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Christchurch Christchurch
Christchurch city (1996 pop. 309,027), E South Island, New Zealand, on the Avon River. It is the third largest city in New Zealand and the commercial center of the productive Canterbury Plains. Industries include food processing, meatpacking, woolens manufacturing, aquaculture, software... Read more
Keri Hulme Keri Hulme
HULME, Keri Nationality: New Zealander. Born: Christchurch, 9 March 1947. Education: North Beach primary school; Aranui High School; Canterbury University, Christchurch. Career: Formerly, senior postwoman, Greymouth, and director for New Zealand television; writer-in-residence, Canterbury... Read more
George Edmund Street George Edmund Street
George Edmund Street 1824-81, English architect. One of the foremost champions of the Gothic revival, he did much church work, including St. Mary Magdalene, Paddington, London; St. James the Less, Westminster; St. Paul's American Church in Rome; and restorations to the Bristol Cathedral and to... Read more
Rita Angus Rita Angus
Angus, Rita (1908–1970). New Zealand painter, mainly of portraits and landscapes. Angus was born at Hastings, near Napier, and studied at Canterbury School of Art, Christchurch, 1927–31. She was considered one of the leading figures in New Zealand art, particularly in the 1940s, and... Read more
Radclyffe Hall Radclyffe Hall
Radclyffe Hall Radclyffe Hall (1880-1943) is best known as the author of the controversial lesbian novel, The Well of Loneliness. Court cases led to the book being banned in both the United Kingdom and the United States. The American verdict was overturned on appeal, but the book remained... Read more
South Island South Island
South Island (1996 pop. 900,114), 58,093 sq mi (150,461 sq km), New Zealand. It is the larger but less populous of the two principal islands of the country. It is separated from the North Island by Cook Strait and from Stewart Island by Foveaux Strait. The Clutha and Waitaki are the largest rivers.... Read more
Avon (rivers) Avon (rivers)
Avon [Celtic,=river], name of several rivers in England. 1 Also called Bristol Avon or Lower Avon, rising in SW England at Tetbury, Gloucestershire, and flowing 75 mi (121 km) E, S, and then NW through Bath and Bristol to the Severn River at Avonmouth. It is navigable for large vessels to... Read more
Ipswich Ipswich
Ipswich city (1991 pop. 129,661) and district, Suffolk, E England, on the Orwell estuary 12 mi (19 km) from its entry into the North Sea. Ipswich is the county seat of Suffolk. A market and port, it exports barley, malt, and fertilizers and imports coal, petroleum, phosphates, grain, and timber.... Read more
New Zealand New Zealand
New Zealand. The two main islands of New Zealand, lying more than 1,000 miles to the east of Australia, have a land area of nearly 104,000 square miles, and are larger than the United Kingdom (94,000). South Island is rather bigger than North Island, but contains only a quarter of the people. In the... Read more
David L. Steward David L. Steward
David L. Steward 19(?)(?)– Business executive At a Glance… Sources David Steward, founder and chief executive officer of World Wide Technology, a leader in the area of information technology, changed the face of Internet business for a variety of commercial, federal, and... Read more

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

Waitangi Day belongs to all.(PERSPECTIVES)
Newspaper article from: New Zealand Herald (Auckland, New Zealand) ...gang colours. It was racism disguised as patriotism...organised an anti-racism rally in Christchurch. The National Front...work together towards changing it to one that is acceptable...for a country which faces its only international...

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