The Timanous Story
Author: David Suitor
Publisher:
Published: 2010-09-10
Total Pages: 111
ISBN-13: 9780615567914
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →A history of Camp Timanous, a boys summer camp in Raymond, Maine founded by Luther Halsey Gulick
Author: David Suitor
Publisher:
Published: 2010-09-10
Total Pages: 111
ISBN-13: 9780615567914
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →A history of Camp Timanous, a boys summer camp in Raymond, Maine founded by Luther Halsey Gulick
Author:
Publisher:
Published: 1919
Total Pages: 434
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Vols. 5-15 include "Bibliography of child study," by Louis N. Wilson.
Author: Marilyn Weymouth Seguin
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Published: 2015-04-20
Total Pages: 160
ISBN-13: 1625853661
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Quirky characters and surprising events have shaped a robust community history throughout the Sebago Lakes region. Nathaniel Hawthorne's lost boyhood diary offers a glimpse into his early writing days on the shore of Sebago Lake. Henry Clay Barnabee, once called the funniest man of his time, brought his crew here for relaxing lakeside summers to rest up their vocal cords around the turn of the century. Discover the story behind a stolen Chinese statue that might just be responsible for a string of curses in Naples and misfortune on the shores of Long Lake. Marilyn Weymouth Seguin explores the unusual, the mysterious and the sometimes weird layers of regional history that have remained hidden--until now.
Author: Richard Kennedy
Publisher: Three Rivers Press
Published: 1995-01-17
Total Pages: 244
ISBN-13: 9780812924909
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Written with humor and spirit, this foolproof guide to finding the perfect summer experience has been fully updated and includes two all-new sections on choosing specialty and day camps. Features nine new camp profiles.
Author: William Sims Bainbridge
Publisher: Business Expert Press
Published: 2020-04-21
Total Pages: 125
ISBN-13: 1951527593
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →This innovative book explores the new relationships connecting computer science, social science, and the humanities. In our time of great and uncertain change, business, government, and education must partner in many forms of technical and cultural convergence–for the benefit of both human welfare and economic recovery. This innovative book explores the new relationships connecting computer science, social science, and the humanities. One popular form of artificial social intelligence, recommender systems, can become a far more valuable tool for research on the arts, beginning with movies and computer games, then extending to all the other art forms. While artificial intelligence can be a powerful tool for description of physical reality, it must become both social and cultural if it is to be a valued tool of human expression. Many new developments offer opportunities and challenges for both industry and government policy. This book shows how artificial intelligence and related information technologies can converge successfully with the social sciences and humanities, so together they can achieve maximum benefits for people.
Author: Charles Frederick Partington
Publisher:
Published: 1836
Total Pages: 942
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Author:
Publisher:
Published: 1928
Total Pages: 846
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →An illustrated monthly with popular articles about nature.
Author: Martin Duberman
Publisher: Knopf
Published: 2009-02-04
Total Pages: 1155
ISBN-13: 0307549674
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →A rich and revelatory biography of one of the crucial cultural figures of the twentieth century. Lincoln Kirstein’s contributions to the nation’s life, as both an intellectual force and advocate of the arts, were unparalleled. While still an undergraduate, he started the innovative literary journal Hound and Horn, as well as the modernist Harvard Society for Contemporary Art—forerunner of the Museum of Modern Art. He brought George Balanchine to the United States, and in service to the great choreographer’s talent, persisted, against heavy odds, in creating both the New York City Ballet and the School of American Ballet. Among much else, Kirstein helped create Lincoln Center in New York, and the American Shakespeare Festival in Stratford, Connecticut; established the pathbreaking Dance Index and the country’s first dance archives; and in some fifteen books proved himself a brilliant critic of art, photography, film, and dance. But behind this remarkably accomplished and renowned public face lay a complex, contradictory, often tortured human being. Kirstein suffered for decades from bipolar disorder, which frequently strained his relationships with his family and friends, a circle that included many notables, from W. H. Auden to Nelson Rockefeller. And despite being married for more than fifty years to a woman whom he deeply loved, Kirstein had a wide range of homosexual relationships throughout the course of his life. This stunning biography, filled with fascinating perceptions and incidents, is a major act of historical reclamation. Utilizing an enormous amount of previously unavailable primary sources, including Kirstein’s untapped diaries, Martin Duberman has rendered accessible for the first time a towering figure of immense complexity and achievement.