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Betty Radice (3 January 1912 – 19 February 1985) was a literary editor and translator. She became joint editor of Penguin Classics , and vice-president of the Classical Association . She produced numerous English translations of classical and medieval Latin texts which were published in the mid-twentieth century.
British officials, according to Klotz, were unable to understand the situation and loath to criticise Noguchi. Young's letters refer to particular difficulties with Percy Selwyn-Clarke, the British Health Officer, whom he found obstructive and self serving. [9] Of the Rockefeller staff, Dr Mahaffey alone was willing to help Young manage Noguchi.
13 Letters may refer to: 13 Letters (album), a 2007 compilation album by 116 Clique; 13 Letters (film), a 2021 Nigerian romantic film This page was last edited on 18 ...
Job hunting today can be pretty ridiculous, and many job seekers will attest to that. Even compared to last year, Americans need to send out more applications to find a job. In 2023, the average ...
Amos reproduced and criticised the proceedings at some of these trials, and denounced the state of things as one "to which no British colony had hitherto afforded a parallel, private vengeance arrogating the functions of public law; murder justified in a British court of judicature, on the plea of exasperation commencing years before the ...
A Letter to Three Wives is a 1949 American romantic drama directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz and starring Jeanne Crain, Linda Darnell and Ann Sothern. The film was adapted by Vera Caspary and written for the screen by Mankiewicz from A Letter to Five Wives, a story by John Klempner that appeared in Cosmopolitan, based on Klempner's 1945 novel. [3 ...
A letter from Crewe to Sir Richard Browne at Paris, under date 10 April 1644, describing the growing exasperation of 'this plus quam civile bellum,' as he called it, and the devastation of the country, is preserved in the British Museum, and is printed in the Fairfax Correspondence.
Graphically, the exclamation mark is represented by variations on the theme of a period with a vertical line above. One theory of its origin posits derivation from a Latin exclamation of joy, namely io, analogous to "hooray"; copyists wrote the Latin word io at the end of a sentence, to indicate expression of joy.