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1314247999.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
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2000066763Williams Township Northampton Co. PA: Williams Township Supervisors 2000. Book. Fine. Soft cover. 1st Edition. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Light tan wraps plastic comb binding. As issued. 26 pp. 2 folding maps at rear. 1st ptg. Scarce. Williams Township Supervisors Paperback
72213Natural history New Naturalists . 1st. Ed. Pub. Collins. 1958. 8vo. Inscription dated 1959 to ffep. Spotting to fore-edges of text block and lightly to ends and title page o/w. a fine hardback in pleasing largely clean thor. vg. dw. Not price clipped. Natural history New Naturalists hardcover
cbs 9781859733097USA Edition . New. Brand New! Fast Delivery US Edition and ship within 24-48 hours. Deliver by FedEx and Dhl & Aramex UPS & USPS and we do accept APO and PO BOX Addresses. Order can be delivered worldwide within 6-10 days and we do have flat rate for up to 2LB. Extra shipping charges will be requested if the Book weight is more than 5 LB. This Item May be shipped from India United states & United Kingdom. Depending on your location and availability. unknown
2001CBS-9781859733097Sp Berg Publishers 2001. New. Sp Berg Publishers unknown
2001CBS-9781859733097Sp Berg Publishers 2001. New. Sp Berg Publishers unknown
25276710-nnew. unknown
25276710like new. unknown
19972505010019EBSCO The College of St. Catherine 1997. Paperback. Like New. 4x0x7. 21 volume set. Includes Book Reviews Contemporary Poetry Literature Articles and Modern Play Scenes. Softcover. Good bindings and covers. Light wear. Clean unmarked pages. Interesting articles in this collection include: Zapatista Army of National Liberation: Sixth Declaration of the Selva Lacandona; The Dream of a Public Language: Modernity Manifesto and the Citizen Subject by Michael Davidson; New Criticism and the Civil Rights Movement: Identity Politics and the Liberal Arts by Tyrone Williams; 1950 June 28: The Fall of Seoul by Don Mee Choi; Sit in at Bullworth's by Aldon Lynn Nielsen; All Have Joined in the Struggle: The Literature of the United Democratic Front in South Africa by Priya Narismulu; The new voices: Poetry as social commentary in the post-Apartheid South Africa by Vuyisile Msila; Sequence for Mumia Abu-Jamal and I Salute the Jacarandas Anyway by Dennis Brutus; The Spatial Logic of Louis Cabri and Rodrigo Toscano's Urban Poetics by Kim Duff; Hyphenated Anthropologists Tourist Stand-ins and the Logic of the Repeat Journey by Ellen Strain; The Guest of Literature: The Issue of Hospitality in Literary Translation by Piotr Gwiazda; What Ethnographies Leave Out by Roger Sanjek; The Poetics of Islam by Kazim Ali; Black Power in Newark by Amiri Baraka; De-Sublimated Multi-Lingualisms by Laura Elrick; Death Sightings by Kathleen Stewart; Left Hook: Brecht Boxing and Committed Art by Ole Gram; Assembly Poetics in the Global Economy: Nicaragua by Bruce Campbell; Michael Tremblay's Hosanna and the Queering of National Identity by Elaine Pigeon; Mixed Blood by Wang Ping; People's Theatre People's Army: Masculinism Agitprop Reenactment by Alan Filewod; Racial Actors Liberal Myths by Josephine Lee; and On the Unbearable Slowness of Being an Anthropologist Now: Notes on a Contemporary Anxiety in the Making of Ethnography by George E. Marcus. Unique poetry in this collection: News Flash: Tagging Death by Allison Hedge Coke; Field Report by Jack Turner; el Puente/the bridge by Elizabeth Burns; 1983 by Walter K. Lew; Tongues by Diane Glancy; The Fifth Direction by Zhang Er; Four Corner Nabs by Allison Hedge Coke; Song of the Andoumboulou: 42 by Nathaniel Mackey; Mao Poems by Kenny Tanemura; and Chaplin Machinery by Mary Kasimor. Contents: No. 1; No. 2; No. 3; No. 4; No. 5; No. 6; No. 8; No. 9; No. 10; No. 11; No. 12; No. 14; No. 15/16; No. 17; No. 18; No. 19; No. 20; No. 21/22; No. 23. This is an oversized or heavy book which requires additional postage for international delivery outside the US. EBSCO, The College of St. Catherine paperback
17900021321790. 1794 Reprint of the 1790 Edition. . Pamphlet. Very Good. 36pp. Date on last page Feb. 15th 1794. Light toning and some foxing. Pain cover around Pamphlet then glued in titled card stock. More like kind British & American titles = > booksellers> amber unicorn> keyword = brit. Size: 8vo 8-1/4 x 4 <br/> <br/> unknown
16947Cambridge: Printed at the University Press. 1945. Cambridge: Printed by Walter Lewis M.A. at the University Press. . 45 1pp. 12mo. Stapled pamphlet. On aged and worn War Economy paper. Two-page preface by Hayward preceded by the following note: 'The Exhibition has been arranged under the auspices of the Syndics of the University Library and the Catalogue made by MR JOHN HAYWARD who in collaboration with MR HAROLD WILLIAMS F.B.A. also made the selection of the Books and Manuscripts for the Exhibition.' Uncommon apart from the Folcroft reprint: the only copy on OCLC WorldCat at the British Library. Cambridge: Printed at the University Press. 1945. [ Cambridge: Printed by Walter Lewis, M.A. at the University Press. ] unknown
200685 November 1806. One page folio left edge trimmed with small loss of text first letters of 'Aaron' in name 'Aaron Graham' and three other words some small closed tears fold mark good condition. "Order is taken this 5th Day of November 1806 . that you deliver & pay of such His Majesty's Treasure as remains in your charge unto Aaron Graham Esq. Inspector of Convicts or to his Assigns the sum of Eighty seven Poaunds and ten Shillings ." Signed "CW Williams Wynn" counter-signed "H.Petty Althorp Copeland". Concluding statement loss of a few letters at start "Camden pray pay this order out of Stamps Consol Fund." 5 November 1806. unknown
2001D07NS1082Frontier Publishing Kirstead 2001. 1st Edition. SOFTCOVER. Quarto size 4to in colour printed stiff card covers 60pp colour plates etc. Inscribed and signed by Williams on the title-page __CONDITION : Almost AS NEW slight flat crease to bottom corner tip of rear cover tiny speck of shelf rub to cover corner tips. . __To see more of our Art Monographs etc type DBBARTIST in the Keywords search box __We always ship in PROTECTIVE CARD PARCELS Frontier Publishing, Kirstead paperback
2001K16NL1250Frontier Publishing Kirstead 2001. 1st Edition. SOFTCOVER. Quarto size 4to in colour printed stiff card covers 60pp colour plates etc. Inscribed and signed by Williams in pencil on the title-page __CONDITION : An extremely well preserved AS NEW unread and unmarked copy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . To see more of our Art Monographs etc type DBBARTIST in the Keywords search box __We always ship in PROTECTIVE CARD PARCELS Frontier Publishing, Kirstead paperback
19674069Louisville Ky: March 26 1967. Very good. 126pp. contemporary copy printed on rectos only stapled. Minor toning and small paperclip stain to top edge of title leaf last leaf loose. Otherwise clean. A nice contemporary copy of the annual report for the Southern Program of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference SCLC prepared by Hosea L. Williams the director of the Southern Program and presented to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the SCLC's Board of Directors at the organization's annual meeting held in Louisville Kentucky March 29-30 1967. The work begins with a summary of the activities of the SCLC over the past year including the work of 104 people in 180 counties in ten southern states. Williams reports that "For the past twelve months the Southern Program has been involved in voter registration political education withholding patronage campaigns school integration organizing community organizations in counties where needed Get-Out-the-Vote Campaigns developing the Negro economic potential organizing farmer's cooperatives labor strikes community newspapers investment corporations tutoring classes especially for Negroes with deficiencies attending previously all-white schools organizing Negro candidates organizing and registering the farmers to fully participate in the ASCS Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service non-violent workshops business and professional clubs direct action campaigns non-violent street protests credit unions county-wide mass meetings on a regular basis youth programs mobilizing existing organizations adult education school boycotts and open housing."<br /> <br /> The next dozen pages are taken up with charts that detail which of the above activities were carried on in each of the 180 counties in the ten states from Alabama to Kentucky Virginia to Texas and more. This is followed by a "Recapitulation of SCLC's Southern Program by State and finally an "overall recap of the Southern Program" presented as a total of each activity quoted above. The present work came from a collection of SCLC material out of Atlanta once belonging to Hosea L. Williams.<br /> <br /> A valuable snapshot of the types of activities and the breadth of work being performed by the SCLC's Southern Program in the midst of the Civil Rights Movement. March 26 unknown
19205516Nashville: February 29 1920. Very good plus. 6pp. on plain paper with original transmittal envelope. Original mailing folds light wear. A friendly and informative correspondence written by Georgia Blakemore later Georgia Blakemore Williams while studying at the famed Meharry Medical College in Nashville. Georgia Blakemore Williams was born in Tennessee in 1883. She graduated from Tuskegee Institute at the turn of the century and worked as a teacher in the East Texas Baptist Academy and in the public schools around Tyler Texas in her early career. Georgia graduated from Meharry two years after the present letter was written and opened her own pharmacy in Tyler in 1923 called the People's Pharmacy. By 1930 Georgia married a laborer named E.Z. Williams; she was noted in the 1930 census as the owner/manager of a retail drug store. Her correspondent in the present letter was Rev. A.T. Stewart a distinguished pastor educator and author in Tyler in the first half of the 20th century who was apparently a mentor to Georgia.<br /> <br /> In the present letter Georgia reports on her life at Meharry in Nashville. She details the harsh winter weather "I am 'snow bound' as Whittier wrote" her recent illness "I had a dreadful cold and cough but have rid myself of both" missing a local public lecture but avoiding disease "I'm sorry as I wanted to hear Dr. Ellington at Ryman auditorium this P.M. on his famous annual sermon 'The Prodigal Son' but the flu and pneumonia are raging and I am taking no chances" joining a church "You speak about the minister and the church I joined. It is exactly the one on Spruce & Cedar below the capital" reporting on visitors "Prof. A.M. Moore was here Xmas visiting his sons in Rodger Williams" and more. In her most interesting passage Georgia reports on her studies and the atmosphere at Meharry: "I went over the top in one exam in pharmaceutical arithmetic. Made 100% does that sound like I'm working I hope so. The passing mark is 80 and so one has to work hard to even make that as these old instructors are so hard expect so much and explain so little." She reiterates that "I don't go out so much. Have to study too hard. Went to the theater once this year to see the Smarter set. Everybody here dances. My dept. will give a big ball in March but that leaves me out. I just go to school and back home." A rare letter from an important and hard-working African-American pharmacy student in the years before she worked in this monumentally challenging field especially for a Black woman in Jim Crow Texas. <br /> <br /> Georgia's letter is accompanied by a typed letter of recommendation from Reverend Stewart dated September 28 1919. In his recommendation Stewart describes Blakemore as "a young woman of sterling worth" who has "as a student distinguished herself for her diligence accuracy integrity and conscientious discharge of every duty." Stewart closes by writing: "I hereby cordially recommend her to all good people every where and especially to those to whom she may offer her service."<br /> <br /> A unique correspondence from an educated African-American woman getting even more professional education for her pharmacy career at the outset of the Roaring Twenties. February 29 unknown
198264026New York: Vantage Press 1982. First Edition. First Printing. Octavo 21cm; red cloth with titles stamped in black on spine; dustjacket; iv2031pp. Lengthily inscribed by the author on the front endpaper: "17 October 1986 / To Joe - Remember me gal I'm one of those fortunate birds who barely got through Josiah Cox's class. Now is that taking you back - or what!! Memories can also be memorable. Sometimes all we have to do is slow down and reflect. Good luck in to you and yours! Thomas D. Williams Mingo. Laid into this copy is a short ANS from Williams to the recipient along with his business card. Spine ends gently nudged faint paper-clip impression to upper margin of title page and the following two leaves; very Near Fine. Dustjacket is unclipped priced $8.95 with light wear to extremities and a few tiny tears; Near Fine. Debut novel by this African American author set during and after the Vietnam War with the story revolving around three central characters: Hubert Jackson a Black Marine private Lo Quan Duc a Vietcong guerilla and Tony Martinelli an Air Force pilot and son of a Mafia chieftain. Not in Blockson and not in Newman Vietnam War Literature: An Annotated Bibliography; OCLC notes 11 holdings. Vantage Press unknown
1950List1810Mostly Atlanta 1950. Leatherette album measuring 12 x 9 inches. With over 225 images most 4 ½ x 2 ¾ inches. Very well preserved and nearly complete with three empty slots about fine overall. Near Fine. A compelling visual record of the childhood of Mable Williams of Atlanta Georgia a high school student at Booker T. Washington High School in Atlanta the first public high school for African-American students in the state. Williams graduated from Booker T. Washington High School in 1953 per a newspaper article included here and would attend Spelman College. Composed mostly of snapshot photographs of her friends and family as a group the album provides a visual record of a vibrant network of family and friends in Atlanta during the time period. <br /> <br /> The album begins with a picture showing her as a girl alongside a picture of a house perhaps hers and traces her life through early adulthood through snapshots and family photographs. We find records of Williams performing at the Greater Atlanta Music Festival in 1950 as a representative of her high school. A newspaper article laid in shows Williams in a newspaper showing her graduation picture and stating that she will attend Spelman College in Atlanta in September of 1953. Pictures show her in New York City visiting a friend at N.Y.U. She would later marry Billy Reid a local jazz musician from Atlanta and would remain active in the Spelman community after graduating in 1957. <br /> <br /> Overall a very well preserved document of the African-American community in Atlanta during the 1940s and 1950s. unknown
200707541Toulouse, Mme g brunel , s.d. ; in-8, 133 pp., br. Edition abrégé- avec jaquette.
182934651London: John Murray Albemarle Street 1829. First Edition. Illustrated with a large folding map showing the campaigns of Alexander. Small 8vo handsomely bound in contemporary three-quarter calf over marbled paper covered boards the spine ruled in gilt and with a black morocco lettering label gilt. vi 402 pp. A well preserved copy handsome and in good order the binding tight and strong the text-block clean and fresh the map also in fine state. FIRST EDITION OF THIS VERY READABLE HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY OF ALEXANDER THE GREAT. Alexander III of Macedon Ancient Greek: Aléxandros most commonly known as Alexander the Great was king of the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedon. He succeeded his father Philip II to the throne in 336 BC at the age of 20 and spent most of his reign conducting a lengthy military campaign throughout Asia and Egypt. By the age of 30 he had created one of the largest empires in history stretching from Greece to northwestern India. He was undefeated in battle and is widely considered to be one of history's greatest and most successful military commanders.<br> Born in Pella Macedon Alexander was tutored by philosopher and polymath Aristotle until the age of 16. In 335 BC shortly after assuming the throne of Macedon he launched a campaign in the Balkans and reasserted control over Thrace and parts of Illyria before marching on the city of Thebes which was subsequently destroyed. Alexander then assumed leadership of the League of Corinth created by his father.<br> With this authority over all Greeks he launched a pan-Hellenic invasion of the Persian Achaemenid Empire in 334 BC and with it began a series of campaigns which lasted for ten years. Following his conquest of Asia Minor and a series of decisive battles particularly at Issus and Gaugamela the power of the Achaemenid Empire was broken. He subsequently overthrew Darius III and conquered the Achaemenid Empire in its entirety. After the fall of Persia the Macedonian Empire held a vast swath of territory between the Adriatic Sea and the Indus River. Alexander endeavored to reach the "ends of the world and the Great Outer Sea" and invaded India in 326 BC achieving an important victory over Porus an ancient Indian king of present-day Punjab at the Battle of the Hydaspes. Facing mutiny from troops he was eventually forced to turn back at the Beas River and later died in 323 BC in Babylon Mesopotamia the city which he had planned to make the capital of his empire while on his return to Greece. Alexander's death put an end to his planned invasion of Arabia. John Murray, Albemarle Street hardcover