970 resultados para Byron, George Gordon Byron, Baron, 1788-1824
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Back Row: Harold W. Bailey, Howard Brown, William F. McDonald, Robert C. Goldsmith, Edward L. Warner, Henry Dinkelspiel,
Third Row: head coach Matt Mann, Richard C. Mertz, Charles F. McCaffree, Garnet W. Ault, J.J. Thompson, O. Bruce. Goldsmith, Rawson F. Hosmer, assistant coach John W. MacMahon
Second Row:, Thomas Y. Watson, George E. Hubbell, Robert P. Walker, captain Richard S. Spindle, J.B. Allan Seager, Frank W. Walaitis, Ernest C. Reif
Front Row: Byron O. Hughes, Frederick J. Grimshaw, Harold E. Nimz
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Top Row (left to right): ? Nelson*, Aram Nahabedian*, Robert Hicks, George Strong, Bradshaw McKee, James Costa, John Olson, George Sipp, Gene Kiddon, Don O'Connell, Doug Wicks.
Third Row: Barry Breakey, Ross Marshall, Byron Parshall, George Bradley, Herbert Hurell, Leon Hinz, Eugene Freed, James Smith, William Clark, Meryl Englander, Edwin Morey, Edward Rosatti.
Second: Dave Bradbury, James Sakai, Russell Buster, Robert Rodgers, assistant coach George Allen, captain, Charlie Ketterer, head coach Cliff Keen, Dick Mandeville*,? Singer*, Frank Whitehouse,
Bottom Row: John Wilcox*, Larry Shaw, ? Schnider*,? Budick*, Stanley Emerling*
*Did not earn 150 pound letter
Letterwinners not pictured: John Allred
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Binding deteriorated. Foxing. Water. Untrimmed.
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Added title-pages, engraved (with vignette) : The plays of William Shakspeare, illustrated with engravings by George B. Ellis, from the designs of R. Smirk, R. A.
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Richard Arkwright.--Edmund Burke.--Robert Burns.--Lord Byron.--George Canning.--Earl of Chatham.--Dr. Adam Clarke.--Lord Clive.--Captain Cook.--William Cowper.--Rev. George Crabbe.--Sir Humphrey Davy.--Lord Eldon.--Lord Erskine.--Charles James Fox.--Benjamin Franklin.--Oliver Goldsmith.--Henry Grattan.--Earl Grey.--Warren Hastings.--Bishop Heber.--John Howard.--Dr. Jenner.--Sir William Jones.--Sir James Mackintosh.--Rev. Henry Martyn, B.D.--Sir John Moore, K.B.--Lord Nelson.--William Pitt.--Sir Samuel Romilly.--Sir Walter Scott.--Richard Brinsley Sheridan.--John Smeaton.--James Watt.--Marquis of Wellesley.--William Wilberforce.--Sir David Wilkie.--Duke of Wellington.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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v. 1. On the principles and character of American institutions, and the duties of American citizens, 1856-1891.--v. 2. Addresses and reports on the reform of the civil service of the United States.--v. 3. Historical and memorial addresses.
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Publisher's advertisements follow text.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Vol. 4, reprinted from the Times and Nineteenth century, has imprint: New York, The Macmillan company, 1908.
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How should the 'long' eighteenth century be defined? January 1, 1700 and December 31, 1799 are quite arbitrary dates. Why should they be chosen to segment our history rather than more significant periods of time, periods which have a coherent content, or are marked, perhaps, by the working out of a theme? Students of English literature sometimes take the long eighteenth century to extend from John Milton (Paradise Lost, 1667) to the passing of the first generation of Romantics (Keats (d. 1821), Shelley (d. 1822), Byron (d. 1824), Coleridge (d. 1834)). Students of British political history often take it to start with the accession of Charles II (the Restoration) in 1660 or, alternatively, the so-called Glorious Revolution of 1688 and to end with the great Reform Act of 1832. Others might choose different book ends. In the history of science and philosophy the terminus a quo is sometimes taken as the publication of Descartes' scientific philosophy or, in more Anglophone zones, the 1687 publication of Newton's Principia with its vision of a 'clockwork universe'. 'Nature and Nature's laws' as Alexander Pope enthused, 'lay hid in Night: God said, Let Newton be! and all was light!'.
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Análisis de la tragedia legendaria en tres actos publicada en 1962 por el dramaturgo francés Jean Geschwin, en la que, a partir de una original recreación del mito de Progne y Filomela, se expresa la preocupación y el desasosiego provocados por las dos décadas de sangrientos conflictos bélicos casi ininterrumpidos que estaban desgarrando a Francia.
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Mode of access: Internet.