Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Antoine Lavoisier" ¶ 5
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

She and edited
She edited and dubbed what elements were left and Tiefland premiered on February 11, 1954 in Stuttgart, however, it was denied entry into the Cannes Film Festival.
She co-starred often with Swedish actor and fellow Bergman collaborator, Erland Josephson, with whom she made the 1973 Swedish television drama, Scenes from a Marriage, which was also edited to feature-film length and distributed theatrically.
She edited all his books and articles, and was his agent, negotiating all his broadcasting and other contracts.
She also edited Temple Bar magazine.
She has edited these writings into the current narrative, the first-person narrative of a man living at the end of the 21st century.
She also edited The Rabbit Skin Cap, a tale of a Norfolk countryman's youth, first published in 1939 and reprinted by the Norfolk Library, 1974, 1975, 1976, which is the life story of George Baldry, a local inventor and poacher in the early C20.
She edited several collections of works in her speciality – the literature of the American South.
She also edited several of her husband's books.
She also edited the first Vertigo works of Bill Willingham and Ed Brubaker in Proposition Player and Scene of the Crime, and the higher-profile series Moonshadow, Girl, Seekers into the Mystery, The Minx and all issues of House of Secrets ( with Jennifer Lee from issue # 11 ).
She ( co -) edited the final 25 issues of The Dreaming between 1999 and 2001, initially as Shelly Roeberg, and latterly as Shelly Bond ( after marrying artist Philip Bond ), and most of the Sandman Presents ... miniseries and one-shots.
She edited several films starring Greta Garbo.
She documented her knowledge and experience of Vodoun in Divine Horsemen: The Living Gods of Haiti ( New York: Vanguard Press, 1953 ), edited by Joseph Campbell, which is considered a definitive source on the subject.
She wrote eight volumes of poetry, including the Pulitzer Prize-winning Cold Morning Sky, and she edited six anthologies of poetry.
She added Spanish to her languages, and in 1877 undertook the writing of a large number of the lives of early Spanish ecclesiastics for the Dictionary of Christian Biography edited by Dr William Smith and Dr. Henry Wace.
She contributed widely to periodicals, notably The Yellow Book, and also edited one herself.
She edited the Memoirs of the Early Italian Painters in 1845.
In the 1850s, Hannah R. Brown contributed to the journal, the “ Una ,” made lecture tours, and edited her personal journal, “ the Agitator .” In one of her articles, she stated, “ the woman is regarded as a sort of appendage to the goods and glories a man .” She advocated that true marriages could be formed if only women were allowed to choose freely.
She has also edited books of poetry for the Muses ' Company Press.
She has also reissued, with corrections, Roy K. Kiyooka's Transcanada Letters and edited his posthumous Pacific Rim Letters, with an afterword and a chronology of his life.
She started teaching writing and literature at Capilano College and also edited for The Capilano Review.
She is the author of several wordmusic collections, performance poetry recordings, and scripts ; has edited poetry anthologies and series ; and was the founding editor of the national feminist and art magazine Branching Out ( 1973 -).
She recently contributed a chapter to Sound Unbound: Sampling Digital Music and Culture ( The MIT Press, 2008 ) edited by Paul D. Miller a. k. a. DJ Spooky.
She has written and edited many books including Conversational Style: Analyzing Talk Among Friends, Talking Voices: Repetition, Dialogue and Imagery in Conversational Discourse, Gender and Discourse, and The Handbook of Discourse Analysis.
She edited the journal for the first two years of its existence from 1840 to 1842, though her promised annual salary of $ 200 was never paid.

She and published
She is also the author of articles that have been published in the New York Times and Newsweek.
She wrote the preface for On War and by 1834 had published several of his books.
She was asked to provide information for Defence Secretariat 19 about leading CND personnel but was instructed to include only information from published sources.
She was the wife of Sir Michael Redgrave and mother of Vanessa, Lynn and Corin, and published her autobiography, Life Among the Redgraves, in 1988.
She published under the pen name Ellis Bell.
She also published a cookbook entitled Serving Time: America's Most Wanted Recipes.
She was active up until her death and also published marine life stills and released the marine-based film Impressionen unter Wasser in 2002.
She spent her last years in a close personal and professional collaboration with anthropologist Rhoda Metraux, with whom she lived from 1955 until her death in 1978. Letters between the two published in 2006 with the permission of Mead's daughter clearly express a romantic relationship.
She writes that only three fragmentary manuscripts are known to have survived into the modern period, two 3rd-century fragments ( P. Rylands 463 and P. Oxyrhynchus 3525 ) published in 1938 and 1983, and a longer 5th-century Coptic translation ( Berolinensis Gnosticus 8052, 1 ) published in 1955.
She also joined the Literary Club and had two stories published in the yearbook: Little Sister and Sergeant Terry.
She also updated her biography on her dad and published Frank Sinatra: An American Legend.
Stuart Dischell published a well-received pantoum, " She Put on Her Lipstick in the Dark ," in the December, 2007 issue of The Atlantic.
One further work of Germain's on elasticity was published posthumously in 1831: her “ Memoir sur la courbure des surfaces .” She used the mean curvature in her research ( see Honors in Number Theory ).
" And American University's Gray records, “ She also published in Annales de chimie et de physique an examination of principles which led to the discovery of the laws of equilibrium and movement of elastic solids.
She had already published extensively, having won various awards, and had come especially to meet Hughes and his fellow poet Lucas Myers.
She ascribed it to her grandmother Adriana Porter, and claimed that the earlier published text was distorted from " its original form ".
She also wrote a children's book, I, Lorelei, which was published by HarperCollins in February 2009.
She published several books.
She translated and published the first English volume of his collected writings.
She published
She placed fourth behind Mia Farrow, Judy Geeson and Katharine Houghton for a " Golden Laurel " award as the year's " Most Promising Newcomer " with the results published in the Motion Picture Exhibitor magazine.
She assumed the role of Elizabeth's guardian following the King's death ; and another book, The Lamentations of a Sinner, was published.
She did nearly a year at the University of Minnesota's Graduate School of Psychology, where she published two articles, and worked in the psychology department's animal research laboratory, before dropping out and moving to attend Berkeley for a few courses, when she began writing the SCUM Manifesto.

0.865 seconds.