970 resultados para Hall, Emma Amelia, 1837-1884
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"Papers."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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On spine: Tennessee reports, v. 9-18.
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Publisher's advetisements on back cover.
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Title on half t.p.: Views of communion / by Hall, Fuller, Griffin and Ripley.
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Mode of access: Internet.
Mr. Fletcher's Address to his constituents, relative to the speech delivered by him in Faneuil Hall.
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This Address is dated: Dec. 23, 1837.
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Spine title: Alexander Campbell's works : catholicism.
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"The second and third volumes contain a large number of cases decided in United States Circuit and District courts"--Soule, Lawyer's ref. manual, 1884.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Introduction. - Sir Henry Bessemer. - Sir William Siemens. - Sir Joseph Whitworth. - Sir John Brown. - Mr. S.G. Thomas. - Mr. G.J. Snelus.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Dreaming of Amelia (2009) recounts a small group of HSC students’ final year of high school. Told from multiple perspectives, the novel focuses on shifting senses of self, maturity, and agency as the protagonists move from adolescence to adulthood. The central conflict of the novel results from two ‘bad kids from the bad crowd at bad Brookfield High’ (blurb) transferring to wealthy private school, Ashbury; Amelia and Riley are scholarship students who do not fit with Ashbury’s profile of 'normal student' as it is understood by the school’s students or staff, and their presence in the school community forces many people to reassess their understanding of individual value (or, at least, that’s what the novel claims happens). In the shifting of perceptions, allegiances, and relationships, each of the main characters achieves a stronger sense of their identity, and Dreaming of Amelia is thus firmly located within the tradition of Young Adult (YA) literature, with all its stereotypes of adolescence.
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"Qld Business Leaders Hall of Fame" is a research project that includes interviews with eminent Qlders that produced oral history interviews and digital stories about their life/company's achievements. This model was able to test and evaluate the use of oral history and digital storytelling for learning and community heritage purposes. Interviewees include; Sir John and Valmai Pidgeon, Joseph Saragossi, Robert Bryan, Clem Jones, Jim Kennedy, Sr Angela Mary, Castelmaine Perkins, Burns and Philp, Qantas, Don Argus & Steve Irwin.