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Pritzker prize goes green Front awarded to Glenn Mergerbrief Article, Pritzker prize goes green Front rewarded to Glenn Mergerbrief Article, Pritzker prize goes green Front awarded to Glenn Marketbrief Article, or Pritzker prize goes green Front rewarded to Glenn Marketbrief Article ?
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Thirty-nine Articles
Thirty-Nine Articles The set of doctrinal formulae first issued in 1563 and finally adopted by the Anglican Communion in 1571 as a statement of its position. Many of the articles allow a wide variety of interpretation. They had their origin in several previous definitions, required by the shifts and... Read more |
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Edward William Bok
Edward William Bok 1863-1930, American editor, b. Helder, Netherlands. His family emigrated to the United States in 1870. He founded the Brooklyn Magazine (later Cosmopolitan ) in 1883. As editor (1889-1919), he made the Ladies' Home Journal a leading American magazine for women, introducing... Read more |
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Allen Toussaint
Allen Toussaint Singer, songwriter, pianist, producer Influenced by Professor Longhair The Toussaint Sound Formed Sansu, Nurtured Meters Broadened Horizons to Theater Selected discography Sources Allen Toussaint likes to talk about the old days, when, as he related to Don Palmer in a... Read more |
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patina
patina , coating of carbonate of copper on articles of copper or bronze, formed after long exposure to a moist atmosphere or burial in the earth. Although commonly green, patina varies in color and consistency; it may be red, brown, black, blue, or gray, or it may be smooth, glossy, or crusty. It... Read more |
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Oliver Waterman Larkin
Oliver Waterman Larkin 1896-1970, American art historian, b. Medford, Mass. Larkin taught at Smith from 1924 to 1964. His major work is Art and Life in America (1949; Pulitzer Prize in history, 1950). He is also the author of Samuel F. B. Morse (1954) and Daumier, Man of His Time (1966).... Read more |
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Sir Alexander Fleming
Sir Alexander Fleming 1881-1955, Scottish bacteriologist, discoverer of penicillin (1928) and lysozyme (1922), an antibacterial substance found in saliva and other body secretions. Educated at St. Mary's Hospital Medical School, Univ. of London, where he later became professor of bacteriology, he... Read more |
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Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation in U.S. history, ratified in 1781 and superseded by the Constitution of the United States in 1789. The imperative need for unity among the new states created by the American Revolution and the necessity of defining the relative powers of the Continental Congress and the... Read more |
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