62,642 research outputs found

    Jeff Kennett [picture] /

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    Condition: good.; File no: 204/16/23; Inscriptions: signed "O'Neill"-- l. r. "Jeff Kennett"-- lower c.; Part of: Ward O'Neill collection.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-an21289637. Cartoon drawing depicting Jeff Kennett standing, smoking and watching a television screen in a TAB

    Ward, Robert -- 1939-65 -- Correspondence, Individual -- letter, 1939-12-06

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    Letter from Ward, R. to Sabin, Albert B. dated 1939-12-06.Sabin Collection Fair Use Policy</a

    Letter from William Ward Watkin to Mr. R. Foard Townsend, May 29, 1918

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    Letter from William Ward Watkin to Mr. R. Foard Townsend regarding Mr. Townsend's illness with an invitation to attend commencement at Rice

    To William P. Preston from R. Ward, 1835

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    Three letters to William P. Preston of Baltimore, Maryland, from R. Ward of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, dated June 24, November 4, and November 14, 1835

    Author Profile: Thomas Ward

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    "I can never resist fresh sushi with a cup of green tea. My greatest achievement has been our three wonderful kids. …" This and more about Thomas Ward can be found on page 4722

    Letter from Stuart R. Ward, June 15, 1956

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    Letter to Fayez Sayegh from Stuart R. Ward, Executive Secretary of the Commonwealth Club of California, June 15, 1956, thanking him for his lecture at the club

    Canaday, President of Friends of the Library

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    14 Lines FROM: Public Information Office The University of Toledo Toledo, Ohio 43606 Marty Clark (419) 537-2675 April 8, 1975 FOR RELEASE UPON RECEIPT Ward M. Canaday (4455 Brookside Rd.) has been re-e1ected presIdent of The '-"--~-'''~'''~--'---­Friends of The University of Toledo Libraries, according to Lucille B. Emch, executive secretary of the organization and associate director for rare books, special collections and archives of the University Libraries. Mr. Canaday's re-election came at a meeting of the executive committee of the Friends held in the University's William S. Carlson Library on Thursday, March 27. Mr. Canaday has served in this capacity since 1937. He also is a former member (1953-1967) of The University of Toledo's municipal Board of Directors. Also re-e1ected at the meeting were Mrs. Harry M. Parke, vice president; Richard B. Swartzbaugh, secretary; and Theodore R. Vogt, treasurer. Re-e1ected members of the executive committee were Mrs. Louise Bruner, Mrs. JoAnn Cousino, Mrs. Leo V. Cunningham, Mrs. Richard E. Gillham. Ernest R-Koppel, Paul E. Rieger. Jack W. Shaffer and Alan Hogan, acting director of the University -30­

    2010-2011 Jesmyn Ward

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    Jesmyn Ward received her MFA from the University of Michigan and is currently an associate professor of creative writing at Tulane University. She is the author of the novels Where the Lines Bleeds and Salvage the Bones, which won the 2011 National Book Award. She is also the editor of the anthology The Fire This Time and the author of the memoir Men We Reaped, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. In 2016, the American Academy of Arts and Letters selected Ward for the Strauss Living Award. (Photo credit: Tony Cook)https://egrove.olemiss.edu/grisham_res/1009/thumbnail.jp

    Henry Ward Beecher portrait

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    Rev. Henry Ward Beecher (1813-1887) studied at Lane Theological Seminary in Cincinnati, Ohio, and gained a reputation for his oratorical skills. In his sermons, he vehemently attacked drinking and slavery and called for more women's rights. He even convinced his congregations to equip a regiment of soldiers for the American Civil War, along with sending guns to anti-slavery factions during "Bleeding Kansas." His sister, Harriet Beecher Stowe, was the author of Uncle Tom's Cabin

    Tintásüveg: Egy biblioterápiai gyűjtemény margójára

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    This article reports on a two-year project, Reading for Recovery(R4R), made possible by the Carnegie-Whitney grant from the American Library Association. The goal was to build a tool with the purpose of facilitating library resources for creative and informal bibliotherapy geared toward people with substance use/abuse problems. In addition to first introducing the results of their work in an article to Hungarian audiences vested tremendously in bibliotherapy, the author wishes to share the difficulties project staff members had to face. Besides issues caused by a major change at the host institution (and out of project staff's control), staff members also had to develop individual strategies to handle the hardship caused by the topic itself. The author, principal investigator of R4R, for example, ended up writing short stories from the material they handled. One example is also included, along with questions to help working with the text individually or in a group setting, such as a book club, a model R4R promotes.Peer reviewedIn Hungarian
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