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The Little Red Lighthouse and the Great Grey Bridge
THE LITTLE RED LIGHTHOUSE AND THE GREAT GREY BRIDGE THE LITTLE RED LIGHTHOUSE AND thinks of a river, explain that this story takes place Connect the story to history, science, and tech- THE GREAT GREY BRIDGE in a famous big city that is located on a river. Have nology by focusing on the art in the program. them guess the city, then watch the program to see Encourage students to do research on steam- by Hildegarde H. Swift and Lynd Ward if their guesses were right. boats, especially along the Hudson and other Themes: American History, Communities, Feelings, American rivers. Discuss the changes in trans- Growth and Change, Self-Esteem portation that made the great grey bridge neces- Grade Level: K–6 (ages 5–12) AFTER VIEWING ACTIVITIES sary. Ask students to prepare timetables or time Running Time: Ask children to recall and discuss how the light- house felt at different points in the story. Use the lines showing important dates in transportation feelings of the lighthouse as a way to discuss their technology. SUMMARY own feelings when big changes happen and they Buildings, bridges and boats come alive in this don't understand what's going around them. Share Connect the story to social studies by focusing appealing tale of a little red lighthouse that guards your own feelings about being in situations when on the "lighthouses" in your own community. the shoreline of New York City. Nature comes alive you suddenly feel very, very small, such as driving This is a good opportunity to examine your local as well, speaking to the lighthouse and the boats on a huge, choked expressway. -
UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DE SANTA CATARINA Departamento De-Língua E Literatura Estrangeiras SINCLAIR! LEWIS: the NOBLE BARBARIAN A
UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DE SANTA CATARINA Departamento de-Língua e Literatura Estrangeiras SINCLAIR! LEWIS: THE NOBLE BARBARIAN A Study of the Conflict of European and American Values in the Life and Fiction of Sinclair Lewis Tese submetida à Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina para a i obtençãoí do grau de Mestre em Letras Hein Leonard Bowles Novembro - 1978 Esta Tese foi julgada adequada para a obtenção do título de MESTRE EM LETRAS Especialidade Língua Inglesa e Literatura Correspondente e aprovada em sua forma final pelo Programa de PÓs-Graduação Pro John Bruce Derrick, PhD Orientador Z&L- Prof. Hilário^hacio Bohn, PhD Integrador do Curso Apresentada perante a Comissão Examinadora composta do; professores: Prof. John Bruce Derrick, PhD Para Dirce, Guilherme e Simone Agradecimentos À Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina À Universidade Estadual de Ponta Grossa À Fundação Faculdade Estadual de Filosofi de Guarapuava Ao Prof. Dr. John B. Derrick Ao Prof. Dr. Arnold Gordenstein ABSTRACT In Sauk Centre, a fairly new and raw midwestern American town in the first years of our century, a solitary youth reads Kipling, Scott, Tennyson and Dickens and becomes enchanted with Europe: its history, traditions and people. Seeing the monotonous and endless extensions of prairie land, the rustic farmer cottages and the haphazard design of his hometown, he imagines the superior graces of. a variegated European landscape; historical cities, old structures, castles and mansions that hint of aristocratic generations. And his people, engaged in the routine of their daily activities; their settled forms of behavior, conversation and clothing, become ; quite uninspiring for him as contrasted to his idealization of a romantic, exotic and stirring European world wherein cultured gentlemen and gracious ladies abound. -
Grin and Bear It
AMERICAN ANTHEM MADE IN THE USA IS SEEING A RESURGENCE AND IT’S A KEY POLITICAL ISSUE. SECTION II MALE MAKEOVER BERGDORF GOODMAN UNVEILS A REMODELED MEN’S DEPARTMENT. PAGE 3 LUXURY LAWSUITS Hermès Sues LVMH, LVMH Sues Hermès By JOELLE DIDERICH PARIS — Let the hostilities resume. Hermès International and LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton said Tuesday they were heading to court over their ongoing dispute regarding LVMH’s WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2012 ■ $3.00 ■ WOMEN’S WEAR D acquisition of a 22.3 percent stake in the maker of Birkin bags and silk scarves. WWD Hermès confi rmed that on July 10, it lodged a com- plaint with a Paris court against LVMH, which sur- prised markets by revealing in October 2010 that it had amassed a 17.1 percent stake in Hermès via cash- settled equity swaps that allowed it to circumvent the usual market rules requiring fi rms to declare share Grin and purchases. The world’s biggest luxury group has since steadily increased its stake, a move seen by Hermès offi cials as an attempt at a creeping takeover, despite reassur- Bear It ances from LVMH chairman and chief executive offi - cer Bernard Arnault that he is not seeking full control. With more than 50 “This complaint concerns the terms of LVMH’s ac- quisition of stock in Hermès International,” Hermès collections under her low- said in a two-line statement. It is accusing LVMH of slung belt, Donna Karan, insider trading, collusion and manipulating stock shown here in her studio, prices, according to a source familiar with the issue, who declined to be named for confi dentiality reasons. -
First-Run Smoking Presentations in U.S. Movies 1999-2006
First-Run Smoking Presentations in U.S. Movies 1999-2006 Jonathan R. Polansky Stanton Glantz, PhD CENTER FOR TOBAccO CONTROL RESEARCH AND EDUCATION UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94143 April 2007 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Smoking among American adults fell by half between 1950 and 2002, yet smoking on U.S. movie screens reached historic heights in 2002, topping levels observed a half century earlier.1 Tobacco’s comeback in movies has serious public health implications, because smoking on screen stimulates adolescents to start smoking,2,3 accounting for an estimated 52% of adolescent smoking initiation. Equally important, researchers have observed a dose-response relationship between teens’ exposure to on-screen smoking and smoking initiation: the greater teens’ exposure to smoking in movies, the more likely they are to start smoking. Conversely, if their exposure to smoking in movies were reduced, proportionately fewer teens would likely start smoking. To track smoking trends at the movies, previous analyses have studied the U.S. motion picture industry’s top-grossing films with the heaviest advertising support, deepest audience penetration, and highest box office earnings.4,5 This report is unique in examining the U.S. movie industry’s total output, and also in identifying smoking movies, tobacco incidents, and tobacco impressions with the companies that produced and/or distributed the films — and with their parent corporations, which claim responsibility for tobacco content choices. Examining Hollywood’s product line-up, before and after the public voted at the box office, sheds light on individual studios’ content decisions and industry-wide production patterns amenable to policy reform. -
Giant List of Folklore Stories Vol. 5: the United States
The Giant List of Stories - Vol. 5 Pattern Based Writing: Quick & Easy Essay Skim and Scan The Giant List of Folklore Stories Folklore, Folktales, Folk Heroes, Tall Tales, Fairy Tales, Hero Tales, Animal Tales, Fables, Myths, and Legends. Vol. 5: The United States Presented by Pattern Based Writing: Quick & Easy Essay The fastest, most effective way to teach students organized multi-paragraph essay writing… Guaranteed! Beginning Writers Struggling Writers Remediation Review 1 Pattern Based Writing: Quick & Easy Essay – Guaranteed Fast and Effective! © 2018 The Giant List of Stories - Vol. 5 Pattern Based Writing: Quick & Easy Essay The Giant List of Folklore Stories – Vol. 5 This volume is one of six volumes related to this topic: Vol. 1: Europe: South: Greece and Rome Vol. 4: Native American & Indigenous People Vol. 2: Europe: North: Britain, Norse, Ireland, etc. Vol. 5: The United States Vol. 3: The Middle East, Africa, Asia, Slavic, Plants, Vol. 6: Children’s and Animals So… what is this PDF? It’s a huge collection of tables of contents (TOCs). And each table of contents functions as a list of stories, usually placed into helpful categories. Each table of contents functions as both a list and an outline. What’s it for? What’s its purpose? Well, it’s primarily for scholars who want to skim and scan and get an overview of the important stories and the categories of stories that have been passed down through history. Anyone who spends time skimming and scanning these six volumes will walk away with a solid framework for understanding folklore stories. -
Sinclair Lewis Society Newsletter VOLUME TWENTY, NUMBER ONE FALL 2011
The SINCLAIR LEWIS SOCIETY NEWSLETTER VOLUME TWENTY, NUMBER ONE FALL 2011 LANCELOT TODD: A CASE FOR FICTIONAL INDEPENDENCE Samuel J. Rogal Illinois Valley Community College In a neat package of a single paragraph containing a summarization of Lewis’s Lancelot Todd, Mark Schorer de- termined that Lewis’s pre-1920s version of the present-day public relations agent run wild represented a relatively simple “ANOTHER PERFECT DAY”: WEATHER, instrument of his creator’s satire and farce. Schorer labeled MOOD, AND LANDSCAPE IN SINCLAIR Todd “a suave immoralist” and “swindler” who threads his LEWIS’S MINNESOTA DIARY way through a series of short stories with plots that hold no “real interest” and whose principal fictional function focuses Frederick Betz upon Lewis’s preparations for the larger worlds of George Southern Illinois University–Carbondale Babbitt and Elmer Gantry (Schorer 239). Although few critical commentators of twenty-first-century American fiction seem- Sinclair Lewis’s Minnesota Diary, 1942–46, superbly ingly have possessed the stamina or willingness to challenge introduced and edited by George Killough, “offers an inside Schorer’s generalized characterization of Todd, there lies suf- view of a very public person,” a “strangely quiet and factual” ficient evidence in the stories themselves to allow for at least diarist, who “keeps meticulous notes on weather, writes ap- a defense of Todd as a character who might somehow stand preciative descriptions of scenery, mentions hundreds of people independent of the likes of Babbitt and Gantry. he is meeting, and chronicles exploratory trips around Min- Lancelot Todd appears in seven Lewis stories published nesota” (15). -
EBCS AR Titles
EBCS AR Titles QUIZNO TITLE 41025EN The 100th Day of School 35821EN 100th Day Worries 661EN The 18th EmerGency 7351EN 20,000 Baseball Cards Under the Sea 11592EN 2095 8001EN 50 Below Zero 9001EN The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins 413EN The 89th Kitten 80599EN A-10 Thunderbolt II 16201EN A...B...Sea (Crabapples) 67750EN Abe Lincoln Goes to WashinGton 1837-1865 101EN Abel's Island 9751EN Abiyoyo 86635EN The Abominable Snowman Doesn't Roast Marshmallows 13551EN Abraham Lincoln 866EN Abraham Lincoln 118278EN Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War 17651EN The Absent Author 21662EN The Absent-Minded Toad 12573EN The Absolutely True Story...How I Visited Yellowstone... 17501EN Abuela 15175EN Abyssinian Cats (Checkerboard) 6001EN Ace: The Very Important PiG 35608EN The Acrobat and the AnGel 105906EN Across the Blue Pacific: A World War II Story 7201EN Across the Stream 1EN Adam of the Road 301EN Addie Across the Prairie 6101EN Addie Meets Max 13851EN Adios, Anna 135470EN Adrian Peterson 128373EN Adventure AccordinG to Humphrey 451EN The Adventures of Ali Baba Bernstein 20251EN The Adventures of Captain Underpants 138969EN The Adventures of Nanny PiGGins 401EN The Adventures of Ratman 64111EN The Adventures of Super Diaper Baby 71944EN AfGhanistan (Countries in the News) 71813EN Africa 70797EN Africa (The Atlas of the Seven Continents) 13552EN African-American Holidays EBCS AR Titles 13001EN African Buffalo (African Animals Discovery) 15401EN African Elephants (Early Bird Nature) 14651EN Afternoon on the Amazon 83309EN Air: A Resource Our World Depends -
Ijvurshall's Convocrtion Speech ^ N.Bon»Ide a X H C C Genera
PMC GAME TDMOHHOW GA1VIDF.R WFF.K- drexel institute OF TECHNOLOGY P A G E 3 PHILADELPHIA, PA. VOLUME XXVIII OCTOBER 19, 1951 NUMBER 9 /Mr. iJvUrshall's Convocrtion Speech Ne. Ofhc^r ^ N.Bon»ide aX h c c Philadelphia s Industrial University” will observe its Sixtioth Anniversary at a Convocation to l)o ad dressed by General (Jeorge C. Marshall. Georges Bidanlt. Vice Premier of France, and others. The Convocation will be initiated at Convention Hall on Tuesday night, October 30. followed by a \\ell planned schedule of panels, special guests, awards, luncheons, and dinners at the nellevtie-St rat ford on Wednesday and Thursday concluding with an evening meeting at the Academy of Music. Marshall will open the three day Convocation in Convention Hall on Tuesday Might. Oitober . l)efore an audience of about fifteen thousand persons, most of them Drexel alumni and the families of l ) r ^ l students and graduates who have served in the armed forces. The general public is also invited. Fifteen panel discussions will be held at the Bellevue-St rat ford Hotel and outstanding national and local Seniors to be Honored at industrial and business leaders will participate by discussing Drexel’s role in the coming development and Scabbard and Blade Dance expansion of Philadelphia. Such Scabbard and Blade is presenting its annual fall formal at 9:;^0 in speakers as (iovernor John L. Fine the Frankford Arsenal Oflicers’ Clul). Music will be supplied by Snythe of Pennsylvania. (Jovernor Driscoll Williams and his orchestra. of New Jersey, Governor Carvel of Seventeen seniors are to receive the distinguished military student Delaware, and special guests, such badge. -
GUARDIANS of AMERICAN LETTERS Roster As of February 2021
GUARDIANS OF AMERICAN LETTERS roster as of February 2021 An Anonymous Gift in honor of those who have been inspired by the impassioned writings of James Baldwin James Baldwin: Collected Essays In honor of Daniel Aaron Ralph Waldo Emerson: Collected Poems & Translations Charles Ackerman Richard Wright: Early Novels Arthur F. and Alice E. Adams Foundation Reporting World War II, Part II, in memory of Pfc. Paul Cauley Clark, U.S.M.C. The Civil War: The Third Year Told By Those Who Lived It, in memory of William B. Warren J. Aron Charitable Foundation Richard Henry Dana, Jr.: Two Years Before the Mast & Other Voyages, in memory of Jack Aron Reporting Vietnam: American Journalism 1959–1975, Parts I & II, in honor of the men and women who served in the War in Vietnam Vincent Astor Foundation, in honor of Brooke Astor Henry Adams: Novels: Mont Saint Michel, The Education Matthew Bacho H. P. Lovecraft: Tales Bay Foundation and Paul Foundation, in memory of Daniel A. Demarest Henry James: Novels 1881–1886 Frederick and Candace Beinecke Edgar Allan Poe: Poetry & Tales Edgar Allan Poe: Essays & Reviews Frank A. Bennack Jr. and Mary Lake Polan James Baldwin: Early Novels & Stories The Berkley Family Foundation American Speeches: Political Oratory from the Revolution to the Civil War American Speeches: Political Oratory from Abraham Lincoln to Bill Clinton The Civil War: The First Year Told By Those Who Lived It The Civil War: The Second Year Told By Those Who Lived It The Civil War: The Final Year Told By Those Who Lived It Ralph Waldo Emerson: Selected -
California Folklore Miscellany Index
Topics: A - Mass Vol Page Topics: Mast - Z Vol Page Abbreviations 19 264 Mast, Blanche & Family 36 127-29 Abernathy 16 13 Mathematics 24 62 Abominable Snowman in the Trinity 26 262-3 Mattole 4 295 Alps Abortion 1 261 Mauk, Frank 34 89 Abortion 22 143 Mauldin, Henry 23 378-89 Abscess 1 226 Maxwell, Mrs. Vest Peak 9 343 Absent-Minded Professor 35 109 May Day 21 56 Absher Family History 38 152-59 May Day (Kentfield) 7 56 AC Spark Plug 16 44 Mayor of White's Hill 10 67 Accidents 20 38 Maze, The Mystic 17 210-16 Accidents 24 61, 74 McCool,Finn 23 256 Ace of Spades 5 347-348 McCoy, Bob (Wyoming character) 27 93 Acorn Acres Ranch 5 347-348 McCoy, Capt. Bill 23 123 Acorn dance 36 286 McDonal House Ghost 37 108-11 Acorn mush 4 189 McGettigan, Louis 9 346 Acorn, Black 24 32 McGuire, J. I. 9 349 Acorns 17 39 McKiernan,Charles 23 276-8 Actress 20 198-9 McKinley 22 32 Adair, Bethena Owens 34 143 McKinleyville 2 82 Adobe 22 230 McLean, Dan 9 190 Adobe 23 236 McLean, Dan 9 190 Adobe 24 147 McNear's Point 8 8 Adobe house 17 265, 314 McNeil, Dan 3 336 Adobe Hut, Old 19 116, 120 Meade, Ed (Actor) 34 154 Adobe, Petaluma 11 176-178 Meals 17 266 Adventure of Tom Wood 9 323 Measles 1 238 Afghan 1 288 Measles 20 28 Agriculture 20 20 Meat smoking, storing 28 96 Agriculture (Loleta) 10 135 Meat, Salting and Smoking 15 76 Agwiworld---WWII, Richfield Tank 38 4 Meats 1 161 Aimee McPherson Poe 29 217 Medcalf, Donald 28 203-07 Ainu 16 139 Medical Myths 15 68 Airline folklore 29 219-50 Medical Students 21 302 Airline Lore 34 190-203 Medicinal plants 24 182 Airplane -
Bl Oo M Sb U
B L O O M S B U P U B L I S H I N G R Y L O N D O N ADULT RIGHTS GUIDE 2 0 1 4 J305 CONTENTS FICTION . 3 NON-FICTION . 17 SCIENCE AND NatURE. 29 BIOGRAPHY AND MEMOIR ���������������������������������������������������������� 35 BUSINESS . 40 ILLUSTRATED AND NOVELTY NON-FICTION . 41 COOKERY . 44 SPORT . 54 SUBAGENTS. 60 Bloomsbury Publishing Plc. 50 Bedford Square Phoebe Griffin-Beale London WC1B 3DP Rights Manager Tel : +44 (0) 207 631 5600 Asia, US [email protected] Tel: +44 (0) 207 631 5876 www.bloomsbury.com [email protected] Joanna Everard Alice Grigg Rights Director Rights Manager Scandinavia France, Germany, Eastern Europe, Russia Tel: +44 (0) 207 631 5872 Tel: +44 (0) 207 631 5866 [email protected] [email protected] Katie Smith Thérèse Coen Senior Rights Manager Rights Executive South and Central America, Portugal, Spain, Turkey, Greece, Israel, Arabic speaking Belgium, Netherlands, Italy countries Tel: +44 (0) 207 631 5873 Tel: +44 (0) 207 631 5867 [email protected] [email protected] FICTION The Bricks That Built the Houses BLOOMSBURY UK PUBLICATION DATE: Kate Tempest 01/02/2016 Award-winning poet Kate Tempest’s astonishing debut novel elevates the ordinary to the EXTENT: 256 extraordinary in this multi-generational tale set in south London RIGHTS SOLD: Young Londoners Becky, Harry and Leon are escaping the city with a suitcase Brazil: Casa de Palavra; full of stolen money. Taking us back in time, and into the heart of the capital, The Bricks That Built the Houses explores a cross-section of contemporary urban life France: Rivages; with a powerful moral and literary microscope, exposing the everyday stories that lie The Netherlands: Het behind the tired faces on the morning commute, and what happens when your best Spectrum uniboek intentions don’t always lead to the right decisions. -
Jeffrey's Hook Lighthouse ("The Little Red Lighthouse")
Landmarks PreseJ:Vation connnission May 14, 1991, Designation List 237 LP-1654 JEF'FREY'S RX>K LIGEIIHXJSE, ("The Little Red Lighthouse"), Fort Washington Park (Property No. M-28), Manhattan. Erected 1880, moved to current site and reconstructed 1921. Landmark site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 2178, I.Dt 3 in part, consisting of a triangular site surrounding the lighthouse, bounded at the northeastern corner by the northwestern corner of the southern Geo:rge Washington Bridge tower base, extending southwesterly approximately 235' on a line established along and extending from the western edge of this tower base to the point where it intersects the U.S. Bulkhead Line of the Hudson River, northwesterly approximately 240' along the U.S. Bulkhead Line to a point where it intersects with a line established by and extending from the northern edge of the southern Bridge tower base, and then southeasterly approximately 70' along said line to the northwestern corner of the Bridge tower base. On April 19, 1988, the Landmarks PreseJ:Vation connnission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the Little Red Lighthouse and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 4). The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Six witnesses spoke in favor of designation. The connnission received rrany letters in support of designation, including over fifty from school children. DESCRIPI'ION AND ANALYSIS Sununary The Jeffrey's Hook lighthouse, erected in 1880 and moved to its current site in 1921, has become widely known as the children's literary landmark, "The Little Red Lighthouse." The story of the lighthouse in Fort Washington Park was popularized by the children's book The Little Red Lighthouse and the Great Gray Bridge, by Hildegarde H.