Mr. Lincoln And Friends Douglas L. Wilson and Rodney O. Davis, Editor, Herndons Informants, p. 541 (Letterof Jason Duncan to William H. Herndon, late 1866early 1867). http://www.mrlincolnandfriends.org/content_inside.asp?pageID=21&subjectID=1
A Scandal Below The Radar Bloggers, of course, are making Hay over the Times disinterest in a story thatcasts Send a letter to the Editor via our email form. Opinions columns http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/opinions/articles/0805maceachern05.html
Extractions: In this case, "borrow" seems to be a loose term. The club's president says Cohen made at least one of the Air America loans - $213,000 - without her approval. Cohen no longer works for either the club or the network, and there is some indication that the current owner of Air America, Piquant LLC, may not have been aware of the loans at the time it purchased the network on May 24, 2004.
LRB | Letters From Vol. 23 No. 5 My tutor at Oxford, Edmund Blunden, told me that Keith Douglas was the best From Editor, London Review . The March on Washington photos mentioned by http://www.lrb.co.uk/v23/n05/letters.html
Extractions: Subscribers to the LRB currently get free access to the full content of the magazine in an online edition. If you are a subscriber and would like to register for online access click here If you are already registered you can log in from our login page If you would like further information about subscribing to the LRB click here LRB Vol. 23 No. 5 dated 8 March 2001 From Vol. 23 No. 5 Professor of Analytical Psychology, University of Essex From Emma Tennant Wynne Godley's terrifying account of psychoanalysis must serve as a warning to those who fear their handles may be grasped by analysts eager to open doors. Suffering distress, as Godley did, in my early thirties, I was directed to a (highly recommended) psychoanalyst who, after informing me that I should embark on a lengthy and expensive course with him, proceeded to ask, as I left my name and address: 'Do you use the front bit?' Realising that he had researched the 'bit' in question - an Hon., for which title I had as much responsibility as, say, a supernumerary nipple - I ran, never to return. Emma Tennant
How Nanotechnology, Robotics, Genetics, And Artificial Intelligence Will Transfo Translate this page Douglas Mulhall le da la vuelta al problema citado por aquellos que alertan sobre De hecho parece que en este campo Hay una guerra declarada entre el http://www.euroresidentes.com/libros/futuro_nanotecnologia/Molecular_Future_Nano
Extractions: Libros sobre Nanotechnology en Amazon Comentario Es un argumento fuerza no exento de singularidad a la hora de rebajar las pretensiones neutralizadoras del desarrollo de la nanociencia. Mulhall sugiere; "The relatively calm natural conditions that allowed our technological society to develop during past centuries may be more rare than we thought. They may end. ... a new survival imperative may inspire us to adapt to a universe that now appears more risky than we once thought." De hecho parece que en este campo hay una guerra declarada entre el medioabiente y la tecnología. Este conflicto nos puede distraer de los verdaderos retos del medio ambiente. De hecho afirma que "cuanto más se aprenda de las catástrofes naturales, la prevención de los peligros de de un viaje a la edad molecular nos puede relegar al cubo de basura de la naturaleza",
Pomona College Before being named executive Editor of The New York Times in July 2003, Verlyn Klinkenborg is the author of Making Hay, The Last Fine Time and The Rural http://www.pomona.edu/adwr/alumni/events/alumniweekend/symposium.shtml
Extractions: Unfortunately, because of space limitations we are not able to include all letters sent to us. Letters that appear often are edited for length or clarity. While universities are places of discussion where people of good will do not always agree, letters deemed potentially libelous or that malign a person or group will not be published. Opinions expressed in the Montanan do not necessarily reflect those of The University of Montana. Soon music takes the room and pushes its way out cracks of windows and doors into the cold mountain air. There the darkness is deep and long, the snow in mounds, the quiet like ice. Bare maple branches long for the moon. Inside I ponder how wonderful stringed instruments can be. Not only do they travel easily from living room to kitchen, but they can turn exalted warbling into a soulful mourn. I become intrigued with how they move into a song. Someone calls out a song title. Musicians shift in their seats, get that far-off look as they reach back for what they know. Then there's the tapping of feet. A chord here, a riff there, another chord. Out of a sort of hesitant, rambling cacophony of sound, the music gels and off they go, never to look back. How wonderful to be carried on their backs!
City Pages - The Barnstormer Where Ohman once baled Hay, suburban soccer kids now play ball on the and eventually convinced the project s Editor to greenlight the concept. http://www.citypages.com/databank/26/1280/article13404.asp
Extractions: All of CityPages.com Best of the Twin Cities Articles Ad Index Calendar Movies Restaurants Learn About CityPages.com RSS Feeds Sign Up for Weekly Email Newsletter from CityPages Home News ... Classifieds Twin Cities Reader Summer Books Issue - Volume 26 - Issue 1280 - Cover Story - June 15, 2005 By Paul Demko Doug Ohman photo by Bill Kelley Doug Ohman is not the kind of man who will brag that he has photographed every barn in the state of Minnesota. It's a big place, and even though Ohman fears that barns may be an endangered species, there are still an awful lot of them. Nonetheless, the fact of the matter is that he has surely tromped around and photographed more barns than anyone else has. Over a decade's worth of rambles on the state's dirt roads and two-lane byways, he has snapped photos of round barns, dairy barns, Yankee barns, gambel-roofed barns, Dutch-style barns, and barns that no longer can be neatly categorized, having collapsed to the ground. Guiding his black Ford pickup truck south on Interstate 35 on a recent weekday afternoon, Doug Ohman points out a massive red barn on the west side of the freeway. The front of the structure is enigmatically emblazoned with a single word: "Sugardale."
Zesty Contras Editor Larry Jennings Date_entered 1996-11 Al Olson Lm 2x2 ip ZC n455 A Whimsy for Tony Lynn Douglas Lm 2x2 pp ZC n456 Who sin the Middle? Al Olson Lm 2x2 ip ZC n457 Whoop! Jamboree Cammy Kaynor Lm http://www.ibiblio.org/contradance/index/ZC.txt
Ask The Editors :: Online Ad Classifications; Hunting Query or 529 Hay, fed, seed) so you can quickly go to what you want to see? Doug Floyd is Editorial page Editor of The SpokesmanReview. http://www.spokesmanreview.com/blogs/editors/archives/2004/01/12online_ad_class.
Extractions: 2. A couple of months ago the paper solicited hunting stories from their readers. Were they ever published? Rich Hepworth, Spokane Answer 1: Marlene Anderson, who directs advertising on spokesmanreview.com, gave this response: "The first page of the online classifieds lists the major categories. Each category has sub-categories that correspond to the classifications that are listed in the print newspaper. They have the same name but not the classification numbers. For instance, 'wood for sale' is a sub-category of Miscellaneous Merchandise. The advantage of the online classifieds over the print version is that you can also enter a keyword such as 'wood' and find any ad online that has the word 'wood' in it." Answer 2: Posted by Ken 09:25 AM Jan 12 Editors Steve Smith, Gary Graham, Ken Sands, Doug Floyd and Carla Savalli answer readers' questions about The Spokesman-Review's editorial decisions and operations.
[ISI Highly Cited Researchers Version 1.1] Highly Cited Researcher Fearon, Douglas Thomas 19741977, Postdoctoral ResearchFellowship, Helen Hay Whitney Foundation. Bronze Star, Army Commendation http://hcr3.isiknowledge.com/author.cgi?&link1=Browse&link2=Results&id=842
Printable Version Elliot will also market all of Steiger s alfalfa through Hay Markets International, Northern Douglas County normally receives 20 of moisture, http://www.minnesotafarmguide.com/articles/2005/08/04/special_section/hay_and_fo
Extractions: Ken Steiger sets goal of 10-ton/acre alfalfa By ANDREA JOHNSON, Assistant Editor "I know I'm pushing the envelope, but I think it's possible," said Steiger. "I've been an independent crop consultant for 30 years, and everything that I've learned over the last 30 years we're going to put to practice here and see how good it works," said Glanzer. "We're really looking forward to this project." "Most of Frank's ideas have come true," said Glanzer. "Thirty years ago, I couldn't figure out what he was talking about. Now I understand them." Accomplishing goals To raise 10-ton alfalfa, Steiger will start out seeding 120 acres to alfalfa this spring. He will seed another 80 acres to alfalfa in the fall after red potatoes are harvested. Sugarbeet lime, turkey manure and commercial fertilizer will be applied to the flat and sandy Douglas County irrigated fields, according to soil tests results. "It's going to be about 4 tons of turkey litter per acre and whatever fertility the soil tests call for," said Glanzer. Potash - about 60 pounds of K20 - will be applied between cuttings. The alfalfa on the potato ground will be seeded around Aug. 1, with a potential single cutting around Sept. 1-10.
Horses Draw Big Crowd At Douglas County Fair | LJWorld.com Kalen was rewarding her horse with some extra Hay between events. Douglas CountyFarm Bureau Movie Night, featuring Racing Stripes, dusk, http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2005/aug/01/horses_draw_big_crowd_douglas_county_fa
Gamasutra Letters to the Editor. Letters To The Editor Submit A Letter Posted by RonHay, 01.16.2003. Game Proposal Should Focus On Resources Available To http://www.gamasutra.com/php-bin/letter_display.php
The New York Times > Movies > HAY FOOT > Review, Cast And Synopsis The NY Times review of Hay Foot, a Fred Guiol film starring and . Hay Foot movietrailer, showtimes, tickets and reader reviews are also available. http://movies2.nytimes.com/gst/movies/movie.html?v_id=94453