1,244 research outputs found
Narrative of Sojourner Truth; a bondswoman of olden time, emancipated by the New York legislature in the early part of the present century; with a history of her labors and correspondence, drawn from her "Book of life."
Preface signed: William Lloyd Garrison. Information from publisher: Narrative of Sojourner Truth by Olive Gilbert, Leeds, Mass. Book of life by Frances W. Titus.Mode of access: Internet
Narrative of Sojourner Truth; a bondswoman of olden time, emancipated by the New York Legislature in the early part of the present century; with a history of her labors and correspondence,
Narrative of Sojourner Truth, by Olive Gilbert. Book of life, by Frances W. Titus.Preface signed: Wm. Lloyd Garrison.Mode of access: Internet
Gilbert Haven Memorial Library, circa 1910
The exterior of the Gilbert Haven Memorial Library building at Gammon.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the National Endowment for Humanities - Humanities Collections and Reference Resources Implementation Project Grant in supporting the processing and digitization of a number of its major archival collections as part of the project: Spreading the Word: Expanding Access to African American Religious Archival Collections at the Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library.</em
Olivia [electronic resource] : or, deserted bride. By the author of Hortensia, The Rambles of Frankly, and The Fashionable Friend. In two volumes.
Author of Hortensia = Elizabeth Bonhote.The imprint of volume 2 reads: "Dublin: Printed for Mess. W. Watson, Gilbert, Burton, White, Byrne, Whitestone, Wogan, and Halpen. MDCCLXXXVII."Electronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from "Department of Special Collections, Kenneth Spencer Research Library, University of Kansas"
"The Twilight Years of our Founder" by Ben W. Miller
A three-page document titled "The Twilight Years of our Founder" and was written by Ben W. Miller. The article talks about William G. Anderson and his last years of life and his relationship with the author and the American Association for Health, Physical Education and Recreation (AAHPER).William Gilbert Anderson, born September 9, 1860, was an American pioneer of physical education, physician, and writer. Anderson was an organizer for the American Association for the Advancement of Physical Education, founded in 1885
Oral History Interview with Gilbert Meilaender
This interview was conducted with Gilbert Meilaender as part of “Moral Histories: Voices and Stories from the Founding Figures of Bioethics,” an oral history project of the Johns Hopkins University Berman Institute of Bioethics. Professor Meilaender is a Senior Research Professor at Valparaiso University. His areas of expertise include theological ethics, Christian ethics, human dignity, the philosophy of friendship, and adoption. He is the author of several books, including Bioethics: A Primer for Christians, Not by Nature but by Grace: Forming Families through Adoption, and Friendship: A Study in Theological Ethics. Professor Meilaender discusses his upbringing as the son of a Lutheran pastor, his education at Concordia Senior College and his path to academia after being ordained as a Lutheran minister. He discusses his graduate studies at Princeton University with mentor Paul Ramsey. He talks about his identity as a theological ethicist in a time when higher education was trying to distinguish the academic study of religion from theological study. He also discusses his experience with foster care and adoption, which shapes his view on reproductive technologies and the implications of the unquestioned use of such technologies. Professor Meilaender talks about his involvement with The Hastings Center and his work on the President’s Council on Bioethics during the George W. Bush administration. He notes that the Council’s work was philosophical, in contrast to law- and policy-oriented bioethics. He discusses the influence of the Council’s work on his thinking about human dignity, as well as the limits of bioethics, his approach to politics, and his belief in including religious views in public debate. The conversation concludes with reflections on his influences, friendships, correspondence with readers, and views on end-of-life care
Oral History Interview with Gilbert Meilaender
This interview was conducted with Gilbert Meilaender as part of “Moral Histories: Voices and Stories from the Founding Figures of Bioethics,” an oral history project of the Johns Hopkins University Berman Institute of Bioethics. Professor Meilaender is a Senior Research Professor at Valparaiso University. His areas of expertise include theological ethics, Christian ethics, human dignity, the philosophy of friendship, and adoption. He is the author of several books, including Bioethics: A Primer for Christians, Not by Nature but by Grace: Forming Families through Adoption, and Friendship: A Study in Theological Ethics. Professor Meilaender discusses his upbringing as the son of a Lutheran pastor, his education at Concordia Senior College and his path to academia after being ordained as a Lutheran minister. He discusses his graduate studies at Princeton University with mentor Paul Ramsey. He talks about his identity as a theological ethicist in a time when higher education was trying to distinguish the academic study of religion from theological study. He also discusses his experience with foster care and adoption, which shapes his view on reproductive technologies and the implications of the unquestioned use of such technologies. Professor Meilaender talks about his involvement with The Hastings Center and his work on the President’s Council on Bioethics during the George W. Bush administration. He notes that the Council’s work was philosophical, in contrast to law- and policy-oriented bioethics. He discusses the influence of the Council’s work on his thinking about human dignity, as well as the limits of bioethics, his approach to politics, and his belief in including religious views in public debate. The conversation concludes with reflections on his influences, friendships, correspondence with readers, and views on end-of-life care
L'ABC de Bébé (pp. [9-10])
Printed in color on cloth and sewn at the spine.
These pages depict "V" for "voiture" (car), "W" for "wagon (girl sitting in a wagon drawn by a goat) ," X" for "xylophone," "Y" for "yoyo," and "Z" for "zigzag."The imprint "Imagerie Pellerin, S.A." was used after 1921 and the company begin issuing cloth books for children during the 1920s.
Gilbert Dauphin was a children's book author who wrote under the pseudonym "Gil."Alphabet books
A Fragment of Text by Gilbert de la Porrée on a Binding from Recycled Parchment in the Collections of the Kórnik Library
W Bibliotece Kórnickiej przechowywanych jest wiele starodruków z dawnego zboru braci czeskich w Lesznie, a wśród nich adligat, czyli „klocek”, łączący w całość trzy dzieła: jedno Jana Kalwina oraz dwa Macieja Flaciusa. Druk ten oprawiony został pergaminem makulaturowym, zapisanym tekstem wybitnego filozofa-scholastyka Gilberta z Poitiers; jest to fragment Commentarius ad Epistolas S. Pauli.
Autor artykułu porównuje tekst Komentarza z okładki pergaminowej z innymi rękopiśmiennymi egzemplarzami tego dzieła. Na marginesie rozważań o autorstwie traktatów przypisywanych Gilbertowi zwraca uwagę, że dotychczas w tych badaniach nie sięgnięto do analizy rytmiki. Zachowany na okładce tekst został napisany prozą rytmiczną, inną niż jeden z listów Gilberta.The Kórnik Library holds many early printed books from the former church of the Unity of the Brethren in Leszno, including an adligat, i.e. a volume combining three works: one by John Calvin and two by Matthias Flacius. This artefact was bound in recycled parchment inscribed with text by an eminent philosopher/scholastic logician, Gilbert de la Porrée; it is a fragment of Commentarius ad Epistolas S. Pauli.
The author of the article compares the text of the Commentary from the parchment cover to other hand-written copies of this work. On the sidelines of reflections concerning the authorship of the treatises attributed to Gilbert, he points out that the research in this scope has not yet taken into account an analysis of the rhythmics. The text which survived on the cover has the form of rhythmic prose – a different one than that in one of Gilbert’s letters
Od Uniwersytetu Piotra i Marii Curie do Uniwersytetu Sorbony. Radykalna reforma zarządzania francuskimi uniwersytetami
Using historical aspects and the international context as his point of departure, the author attempts to justify the need for radical reforms in higher education and the organisation of research in France. He also identifies day-to-day barriers, pointing to the need to strengthen the links between higher education and research and the need to develop networking between universities and industry. A professor and a long-time president of the Pierre and Marie Curie University, Gilbert Bereziat makes multiple references to the experience of his school in rationalising funding and managing the teaching and research functions.Wychodząc w swoich rozważaniach od akcentów historycznych i kontekstu międzynarodowego, autor próbuje uzasadnić potrzebę radykalnych reform szkolnictwa wyższego i organizacji badań naukowych we Francji. Wskazuje przy tym na bariery występujące w codziennej praktyce, na konieczność wzmocnienia powiązań między szkolnictwem wyższym i badaniami naukowymi, na potrzebę rozwoju kontaktów między uniwersytetami i przedsiębiorstwami. Jako profesor i wieloletni prezydent Uniwersytetu Piotra i Marii Curie (Paris VI), wielokrotnie odwołuje się do doświadczeń tej uczelni w racjonalizowaniu finansowania i zarządzania kształceniem studentów oraz badaniami
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