456 research outputs found

    Letter from John Canon Breen to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from John Canon Breen, President St. Brendan’s Seminary, Killarney, County Kerry, to (Hagan), asking for copies of the prospectus. While he met their friend Keohane in March, he has never received a reply to a letter wrote to him after the Irish schoolboys' pilgrimage to Lourdes

    Letter from Carl Hayden to Fred S. Breen regarding Sale of Bright Angel Trail

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    Letter from Carl Hayden to Fred S. Breen regarding Yaki Point, the sale of Bright Angel Trail and the building of a road between Maine and the Grand Canyon

    Sea City

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    Dr Sally Breen is the author of The Casuals (2011), winner of the Varuna Harper Collins Manuscript Prize, and Atomic City (2013), shortlisted for the People’s Choice Book of the Year Queensland Literary Awards 2014. Her short form creative and non-fiction work has been published internationally including features in Overland, Griffith Review, Meanjin, The Guardian London, The Age, Review of Australian Fiction, Sydney Review of Books, Best Australian Stories, Hemingway Shorts, TEXT and The Asia Literary Review. Sally is a regular contributor to The Conversation where she writes on a variety of topics from pop culture to sport, film, visual arts and rock n roll. Sally is senior lecturer in creative writing at Griffith University Australia and executive director of Asia Pacific Writers and Translators. Her latest work ‘Don’t You Know You’ve Got Legs – A Gold Coast Surf Culture Manifesto’ features in Lines to the Horizon, out now with Fremantle Press. Sally has worked as associate editor of the Griffith Review, fiction editor of Wet Ink and edited numerous collections and special editions of journals including TEXT, MC Journal and eleven editions of Talent Implied – New Writing from Griffith. She recently co-edited a collection of new writing from the Asia Pacific Meridian – the APWT Drunken Boat Anthology of New Writing available worldwide from the APWT website www.apwriters.org and SPD Books in the US. More of Sally’s work can be accessed via her website https://www.sallybreen.com.auFull Tex

    Margaret Breen giving a talk on Edward Irenaeus Prime-Stevenson

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    Photo of Margaret Breen (University of Connecticut) discussing author Edward Irenaeus Prime-Stevenson. Breen gave a talk titled “Queer Translations: Prime-Stevenson’s Imre (1906) and The Intersexes (1908) and the Emergence of Homosexual Identity”. This talk was from the event German Discovery of Sex: Medicine, Activism, Literature which took place on April 16, 2011 as part of the Henry J. Leir Chair Programming for the 2010-2011 season. Robert Tobin was the Henry J. Leir Chair from 2008 up until his passing in 2022. These are Robert Tobin\u27s photos, originally hosted on his WordPress site provided by Clark University.https://commons.clarku.edu/tobindiscphotos/1009/thumbnail.jp

    Rethinking Power: An Analysis of Media Coverage of Sexual Abuse in Ireland, the UK and the USA

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    The author Michael Breen is a Government of Ireland Fellow 2003/2004 and this research has been possible through the Fellowship scheme of the Irish Research Council for Humanities and Social Sciences. This paper has been part funded by a conference grant from the College Research Directorate, Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick.Ye

    Rethinking Power: An Analysis of Media Coverage of Sexual Abuse in Ireland, the UK and the USA

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    The author Michael Breen is a Government of Ireland Fellow 2003/2004 and this research has been possible through the Fellowship scheme of the Irish Research Council for Humanities and Social Sciences. This paper has been part funded by a conference grant from the College Research Directorate, Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick.Ye

    Letter from Donal A. Reidy to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from Donal A. Reidy, The Palace, Killarney (County Kerry), to Hagan. They are sending two students; Curran and Brosnahan. The former is from the Gaeltacht and has no Oxford English, his early schooling did in no way match his abilities. Adding in a postscript that Canon Breen was "promoted" to a parish owing to failure to repair the harm he did in the seminary; their rector is now Fr. Denis Brosnan. Then speaking in favour of past Roman pupil 'Mago' O'Donnell, now teaching at an Irish (Gaelic) Training College; hoping his perceived oddities will not come against him; believing that in Rome he suffered from slander by Canon Breen

    De tafel als metafoor voor architectuur

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    This book is the result of an exercise at the Faculty of Architecture of Delft Technical University, The Netherlands, The task was set by the Staff of the department for Study of elementary form and composition. The theme of this exercise was 'the Table as ametaphor for architecture' which was one of the tasks in the study project entitted 'Image and materialisation'. The students developed and presented their ideas in models scale 1 to 5, In the article 'the table as an architectural object' by Jack Breen, tabledesign is reviewed in relation to the architectural design tradition. In the article 'the table of ten : aselection', Bernard OIsthoorn offers a critical analysis of the students' designs and focusses on ten selected projects, In the categories 'Modern Classics', Dynamism and a A-symmetry', 'Sculpture and Construction' and 'Devise and Building Kit' a thematic impression of the students' designs is given.Staf VormstudieArchitectur

    The economic contribution of recreational fishing: Waterville, Co. Kerry. ESRI Research Bulletin 2017/11

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    This research evaluates the local economic benefit arising from recreational angling tourism in Waterville, Co. Kerry. Tourism is vital to the local economy, and fishing is an important tourist attraction. Fishing opportunities include sea fish angling for bass, pollack, mullet, etc., as well as lake and river angling for salmon, sea trout and brown trout. Other sporting and cultural attractions also exist locally and the area benefits from it situation on the ‘Ring of Kerry’. Waterville Lakes and Rivers Trust undertook a survey of anglers between February and June 2015. This research is based on that survey data but focuses on visiting tourist anglers and their expenditures in the local area, both anglingrelated (e.g. ghillie and boat hire, fishing tackle, bait, etc.) and non-angling expenditures (e.g. accommodation, meals, drinks and groceries, gifts, etc.). The survey includes both tourists where the sole focus of the trip was fishing and where fishing was only one component of a trip that included other tourist activities

    Essentially yours: the protection of human genetic information in Australia

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    ALRC Report 96 (tabled May 2003)  was the product of a two-year inquiry by the ALRC and the Australian Health Ethics Committee (AHEC) of the NHMRC, involving extensive research and widespread public consultation.The inquiry was the most comprehensive ever undertaken into these issues in Australia or overseas. The report covers an extensive range of activities in which genetic information plays—or soon will play—an important role. The two-volume, 1200 page report makes 144 recommendations about how Australia should deal with the ethical, legal and social implications of the New Genetics. This Report reflects the law as at 14 March 2003
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