommons.providence.edu/lower_rooms_pubs/1002/thumbnail.jp

    Mary G. Farrell\u27s Director\u27s Notes for The Lower Rooms

    No full text
    Providence College Department of Theatre, Dance & Film Mary G. Farrell\u27s Director\u27s Notes for The Lower Rooms.https://digitalcommons.providence.edu/lower_rooms_pubs/1002/thumbnail.jp

    Handwritten Dedication to Jeremiah Farrell from Marc Romano, author of Crossworld

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    A handwritten note of appreciation sent to Jeremiah Farrell by Marc Romano, the author of Crossworld: One Man\u27s Journey into America\u27s Crossword Obsession . Farrell was the renown creator of the 1996 Election Day Puzzle that predicted the election by allowing for Clinton or Bobdole to be valid responses. Romano mentions the puzzle several times in his own work and corresponded with Farrell regarding his book and the best puzzle in the world .https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/faculty_images/1001/thumbnail.jp

    Telegram from Thelma Farrell to Amon G. Carter, Jr. and George Ann Brown Carter

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    Telegram from Thelma Farrell to Amon G. Carter, Jr. and George Ann Brown Carter upon the death of Amon Giles Carter. The telegram expresses condolences and sympathy about his death.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_meachamcarterpapers/1125/thumbnail.jp

    Farrell, G T W, 415895

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/384610Surname: FARRELL. Given Name(s) or Initials: G T W. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 415895. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 51355.230352 Item: [2016.0049.16903] "Farrell, G T W, 415895

    Jeremiah Farrell with Dennis Sasha, author of Puzzling Adventures: Tales of Strategy, Logic and Mathematical Skill

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    Jeremiah Farrell is awarded the title of Omniheurist, First-Class for solving the eloborate embedded puzzle in Dennis Sasha\u27s book, Puzzling Adventures . The cryptic puzzle required Dr. Farrell to travel to New York City on a certain day to meet two persons in yellow with one wearing a red wig. The event was featured in articles in Indy Star and the New York Sun.https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/faculty_images/1003/thumbnail.jp

    R.C. Farrell Store

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    Photograph - People standing in front of R.C. Farrell, General Merchant store, Athabasca, Alberta. Left to right: Lance Smith, Louis Menard, Romeo Farrell, Athela LaRue Farrell, and Ray Vari

    Did violence fall after property crime?

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    This study contributes to crime drop research relating to the security hypothesis which the authors have undertaken with Nick Tilley. We offer preliminary evidence of a lag between the fall in property crime and that in some forms of violent crime. The delay is estimated at three years. The age distribution of violence shows that, proportionally, it is committed by older offenders than property crime, and we offer the preliminary suggestion that a period effect reducing youth crime would take longer to work its way through the population for violence, delaying its aggregate decline. Such a period effect would be consistent with the debut crime hypothesis and the expected effect of improved security

    Histoire et fiction dans Troubles de J. G. Farrell

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    This article aims at analyzing how the Anglo-Irish novelist J. G. Farrell succeeded in through the medium of fiction, a period of Irish history whose consequences are still vivid at the present time. In this novel, Troubles, which was published in 1970 and was awarded the Faber Memorial Prize, history and fiction form a kind of web in which the contemporary reader cannot fail to notice analogies with present-day events. Past and present become the two sides of an at once truthful and deforming mirror, held up to reality and the world. In such a universe, the human being gets caught, as the author himself put it, in the « grip » of history which turns out to be that of his or her own life-story.Cet article a pour but d'analyser comment J. G. Farrell, romancier d'origine anglo-irlandaise, est parvenu à recréer, par le truchement de la fiction romanesque, une période de l'histoire irlandaise dont les conséquences se font encore sentir à l'époque actuelle. Dans ce roman, Troubles, publié en 1970 et couronné par le prix Faber, Histoire et fiction tressent un maillage dans lequel le lecteur contemporain ne peut manquer de voir des analogies avec l'actualité immédiate. Passé et présent deviennent les facettes d'un miroir à la fois fidèle et déformant de la réalité et du monde. Dans cet univers, l'être humain se trouve pris au « piège » de l'Histoire, pour reprendre les paroles de l'auteur, piège qui devient aussi celui de sa propre histoire.Delattre Elisabeth. Histoire et fiction dans Troubles de J. G. Farrell. In: Études irlandaises, n°25-1, 2000. pp. 65-80

    Farrell and Daigneau Store

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    Photograph - Interior view of Farrell and Daigneau Store, Athabasca, Alberta. Left to right, Hamel (book keeper), Joseph Arthur Daigneau, Jim Demers, Moise Hogne, and Romeo C. Farrel
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