979 resultados para Reid, Elizabeth Anne


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Two letters regarding commissions executed by Tudor on her behalf and on behalf of Elizabeth Degen.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Translation of : Memoirs of the life of Miss Caroline E. Smelt.

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Margaret, daughter of James I. of Scotland, dauphine of France, by H. E. Butler.--Elizabeth of Bohemia, daughter of James I. and VI., by R. H. Hodgkin.--Mary of Orange, daughter of Charles I. and mother of William III., by A. Cecil.--Henrietta of Orleans, daughter of Charles I., by J. S. C. Bridge.--Sophia of Hanover, grand-daughter of James I. and VI., and mother of George I., by the editor.

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Top Row: Mary Jo Ambrozy, Carolyn, Ashley, Gail Marie Barbaza, Jeanne Barr, Susan Bauer, Lynn Eva Becker, Christine Bibilikow, Kathy Biehl, Lisa Bloomfield, Bail M. Borowiak, Susan, M. Browning, Diane Louise Burgoon, Camille Carlson, Cindy marie Chaltry, Kathleen Anne Clegg, Ann cline

Row 2: Wendy Cogan, Annette Robin Cole, Barbara Compton, Elizabeth Connors, Norma K. Marshall, Michele Betts, Donna Jean Holihan, Pamela S. Harden, Kathleen McLaughlin, Mary M. Walker, Mary Lohr, Julia Cooney, Carol Crapo, Deborah D. Davis, Mary Dreisig

Row 3: Athena Eary, Eleanor Eckrich, Patti M. Eidenberger, Catherine Elmlinger, Annette Englund, Cynthis Fellencer, Karen Fischer, Carolyn B. Forbes, Nancy Ellen Freedman, Susan P. George, Annette Gervaix, Beverly Glogowski

Row 4: Jayne Goodrich, June A. R. Grimm, Marie Guerrini, Douglas Leon Hankins, Yvonne M. Harwoor, Linda Hecimovich, Catherine M. Herbel, Kelly Hocker, Brenda Lee Horness, Theresa A. Hosey, Karin E. Hunt, Beth Jackson

Row 5: Karen Sue Jaffe, Roland Jemerson, Tamera Johnson, Susan Kaczmarek, Laura S. Keverian, Julie A. Kimbrough, Eva Marie Kline, Nancy L. Kuehn, Margaret J. Labadie, Lori K. Lane, Elizabeth Lang, Linda Lawton, Judy Linden, Peggy Little, Sharon Lois Longe, Claire Lonstein

Row 6: Deloris Macon, Karen Marie Macsay, Susan E. Mapley, Maria Y. Maquera, Ann McCullough, Michael Meade, Barbara Messink, Mary Elizabeth Mick, Susie E. Mikolajewski, Marilyn Millman, Debra A. Mills, Lu Ann Minore, Jean M. Mischel, Terri Ann Mitchell, Catherine Jean Moore, Michelle A. Mourad

Row 7: Mary Lynn Musial, Kathleen Myles, Denise Oliphint, Patrice M. Orlowski, Susan Orne, Carolyn Pernell, Holly Perry, Paula L. Petkoff, Arlene Ann Popovich, Barbara A. Quinn, Carol Reid, Sandra J. Remington, Gisselle Rodriguez, Susan Roelant, Laura S. Rogers, Nancy Rudd

Row 8: Karen Beth Salem, Barbara Santavy, Linda Schairer, Marie B. Schneider, Julie Schoettley, Julie Rose Schuster, Mary V. Seibert, Tracy Shafer, Claire E. Sharda, Susan D. Shortino, Judith Simon, Phillis Simpson, Donna Sledz, Cynthia Smith, Diane L. Smith, Mary Kay Smith

Row 9: Susan R. Smith, Sharon stansberry, Linda Suchocki, Susan Swoiskin, Leslie Ann Urban, Mary B. Van Wingen, Gretchen M. Vermeulen, Verland Z. Walker, Jayne Walworth, Elaine Devorah Webber, Julie Ann Webster, Sora Weller, Julie L. Weyburne, Malorie Whitefield, Frances Wiecha, Anne C. Wise

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Mode of access: Internet.

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The aim of this chapter is to provide you with a basic understanding of epidemiology, and to introduce you to some of the epidemiological concepts and methods used by researchers and practitioners working in public health. It is hoped that you will recognise how the principles and practice of epidemiology help to provide information and insights that can be used to achieve better health outcomes for all. Epidemiology is fundamental to preventive medicine and public health policy. Rather than examine health and illness on an individual level, as clinicians do, epidemiologists focus on communities and population health issues. The word epidemiology is derived from the Greek epi (on, upon), demos (the people) and logos (the study of). Epidemiology, then, is the study of that which falls upon the people. Its aims are to describe health-related states or events, and through systematic examination of the available information, attempt to determine their causes. The ultimate goal is to contribute to prevention of disease and disability and to delay mortality. The primary question of epidemiology is: why do certain diseases affect particular population groups? Drawing upon statistics, the social and behavioural sciences, the biological sciences and medicine, epidemiologists collect and interpret information to assist in the prevention of new cases of disease, eradicate existing disease and prolong the lives of people who have disease.

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The term ’public discourses’ describes a range of texts or signifiers that inform the conditions of audience reception. Public discourses include myriad written, visual, spatial, auditory and sensory texts experienced by an audience at a particular theatrical event. Ric Knowles first introduced this term in his recent work Reading the Material Theatre. Whereas Knowles was interested in how public discourses modified the conditions of reception, my broader research is to explore how these public discourses become texts in themselves. This paper will discuss one public discourse, the theatre programme, as it related to a staging of Maxwell Anderson’s Anne of the Thousand Days at the Brisbane Powerhouse in June 2006. The significance of the programme was explored at symposiums held after the performances. Audiences generally view programmes before a performance and after a performance and its significance as a written text changes. The program became a sign vehicle that worked to expound and explicate the meaning of the play for the audience. This public discourse became a significant written text contributing to the textual whole of the theatrical event.

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Described as 'The Lucky Country' over forty-years ago, Australia continues to play on and onward with a fervent belief in luck, her people often described, usually by themselvess, as 'graced' or as living in 'God's Own'. With our comfortable lifestyle and isolated location, white sands and soft mangoes, it is easy to see why we embraced the term so eagerly. Where else could you win the lottery twice? While these national stereotypes are an essential part of the romance that drives and defines us, the idea that luck is the central motif of Australian culture has become a cliche, and a dangerous, almost disastrous one at that. In On Luck, Anne Summers observes, "You hear it everywhere: in all sorts of conversations, in Qantas ads, from the mouths of travellers returning from overseas trips full of complaints about the climate, the crowds, the uncivility of other places".