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Jordan: another dry summer. (Jordan's endemic water problems) (Business & Finance)
The Middle East
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July 1, 1993
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COPYRIGHT 1993 IC Publications Ltd. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group.
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Jordan's endemic water problems will not go away. As the country searches frantically for alternative sources and better ways to ration consumption, Amman is braced for another summer of water cuts.
Water is Jordan's national obsession. Squeezed between a barren desert to the east and water-hungry Israel to the west, Jordan is never far from a water crisis. The situation is further complicated by one of the highest annual rates of population growth in the world (3.8% according to the latest official estimates) and steadily increasing demand for water from industry and ...
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Hartley Coleridge: 1796-1849.(ENTHUSIASMS)
Magazine article from: Poetry
; Hartley Coleridge was a strange little boy...I bought half of them. Hartley received precisely two...that the poems of Harriet Coleridge (if there were such a...omission in every anthology. Hartley sometimes scrapes into...
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Hartley Coleridge
Magazine article from: Poetry
; 1796-1849 Hartley Coleridge was a strange little...bought half of them. Hartley received precisely two...the poems of Harriet Coleridge (if there were such...in every anthology. Hartley sometimes scrapes into...
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The specter of Hegel in Coleridge's Biographia Literaria.(Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Hartley Coleridge,)
Magazine article from: Journal of the History of Ideas
; Coleridge opens the abstruse twelfth chapter of...accepted the challenge of understanding Coleridge's ignorance, perhaps because they...propose, however, to take seriously Coleridge's adage by arguing that the philosophical...
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Another source for Coleridge's pleasure-dome in "Kubla Khan".
Magazine article from: ANQ
; ...Fisher does not comment on the echoes in Coleridge. Fisher, in Travels, also publishes...Knowledge. London: Macmillan, 1992. Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. Poetical Works. Ed. Ernest Hartley Coleridge. London: Oxford UP, 1973. Fisher...
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The Gang: Coleridge, the Hutchinsons & the Wordsworths in 1802.
Magazine article from: Criticism
; ...that Dorothy was in love with Coleridge; and Coleridge's fantasy of love for Sara Hutchinson. Worthen...emphasizes the group's interest in children, Coleridge's son Hartley, Sara Coleridge's pregnancy during the summer, and Wordsworth...
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Coleridge on the Couch
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post
; ...A complex, sad picture of Coleridge's marriage emerges, including a careful sketch of Coleridge as father, particularly in...and on behalf of, his son Hartley. Weissman makes no excuse for Coleridge's weaknesses. He was frequently...
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Coleridge's joy.
Magazine article from: Wordsworth Circle
; ...Prelude with a tribute to Coleridge for helping him attain an...But well before 1805, Coleridge had abandoned any belief he...and his first-born son, Hartley. (1) Pure joy, for Coleridge, must come without self...
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Coleridge's Swinging Moods and the Revision of "This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison".
Magazine article from: Style
; ...published incarnation, Coleridge's letters and...critical debate about Coleridge's trading of allegiances from Hartley's account of experience...two versions of Coleridge's poem as divided...correlation with Hartley's and Kant's...
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Morton D. Paley. Portraits of Coleridge.
Magazine article from: Studies in Romanticism
; ...is exactly the carcass Coleridge refers to, with a few...portrait of the young Coleridge who is shown with his...the spine) the name "Hartley" appears in bold capitals on a handwritten label. Coleridge's index finger underlines...
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POETIC JUSTICE I did my own Coleridge walk ... Simon Heptinstall uses some licence for his version of a literary stroll in the West Country.
Newspaper article from: The Mail on Sunday (London, England)
; ...Stowey between Bridgwater and Minehead, where Coleridge moved in 1797 with wife Sarah and baby Hartley and where, today, is a new housing estate...More importantly the National Trust owns Coleridge's old house which is open four afternoons...
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