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book and Collections
The original manuscript of Debs ' book Walls and Bars, with handwritten amendments, presumably by Debs, resides in the Thomas J. Morgan Papers in the Special Collections department of the University of Chicago Library.
* Wyndham Lewis Collection ( archival ) and ( book collection ) at Clara Thomas Archives & Special Collections at York University
A note book belonging to Campbell is housed at the University of Birmingham Special Collections Department.
The book publishing arm of the Review, established in 1999, is New York Review Books, which has three imprints, " NYRB Classics ", " NYRB Collections " and " NYR Children's Collection ".
In 2006 the book won an Award for Excellence in Historical Recorded Sound Research from the Association for Recorded Sound Collections.
Collections of Schlock Mercenary strips are published in book form by " The Tayler Corporation ", i. e. they are self-published.
The Regenstein Library is also the location of the Special Collections Research Center, which houses rare book collections, manuscripts, and university archives.
Also found on the third floor are the Special Collections: the Nelle M. Krise Rare Book Room that features a collection of books tracing the history of book making, the college archives, and the college museum.
Collections of articles published as a book are often titled Treasure Trove, as in A Treasure Trove of Science.
* " The Kite Needs the String: the book illustration of David Gentleman ", Manchester Metropolitan University Special Collections, 2010-2011.
Its first published book was Robert F. Harper's Assyrian and Babylonian Letters Belonging to the Kouyunjik Collections of the British Museum.
The Special Collections Library is especially noted for its collections of early manuscripts, children ’ s literature, social protest and radical literature, transportation history, and book arts.
) His descendants collected his works and compiled them into a book titled Lord Shi Zhongzheng's Collections ( 史忠正公集 ).

book and for
Steele apparently professed his sentiments in this book too openly and honestly for his own good, since the government was soon to use it as evidence against him in his trial before the House.
If, as Reid says, `` nearly all his poetry was produced when he was not taking opium '', there may be some reason to doubt that he was under its influence in the period from 1896 to 1900 when he was writing the poems to Katie King and making plans for another book of verse.
In his book Civilization And Ethics Albert Schweitzer faces the moral problems which arise when moral law is recognized in business life, for example.
Later, rising ninety, he was beset by publishers for the story of his life and miracles, as he put it, but, calling himself the Needy Knife-grinder, he had spent his time writing short articles and long letters and could not get even a small popular book done.
To the newspapers he talked about his unquiet life, about his wish to be a newspaperman once more, about the prevalence of American slang in British speech, about the loquacity of the English and the impossibility of finding quiet in a railway carriage, about his plans to wander for two years `` unless stopped and made to write another book ''.
Even so apparently impartial a critic as W. H. Frohock has taken for granted that the book was originally intended as a piece of Loyalist propaganda ; ;
These lines never cease to haunt the book amidst all the exaltations of combat, and to make an appeal for a larger and more elemental human community than one based on the brutal necessities of war.
In a recent book called `` World Peace Through World Law '', two distinguished lawyers, Grenville Clark and Louis Sohn, call for just such an overhaul of the U.N., basing their case on the world-wide fear of a nuclear holocaust.
Patchen does read some of his earlier works to music, but he has written an entire book of short poems which seem to be especially suited for reading with jazz.
In his recent book, Hurray For Anything ( 1957 ), one of the most important short poems -- and it is the title poem for one of the long jazz arrangements -- is written for recital with jazz.
He knew all about it and had put it down in journal form in The War In A Black Shirt, a wonderful book not, for some strange reason, published in the U.S..
His new book, entitled `` Slums And Suburbs '', calls for fast and drastic action to avert disaster.
The 1960 tax book for East Greenwich indicates a valuation for this property in excess of two million dollars.
It must have been with some pleasure and relief that on September 12, 1848, Joseph Brown made the momentous entry in his job book, in his characteristically cryptic style, `` Lucian Sharpe came to work for me this day as an apprentice ''.
The purpose set forth at the beginning of this book was first to introduce the reader to a general background knowledge of the various types and capabilities of the forecasting methods already in use, so that he might then be in a position to evaluate for himself the validity of the rather astonishing empirical correlation that is to follow, and to appraise the forecast that its interpretation suggests for the future of farm prices over the years immediately ahead.
And the evidence that he does, indeed, stand there derives quite simply from the vigorous interest with which rather casual readers have responded to that book for the past century or so.
In one now-historic first interview, for example, the transcript ( reproduced from the book, The First Five Minutes ) goes like this: The therapist's level tone is bland and neutral -- he has, for example, avoided stressing `` you '', which would imply disapproval ; ;
I have often searched for a graphic way of impressing our superiority on those Americans who have doubts, and I think Mr. Jameson Campaigne has done it well in his new book American Might And Soviet Myth.
Mrs. Child, who had once apologized for sending editor Palfrey a book on slavery, now confided that she had helped one of Henry Palfrey's slaves escape to Canada some years before, but asked him not to advertise the fact in Louisiana.
He is by no means the country boy he might have been in the last century, down from the hills with bear grease on his hair and a zeal for book learning in his heart.
Mr. Black's life was an open book, so to speak, from his birth in Jackson, Mississippi, through his basketball-playing days at L.S.U. and his attainment of a B.A. degree, which had presumably prepared him for his career as district sales manager for Peerless Business Machines.

book and Ancestry
Genealogist Douglas Richardson, in his book " Plantagenet Ancestry, A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families ", has detailed the ancient British ancestry of Penelope ( Pelham ) Winslow ’ s parents, Herbert Pelham, Esq.
Dorothy Scarborough's 1937 book A Song Catcher In Southern Mountains: American Folk Songs of British Ancestry includes a lullaby called " Gypsy Davy ", which Scarborough collected from two Virginia women who had learned the song from their respective grandmothers who in turn had learned it in Ireland.
The location of Yonatan ben Uzziel's burial place is illustrated in a drawing in 1537 from the book " Ancestry of fathers and prophets " ( Hebrew: יחוס אבות ונביאים ).

book and Colonel
" The official name is Philotic Parallax Instantaneous Communicator ," explains Colonel Graff in Ender's Game, " but somebody dredged the name ansible out of an old book somewhere.
The book Kill or Get Killed, written by Colonel Rex Applegate, was based on the defendu taught by Sykes and Fairbairn.
* Brendan Whiting's book Victims of Tyranny, gives an account of the lives of the Irish rebels, the Fitzgerald convict brothers who were sent to help open up the north of Van Diemen's Land in 1805, under the leadership of the explorer Colonel William Paterson.
Cover of the original 1876 EditionThe first edition of the book, whose full title was Pocket Manual of Rules of Order for Deliberative Assemblies, was published in February 1876 by then U. S. Army Colonel Henry Martyn Robert ( 1837 – 1923 ) with the short title Robert's Rules of Order placed on its cover.
The next citations are not found until 1955, when the May – June issue of Aviation Mechanics Bulletin included the line " Murphy's Law: If an aircraft part can be installed incorrectly, someone will install it that way ," and Lloyd Mallan's book, Men, Rockets and Space Rats, referred to: " Colonel Stapp's favorite takeoff on sober scientific laws — Murphy's Law, Stapp calls it —' Everything that can possibly go wrong will go wrong '.
* The lyrics were sung in the 1972 film adaptation of the John Knowles novel A Separate Peace ( although they are not in the book, and the tune to which they are sung in the film is not the " Colonel Bogey March ").
Initially intended as a relaunch of the Bond book series following the death in 1964 of the character's creator, Ian Fleming, Colonel Sun instead ends up being the final book of the series ( discounting a " biography " of Bond and a pair of film script adaptations ) until John Gardner revives the literary James Bond in 1981.
The book features the recurring characters of Hercule Poirot, Colonel Race, Superintendent Battle and the bumbling crime writer Ariadne Oliver, making her first appearance in a Poirot novel ( she previously had a role in the Parker Pyne short story The Case of the Discontented Soldier ).
He received a Pulitzer Prize and a National Book Award for his 1989 book A Bright Shining Lie, about the life of Lieutenant Colonel John Paul Vann and the United States involvement in the Vietnam War.
In the first post-Fleming book, Colonel Sun, M is kidnapped from Quarterdeck, his home, and Bond goes to great lengths to rescue him.
Yet, when his volume of verse, Stolen Moments, was published in Sydney in 1842, the list of subscribers included many of the most distinguished people in the colony ( including Colonel Gibbes, to whom the poetry book was dedicated ).
David C. Hanrahan, the author of the book Colonel Blood: The Man who Stole the Crown Jewels, was historical consultant.
The book appears in the film Apocalypse Now, among those kept by the character, Colonel Walter E. Kurtz, played by Marlon Brando, along with The Golden Bough.
Lieutenant Colonel Dave Grossman, in his book On Killing, suggests that military training artificially creates depersonalization in soldiers, suppressing empathy and making it easier for them to kill other human beings.
At Tenterden Town station can be found the Colonel Stephens Railway Museum, along with a book and gift shop-selling Thomas the Tank Engine gifts, the Carriage and Wagon Department and a cafe that was once the Maidstone & District Motor Services Ltd bus station building from Maidstone, Kent.
Watching Jennings ' UFO special prompted Hellyer to finally read U. S. Army Colonel Philip J. Corso's book The Day After Roswell, about the Roswell UFO Incident, which had been sitting on his shelf for some time.
The comic book hero Colonel Clifton, who is retired from the RAF, is an example of this — his proper rank would be that of Group Captain.
In Alexander ( 1928 ) the author refers to Colonel T. Thornton visiting the area about 1786, and his book Sporting Tour published in 1804 in which he refers to the range as the Cairngorms-continuing:
Both Alexander ( 1928 ) and Watson ( 1975 ) appear to suggest that Colonel Thornton's book was the first time the term Cairngorms was used in print to refer to whole group.
Colonel Ardant du Picq, a French infantry officer who was killed in the Franco-Prussian War, prepared drafts based on his observations of military history which became the book Battle Studies.
In his book God Is My Co-Pilot, Colonel Robert Lee Scott, Jr., USAAF, commander of the 23d Fighter Group, China Air Task Force, described in detail an aerial raid he led on the Japanese shipping anchored in Hong Kong harbour, conducted 25 October 1942, and the lone attack he personally made in his Curtiss P-40K Warhawk ( nicknamed Old Exterminator ) upon the famous Peninsula Hotel:
President Roosevelt's interpreter was U. S. Marine Corps Colonel Bill Eddy who recorded the men's conversation in his book FDR Meets Ibn Saud.
This facet may be based on the activities of Mickey Marcus, although Marcus himself ( under his real-life alias of " Colonel Stone ") makes a brief appearance in the book.
Cutler is referenced by Colonel Philip J. Corso, in his book The Day After Roswell, which claims Cutler helped disseminate technology harvested from the 1947 Roswell UFO crash.

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