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Carroll and published
It was at the Watkinson library that Whorf became friends with the young boy, John B. Carroll, who later went on to study psychology under B. F. Skinner, and who in 1956 edited and published a selection of Whorf's essays as Language, Thought and Reality.
In his posthumously published 1981 book The Anglo-American Establishment, Georgetown University history professor Carroll Quigley explained that the Balfour Declaration was actually drafted by Lord Alfred Milner.
In 1856, Carroll published the following poem anonymously under the name Upon the Lonely Moor.
His memoir, Just One More Thing ( ISBN 978-0786717958 ) was published by Carroll & Graf on August 23, 2006.
The Skeptic's Dictionary is a collection of cross-referenced skeptical essays by Robert Todd Carroll, published on his website skepdic. com and in a printed book.
Crisp had published three short books by the time he came to write the The Naked Civil Servant at the urging of agent Donald Carroll.
* Carroll County News is published twice weekly.
In 1992, members of the Lewis Carroll Society attributed it to a gargoyle found on a pillar in St. Nicolas Church, Cranleigh, where Carroll used to travel frequently when he lived in Guildford ( though this is doubtful as he moved to Guildford some three years after Alice's Adventures in Wonderland had been published ) and a carving in a church in the village of Croft-on-Tees, in the north east of England, where his father had been rector.
Beginning in August 2006, the Monitor published an account of Carroll's kidnapping and subsequent release, with first-person reporting from Carroll and others involved.
Notable published authors on chaos magic include John Balance, Peter J. Carroll, Jan Fries, Jaq D. Hawkins, Robert Anton Wilson, Phil Hine, Alan Moore, Grant Morrison, Jozef Karika, Ian Read, Ray Sherwin, Lionel Snell and Ralph Tegtmeier.
In the 2010 graphic novel Calamity Jack, sequel to Rapunzel's Revenge ( published in 2006 ), the giant Blunderboar has a pet Bandersnatch named Lewis, presumably after Lewis Carroll.
When the editor Paul Carroll published BIG TABLE Magazine ( Issue No. 1, Spring 1959 ) alongside former Chicago Review editor Irving Rosenthal, he was found guilty of sending obscene material through the U. S. mail for including " Ten Episodes from Naked Lunch ," a piece of writing the Judicial Officer for the United States Postal Service deemed " undisciplined prose, far more akin to the early work of experimental adolescents than to anything of literary merit " and initially judged it as non-mailable under the provisions of.
While still in high school, Carroll published his first collection of poems, Organic Trains.
In 1978, Carroll published The Basketball Diaries, an autobiographical book concerning his life as a teenager in New York City's hard drug culture.
The number of building " 257 " is a metonym for the entire site in 2004 when Michael Carroll, an attorney, published Lab 257: The Disturbing Story of the Government's Secret Plum Island Germ Laboratory.
Although better known for his children's books and illustrations for Mark Twain and Lewis Carroll, he published two books of invertible illustrations, in which the picture turns into a different image entirely when turned upside down.
The magazine also published original science fiction and fantasy by William S. Burroughs, Joyce Carol Oates, Jonathan Carroll, T. Coraghessan Boyle, and other mainstream writers.
Lewis Carroll published The Alphabet-Cipher in 1868, possibly in a children's magazine.
While Carroll calls this cipher " unbreakable ", Kasiski had published a volume describing how to break such ciphers from five years earlier, and Charles Babbage had secretly found ways to break polyalphabetic ciphers during the Crimean War.
Euclid and his Modern Rivals is a mathematical book published in 1879 by the English mathematician Charles Lutwidge Dodgson ( 1832 – 1898 ), better known as Lewis Carroll.
On March 15, 2012, editor Roger Carroll published a column on the paper's front page in which he took the sports editor of a competing weekly to task for plagiarizing one of his stories.
They were featured in a 1967 book The Liverpool Scene edited by Edward Lucie-Smith, with a blurb by Ginsberg and published by Donald Carroll.
" The Walrus and the Carpenter " is a narrative poem by Lewis Carroll that appeared in his book Through the Looking-Glass, published in December 1871.

Carroll and Through
Haddocks ' Eyes is a poem by Lewis Carroll from Through the Looking-Glass.
Tenniel is most noted for two major accomplishments: he was the principal political cartoonist for England ’ s Punch magazine for over 50 years, and he was the artist who illustrated Lewis Carroll ’ s Alice ’ s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass.
To establish his place within the Alice canon, Tenniel drew ninety-two drawings for Lewis Carroll ’ s Alice ’ s Adventures in Wonderland ( London: Macmillan, 1865 ) and Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There ( London: Macmillan, 1871 ).
" Jabberwocky " is a nonsense verse poem written by Lewis Carroll in his 1871 novel Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There, a sequel to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
A decade before the publication of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and the sequel Through the Looking Glass, Carroll wrote the first stanza to what would become " Jabberwocky " while in Croft on Tees, close to nearby Darlington, where he lived as a child,
Paul Schmidt adapted the text from the works of Lewis Carroll ( Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass, in particular ), with songs by Waits and Kathleen Brennan presented as intersections with the text rather than as expansions of the story, as would be the case in conventional musical theater.
Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There ( 1871 ) is a work of literature by Lewis Carroll ( Charles Lutwidge Dodgson ).
* Lewis Carroll publishes Through the Looking-Glass.
It also contains the " suppressed " chapter " The Wasp in a Wig ", which Carroll omitted from the text of Through the Looking-Glass on Tenniel's recommendation.
One of Jung's favourite quotes on synchronicity was from Through the Looking-Glass by Lewis Carroll, in which the White Queen says to Alice: " It's a poor sort of memory that only works backwards ".
* Lewis Carroll: Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Through the Looking-glass
* Through the Looking-Glass, written by Lewis Carroll, read by Bernard Cribbins
The March Hare later appears at the trial for the Knave of Hearts, and for a final time as " Haigha " ( which Carroll tells us is pronounced to rhyme with " mayor "), the personal messenger to the White King in Through the Looking-Glass.
Author Lewis Carroll was inspired to write ' Alice's Adventures in Wonderland ' and ' Through the Looking-Glass ' by local residents he met when staying in Whitburn.
Through his early teenage years, Carroll lived with his grandparents to help care for an ailing grandfather.
The song was parodied by Lewis Carroll in Through the Looking-Glass and by Rudyard Kipling in The Jungle Book.
Through connections in St. Paul's Green Lantern Tavern, Nelson recruited Homer Van Meter, Tommy Carroll, and Eddie Green.
Jabberwocky, a poem ( of nonsense verse ) found in Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There by Lewis Carroll ( 1871 ), is a nonsense poem written in the English language.
::—" Haddocks ' Eyes ", Through the Looking-Glass, Lewis Carroll
" Anglo-Saxon attitudes " is a phrase spoofed by Lewis Carroll in Through the Looking-Glass ( 1871 ):
This module, like its companion Dungeonland, is a close adaptation of a work of fiction by Lewis Carroll, in this case Through the Looking-Glass.
* The Complete Alice ( 1986 ) ( Through the Looking-Glass and The Hunting of the Snark, written by Lewis Carroll )
Through a friend of his ex-wife, O ' Brien got a gig writing Episode 37 of the animated series Rugrats, “ Toys in the Attic ”, which premiered in 1992 under his only known pseudonym, Carroll Mine.
Lewis CarrollLewis Carroll ( pen name of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson ) ( 27 January 1832 – 14 January 1898 ) was the author of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass.

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