984 resultados para Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic. Dept. of Kansas
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The republic of Argentina.--The United states of Brazil.--The republic of Bolivia.--The republic of Chile.--The republic of Peru--The republic of Paraguay.--The republic of Uruguay.--The republic of Guatemala.
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Printed in Great Britain.
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"Annex number 189. Report relating to the construction of the hypsometric map of the republic of Guatemala drawn under the supervision of the engineering staff of the Guatemala boundary commission, by order of the government of the republic": p. 178-183. Signed: Guatemala, September 29, 1928. Claudio Urrutia.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"List of books referred to in the text": v. 2, p. [353]-358.
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First issued in 1860, under title: History of the United States of America.
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I. Franklin in France.--II. Omar Khayyám.--III. Sir Walter Scott.--IV. Speeches before the American society in London.--V. A partnership in beneficence.--VI. Speech at the annual dinner of the Royal society.--VII. Speech at the annual dinner of the Literary fund.--VIII. Speech at the opening, by Miss Helen Hay, of the Robert Browning garden.--IX. International copyright.--X. American diplomacy.--XI. A festival of pece.--XII. William McKinley.--XIII. At the universities.--XIV. Commercial club dinner.--XV. New Orleans.--XVI. The Grand army of the republic.--XVII. President Roosevelt.--XVIII. Edmund Clarence Stedman.--XIX. Lincoln's faith.--XX. The press and modern progress.--XXI. Fifty years of the Republican party.--XXII. America's love of peace.--XXIII. Life in the White House in the time of Lincoln.--XXIV. Clarence King.
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Cover title.
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"The matter and photographs ... first appeared as Travel stories in the Saturday blade."--Introd.
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Vol. 1 translated by Henry Cary; vol. 2 translated by Henry Davis; vol. 3-6 translated by George Burges.
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Scene showing street in Flint Michigan decorated for a Grand Army of the Republic Encampment
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Contents.--v. 1. Early colonial literature, 1607-1675.--v. 2. Later colonial literature, 1676-1764.--v. 3. Literature of the revolutionary period, 1765-1787.--v. 4. Literature of the republic, pt. 1, 1788-1820.--v. 5. Literature of the republic, pt. 2, 1821-1834.--v. 6-8. Literature of the republic, pt. 3, 1835-1860.--v. 9.-10. Literature of the republic, pt. 4, 1861-1888.--v. 11. Literature of the republic, pt. 4, 1861-1888 (continued) Additional selections, 1834-1889. Short biographies of all authors represented in this work, by Arthur Stedman. General index.
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Covers the year 1792 to the proclamation of the republic. In continuation of "Marie-Antoinette and the end of the old reǵime" and "Marie Antoinette at the Tuileries."
A Site Description of the CARICOMP Mangrove, Seagrass and Coral Reef Sites in Bocas del Toro, Panama
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Bocas del Toro is located in the western region of the Republic of Panama. It is part of a province of approximately 8917 km(2) with an estimated 68% of its area covered by tropical rainforest. The area receives 2870 mm/year of rainfall. The dry and rainy seasons are not clearly defined. There are two periods each of low and high rainfall, March and September-October, and July and December, respectively. Mangrove forests, seagrass meadows and coral reefs are vast, covering large areas in the shallow waters surrounding the islands of the archipelago and along the mainland coast. The CARICOMP sites were established in 1998-99 and are periodically monitored following Level I protocol. Herein we describe the sites in a regional context and present the baseline data for each site. This paper fulfills the requirements of the formal site description for CARICOMP monitoring sites.
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Garner seeks to explain the absence of far-right political formations in the history of the Republic of Ireland, especially in relation to immigration. He argues that the ‘mainstream’ nationalist parties have implemented a racialized governance of Ireland via the issue of citizenship (in the referendum of 2004). While hegemonic ideas on the racial purity of indigenous populations and the highly ambivalent attitudes and policies on immigration pursued over the last decade are characteristic of a broader European trend, this has not, in the Republic, been accompanied by meaningful far-right political mobilization. Ireland has frequently been seen as sui generis in political terms, and indeed emerges in some ways as a counter-case: increasing hostility towards Others has been identified in the midst of rapid economic growth and political stability. A variety of issues related to the country’s political development have given rise to an especially small left-wing vote, a nationalist centre ground and longlasting domination by a single populist party, Fianna Fa´ il. This party has been partnered in government since 1997 by a free-market party, the Progressive Democrats, who have contributed to Ireland’s movement towards neo-liberal policies and a highly functional approach to immigration. The transition from country of emigration to country of immigration has thus taken place against an ideological backdrop in which the imperatives of labour demand and consolidating domestic support for reform have made an uneasy match, resulting in the racialization of Irishness. The state has, however, amended the Constitution in order to qualify jus soli citizenship entitlement in the case of particular categories of people: those whose parents are not Irish nationals. The significant stakes of these changes are analysed in the context of state responses to Eire’s transition to a country of immigration, and the role of nationalist-populism in the country’s political culture.