35,509 research outputs found

    Sinclair Lewis Society Newsletter, Vol 33, No. 1

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    Sinclair Lewis Conference to be Held in Sauk Centre in July 2025 Sinclair Lewis and the American Mind, by Greg Davis What Were They Reading Then?: Pioneer Realism: A Lantern in Her Hand by Bess Streeter Aldrich by Ted G. Fleener All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days: An American Literature Scholar in Germany During World War II Sinclair Lewis: Chess\u27s Red Master, by Shaun F. Richards Breaking into Print What Were They Reading Then?: How to Get to the Top of the Heap: What Makes Sammy Run? by Budd Schulberg by Sally E. Parry Mantrap: The Movehttps://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/slsn/1094/thumbnail.jp

    Miss Viola Sinclair, Alton F. Skipper, and G. W. Bluethman

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    Glass doors swing open automatically when the shopper steps on the magic mat at the new Safeway Store. The trio, left to right, show how it is done: Miss Viola Sinclair, with arms laden with food; Alton F. Skipper, store manager, and G. W. Bluethman, district manager, who is entering the store through an adjoining door. Published in Fort Worth Star-Telegram morning edition July 8, 1951.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/13559/thumbnail.jp

    Compte rendu de Ruiz Fabri (H.), Sinclair (G. F.), Rosen (A.) (dir.) Revisiting Van Gend en Loos

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    Ruiz Fabri (H.), Sinclair (G. F.), Rosen (A.) (dir.). – Revisiting Van Gend en Loos., Paris : Société de législation comparée, 2014. – 312 p. – ISBN : 9782365170383

    Senator Wallace F. Bennett

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    Photograph of Senator Wallace F. Bennett of Utah (L)shaking hands and posing for photo with two men (G. Sinclair Armstrong, Chairman, Security and Exchange Commission and Charles T. Kapplen, Attorney

    Erratum to: Effect of moderate red wine intake on cardiac prognosis after recent acute myocardial infarction of subjects with Type 2 diabetes mellitus (Diabetic Medicine, (2006), 23, 9, (974-981), 10.1111/j.1464-5491.2006.01886.x)

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    In an article by Marfella et al, the author name C. Saron is incorrect and should be listed as C. Sardu. Therefore the correct author list is: R. Marfella, F. Cacciapuoti, M. Siniscalchi, F. C. Sasso, F. Marchese, F. Cinone, E. Musacchio, M. A. Marfella, L. Ruggiero, G. Chiorazzo, D. Liberti, G. Chiorazzo, G. F. Nicoletti, C. Sardu, F. D'Andrea, C. Ammendola, M. Verza and L. Coppola.In an article by Marfella et al, the author name C. Saron is incorrect and should be listed as C. Sardu. Therefore the correct author list is: R. Marfella, F. Cacciapuoti, M. Siniscalchi, F. C. Sasso, F. Marchese, F. Cinone, E. Musacchio, M. A. Marfella, L. Ruggiero, G. Chiorazzo, D. Liberti, G. Chiorazzo, G. F. Nicoletti, C. Sardu, F. D'Andrea, C. Ammendola, M. Verza and L. Coppola

    Letter re: invitation

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    Letter from Harry Sinclair, founder of Sinclair Oil, to Amon Carter regarding an invitation to an unveiling of a statue of Will Rogers

    Letter re: Will Rogers visit

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    Letter from H.F. Sinclair, founder of Sinclair Oil, to Amon Carter regarding the enjoyable dinner they attended in Fort Worth, Texas and Sinclair's travel plan

    'The ceasing from the sorrow of divided life: may Sinclair’s women, texts and contexts (1910-1923)

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    This thesis explores May Sinclair's female protagonists in her Modernist texts, 1910-1923. 1 look at how Sinclair's work bears witness to her scene of writing and offer an analysis that places Sinclair, most centrally, in a dialogue with contemporary literary, psychoanalytical, and cultural influences.1 draw upon a wealth of unpublished material, medical archives and journals, newspapers, propaganda, novels of fellow female writers, and other artefacts of the day. By appraising these works together, the critical distinction between Modernism and the topical issues of early twentieth century Britain is seen to dissolve, and Sinclair’s writing emerges as an important oeuvre for reading the life of the modem woman. Women’s fiction of the period typically searches for autonomy and agency. However, as 1 show, the desire for radical social change is problematic and often in conflict with the prescribed code of an idealised, fixed female identity. Through an exploration and development of her own concept of sublimation, Sinclair confronts these complex ideological structures in her engagement with the position of women in her fiction. She places her women in a variety of situations—from the tightly knit, domestic home to the unfettered, open terrain of wild landscapes—and analyses the forces that hold women back or set them free. In my study of Sinclair's Modernist texts, 1 argue that Sinclair urges for psychic freedom for women from their cramped, repressive conditions; this is achieved through sublimation

    Elaboration on Kwapien's theorem: Representing bounded mean zero functions f as coboundary f = g ◦ T − g

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    In [8] Kwapien proved that every mean zero function f ∈ L∞[0, 1] we can write as f = g ◦ T − g for some g ∈ L∞[0, 1] and some measure preserving transformation T of [0, 1]. However, as was discovered in [4] there is a gap in the proof for the case that f is not continuous. The aim of this bachelor thesis is filling in that gap in the proof. We first extend Kwapien’s proof for continuous functions to certain other measure spaces. Thereafter, we use the method of proof suggested by Kwapien, to proof the theorem for mean zero function f ∈ L∞[0, 1] for which λ(f−1({x})) = 0 for all x ∈ R. Using this result we then proof that every mean zero function f ∈ L∞[0, 1] can be written as a sum f =(g1 ◦ T1 − g1) + (g2 ◦ T2 − g2) where g1, g2 ∈ L∞[0, 1] and where T1, T2 are measure preserving transformations of [0, 1]. We finish this thesis with an application of Kwapien’s theorem in the study to singular traces Applied Mathematic

    SINCLAIR LEWIS

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    Sinclair Lewis, ca. 1930s Sinclair Lewis\u27s novel Arrowsmith, published in 1925, introduced a news kind of hero to the American public - the research scientist. Lewis wrote the book with the close consultation of Paul de Kruif, who had worked in Simon Flexner\u27s laboratory at The Rockefeller Institute for two years beginning in 1920. For Arrowsmith, de Kruif provided Lewis with character sketches based on scientists he knew. Martin Arrowsmith\u27s mentor Max Gottlieb was a a composite of Rockefeller\u27s Jacques Loeb and F. G. Novy. Loeb\u27s philosophy, and his habit of lecturing to his collegues, is evident in Gottlieb\u27s paeans to physical chemistry. Gottlieb tells Arrowsmith: Physical chemistry is power, it is exactness, it is life.https://digitalcommons.rockefeller.edu/chemistry-of-life/1014/thumbnail.jp
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