21,371 research outputs found

    Dickson and Hofeltz Children

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    Connie Dickson, Sarah Jane and JImmy Holfeltz and Shirlene Dickson, cousins, are pictured together. Connie and Shirlene are the daughters of Lee and Mary Potter Dickson. Sarah Jane and Jimmy are the children of Glen and Lila Holfeltz

    Dickson and Holfeltz Family

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    Dickson and Holfeltz family members are pictured together. On the back row, Lee Dickson, Glen and Lila Holfeltz. Front, children, Shirlene Dickson, Sarah Jane and Jimmy Holfeltz and Connie Dickson

    Letter to William Dickson from his niece Jane Hamilton

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    Letter to William Dickson from his niece Jane Hamilton. Jane thanks her uncle for his kind letter and the 50 pounds that he has sent her. The letter concerns family matters such as her nephew sailing for Calcutta and she assumes that Helen has heard about the death of her grandmother (3 ¼ pages, handwritten), Jan. 2, 1845

    Using anthropology to inform a book’s transition to digital

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    Health professionals' nuanced relationship with the BNF in print may keep them from switching to digital, finds Jane Dickson

    Poems / by Bassett Dickson.

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    Illustration is a photograph.; Electronic reproduction. Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, 2009.; Library's N copy inscribed by author

    The light of the eye : doctrine, piety and reform in the works of Thomas Sherlock, Hannah More and Jane Austen

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    Bibliography: leaves 376-401.This thesis investigates the ways in which three eighteenth-century writers, Bishop Thomas Sherlock, Hannah More and Jane Austen embody orthodox Anglican doctrine according to their individual perceptions of the enlightening properties of Protestant Christianity. After situating them in their respective gender, literary and ecclesiastical contexts, I examine some of their key doctrines and analyse excerpts from their works. My selection of passages from Sherlock's works is fairly comprehensive, but in the case of More and Austen, where there is already a formidable body of literary criticism, it is more selective. Thus, I focus on doctrine in More's tracts, Strictures on the System of Female Education, An Essay on St Paul and most especially Coelebs in Search of a Wife and in the case of Austen, on her prayers and select passages from Sense and Sensibility and Mansfield Park. I conclude that, although diverse in their particular kind of Anglicanism (High, Evangelical and Median) and in their choice of genre, transparency or obscurity (anonymity and pseudonymity) and the various narratological strategies some of them invoke to circumvent certain taboos, Sherlock, More and Austen champion the same central orthodox doctrines, defend them against current alternatives to orthodoxy such as Latitudinarianism, Deism and various forms of Freethinking, and promote similar moral and ecclesiastical reforms. However, indirectly (through female characters who resist male representation or control) the women writers subject their ostensibly authorially-endorsed male narrators/characters to scrutiny and sometimes (when the males objectify the women) subversion

    Indenture of bargain and sale between Walter Hamilton Dickson and Augusta Maria Dickson of Niagara to Jane Dickson (widow of Robert Dickson), Thomas Clark Street of Stamford and Edward Clarke Campbell of Niagara

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    Indenture of bargain and sale between Walter Hamilton Dickson and Augusta Maria Dickson of Niagara to Jane Dickson (widow of Robert Dickson), Thomas Clark Street of Stamford and Edward Clarke Campbell of Niagara for 150 acres for the south half of Lot no. 32 in the 7th concession and the north east quarter of Lot no. 22 in the 10th Concession of Dumphries. This was recorded in the County of Halton on the 29th day of January, 1849 in Folio 326, memorial 236, Jan. 12, 1849

    Andrew Dickson White papers microfilm reel 149, 1882-1917

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    Digitized microfilm of correspondence and papers from the Andrew Dickson White collection.Segment 1: Volume one of the Autobiography of Andrew Dickson White, New York, The Century Co., 1917; copyright, 1904, 1905 by The Century Co., published March, 1905; 601 pages... Segment 2: Volume two of the Autobiography of Andrew Dickson White, including a list of publications by the author and an index, 606 pages ...Segment 3: This portion of the reel contains three letter registers kept by a succession of White's secretaries. The first volume lists letters sent from January 2, 1882 through June 29, 1883. Except for a few pages at the beginning and end, the right-hand pages record the letters of 1882, and the left·hand pages those of 1883. The second volume lists letters sent throughout 1884, and the third records letters sent from January 1, 1885 through August 14, 1885

    Silha Bulletin Fall 2018

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    A publication of the Silha Center for the Study of Media Ethics and Law, School of Journalism and Mass Communication.A publication of the Silha Center for the Study of Media Ethics and LawSilha Center for the Study of Media Ethics and LawUniversity of Minnesota: Silha Center for the Study of Media Ethics and Law; Kirtley, Jane E.; Memmel, Scott; Nordstrom, Kirsten; Wiley, Sarah; Carmody, Casey; Hargrove, Elaine. (2018). Silha Bulletin Fall 2018. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/203922
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