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brown's guide to georgia: Brown's Guide to the Georgia Outdoors John Wesley English, 1986 |
brown's guide to georgia: The Official Railway Guide , 1875 |
brown's guide to georgia: Regional Interest Magazines of the United States Sam Riley, Gary W. Selnow, 1990-11-30 In Regional Interest Magazines of the United States, Sam G. Riley and Gary W. Selnow focus on those magazines that direct their attention to a particular city or region and reach a fairly general readership intersted in entertainment and information. This work is a follow-up to their earlier Index to City and Regional Magazines of the United States. Titles are arranged alphabetically to facilitate access; each entry includes a historical essay on the magazine's founding, development, editorial policies, and content. Entries also include two sections that provide data on information sources and publication history, arranged in tabular form for ready reference. In choosing the magazines to be profiled, Riley and Selnow attempted to represent not only the biggest and most successful of this genre, but also some smaller and newer titles, plus significant earlier magazines that are no longer in print. Special care was also taken to achieve an even geographical spread. To attain greater accuracy, regional writers were enlisted to do the entries on their own region. These writers provide valuable information on how the various magazines began, how conditions have caused them to change, their problems, their editors and publishers, and their content as well as colorful and little known facts of their operation. Magazines were arranged alphabetically, and two informative appendices list the profiled titles by founding date and geographic location. This volume will be a valuable resource for students of magazine publishing history. |
brown's guide to georgia: Catalogue of Title-entries of Books and Other Articles Entered in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, Under the Copyright Law ... Wherein the Copyright Has Been Completed by the Deposit of Two Copies in the Office Library of Congress. Copyright Office, 1972 |
brown's guide to georgia: The Georgia Conservancy's Guide to the North Georgia Mountains Fred Brown, Nell Jones, 1991 |
brown's guide to georgia: Access , 1983 |
brown's guide to georgia: Kole's Guide Kaye Kole, 1982 |
brown's guide to georgia: Conversations with Flannery O'Connor Flannery O'Connor, 1987 Interviews with the author of Wise Blood, A Good Man Is Hard to Find, and Everything That Rises Must Converge |
brown's guide to georgia: Haunted Central Georgia Jim Miles, 2017 Every portion of Central Georgia is thoroughly haunted. Tobe, the ghost of Orna Villa in Oxford, had an appetite for biscuits. Angry spirits near Augusta drove a family from a beautiful old home. Paranormal entities in a home cobbled together from three old houses created a tapestry of supernatural events. People still seek advice from a fortuneteller dead half a century, and a long-deceased girl hitches a ride home on the same night each year. Author Jim Miles presents a ghost story from each of the fifty-one counties in this historic region. |
brown's guide to georgia: Catalog of Copyright Entries Library of Congress. Copyright Office, 1977 |
brown's guide to georgia: Canoeing & Kayaking Georgia Suzanne Welander, Bob Sehlinger, 2015-07-14 Covering thousands of miles of Georgia's waterways, Canoeing & Kayaking Georgia is the definitive guide to Georgia's whitewater to wilderness swamps--and everything in between. This updated edition incorporates the exhilarating new urban whitewater course in Columbus, and the recently established water trails that actively welcome recreational paddlers throughout the state. Now expanded to cover more waterways in Southwest Georgia--Kinchafoonee, Muckalee, and Ichawaynochaway Creeks--you only need one book to figure out where to float, no matter what type of boat you paddle. |
brown's guide to georgia: Prologue , 1994 |
brown's guide to georgia: Sweet Georgia Brown Cheryl Robinson, 2008-01-02 Meet Georgia Brown-a humble housewife determined to become a household name.... After eleven years of marriage, Georgia Brown is fed up with her husband, Marvin, a popular radio personality. It's not just because she suspects he's having an affair, or because she's suddenly expected to raise his thirteen-year-old daughter, Chloe-whom she never even knew existed. It's because of the comments he makes about her weight, their marriage, and their sex life...on national radio! Now, to save their marriage, Marvin invites Georgia to the station for an on-air rebuttal, having no idea it will launch her career. Or that what began as a battle at home will now be a blistering war for all to hear.... |
brown's guide to georgia: Cherokee Myths and Legends Terry L. Norton, 2014-11-14 Retelling 30 myths and legends of the Eastern Cherokee, this book presents the stories with important details providing a culturally authentic and historically accurate context. Background information is given within each story so the reader may avoid reliance on glossaries, endnotes, or other explanatory aids. The reader may thus experience the stories more as their original audiences would have. This approach to adapting traditional literature derives from ideas found in reader-response and translation theory and from research in cognitive psychology and sociolinguistics. |
brown's guide to georgia: Red River Blues Bruce Bastin, 1995 This story of the origins and evolution of the American blues tradition draws on oral history interviews and research into neglected primary sources. Book jacket. |
brown's guide to georgia: Beverly Buchanan Amelia Groom, 2021-02-02 An illustrated examination of Beverly Buchanan's 1981 environmental sculpture, which exists in an ongoing state of ruination. Beverly Buchanan's Marsh Ruins (1981) are large, solid mounds of cement and shell-based tabby concrete, yet their presence has always been elusive. Hiding in the tall grasses and brackish waters of the Marshes of Glynn, on the southeast coast of Georgia, the Marsh Ruins merge with their surroundings as they enact a curious and delicate tension between destruction and endurance. This volume offers an illustrated examination of Buchanan's environmental sculpture, which exists in an ongoing state of ruination. |
brown's guide to georgia: Souls Grown Deep: The tree gave the dove a leaf Paul Arnett, 2000 The first comprehensive overview of an important genre of American art, Souls Grown Deep explores the visual-arts genius of the black South. This first work in a multivolume study introduces 40 African-American self-taught artists, who, without significant formal training, often employ the most unpretentious and unlikely materials. Like blues and jazz artists, they create powerful statements amplifying the call for freedom and vision. |
brown's guide to georgia: Investigation of Senator Herman E. Talmadge United States. Congress. Senate. Select Committee on Ethics, 1979 |
brown's guide to georgia: Exhibits United States. Congress. Senate. Select Committee on Ethics, 1980 |
brown's guide to georgia: Communities In Economic Crisis John Gaventa, Barbara Ellen Smith, Alex W. Willingham, 1990-01-08 Hard times are no stranger to the people of Appalachia and the South. Earlier books have documented the low wages of the textile industry, boom-and-bust cycles of coal mining, and debt peonage of Southern agriculture that have established a heritage of poverty that endures. This book is a unique collection of essays by people who are actively involved in the efforts to challenge economic injustice in these regions and to empower the residents to build democratic alternatives. In the series Labor and Social Change, edited by Paula Rayman and Carmen Sirianni. |
brown's guide to georgia: Shy of the Squirrel's Foot Andy Martrich, 2024-11-11 The Jargon Society, a boundary-pushing publisher of poetry and experimental writing, was founded by Jonathan Williams (1929–2008) in 1951. Jargon quickly gained a reputation as the home of the poetic and literary avant-garde, including noted midcentury poets like Charles Olson and Lorine Niedecker. Williams himself looms large in this story as the publisher at Jargon until his death, making this book as much about his life and work as the press he founded, which today operates through the Black Mountain College Museum in Asheville, North Carolina. Andy Martrich authors this story in a manner befitting Jargon’s ethos of literary experimentation by focusing on the books the Society cataloged but never published. While it’s not uncommon for a small press to plan for books that don’t make it to publication, Martrich argues that Jargon’s incessant financial difficulties, coupled with Williams’s impressive network, makes its trail of unfinished projects unique and an ideal way to chronicle the press itself. Using archival research, interviews with volunteers at Jargon, and more, Martrich gives readers not only an intimate look into a Southern press and publisher but also an important history of modern and experimental literature in twentieth-century America. Shy of the Squirrel’s Foot includes an epilogue by Anne Midgette, an afterword by Nicole Raziya Fong, and Jargon’s complete annotated bibliography, which details every book the press published, compiled in one place for the first time. |
brown's guide to georgia: New Southern Cooking Nathalie Dupree, 2004-03-01 A collection of 350 recipes, ranging from biscuits to cobblers, emphasizes ease of preparation as it celebrates the best in traditional and new Southern cuisine, as well as the culinary influences that transformed Southern cookery. Reprint. |
brown's guide to georgia: One Book/Five Ways Association of American University Presses, 1994-05-02 A testament to the ingenuity of scholarly presses, One Book/Five Ways is a fascinating experiment in comparative publishing. This book records the history of a single manuscript, entitled No Time for Houseplants, submitted to five different university presses—Chicago, MIT, North Carolina, Texas, and Toronto—and then actually published by the University of Oklahoma Press. Each of the five model publishers agreed to treat the book as a real project accepted for publication and to compile a log of procedures they followed. These logs include correspondence, budgets, forms, layouts, and specifications, providing an insider's look at the path a manuscript takes through the various departments of each press, from editorial to marketing. With a new Foreword discussing changes in publishing since 1978 and an Afterword commenting on the actual publication of No Time for Houseplants, One Book/Five Ways is a unique educational tool for anyone interested in the publishing process. |
brown's guide to georgia: Encyclopedia of American Folk Art Gerard C. Wertkin, 2004-08-02 For a full list of entries, contributors, and more, visit the Encyclopedia of American Folk Art web site. This is the first comprehensive, scholarly study of a most fascinating aspect of American history and culture. Generously illustrated with both black and white and full-color photos, this A-Z encyclopedia covers every aspect of American folk art, encompassing not only painting, but also sculpture, basketry, ceramics, quilts, furniture, toys, beadwork, and more, including both famous and lesser-known genres. Containing more than 600 articles, this unique reference considers individual artists, schools, artistic, ethnic, and religious traditions, and heroes who have inspired folk art. An incomparable resource for general readers, students, and specialists, it will become essential for anyone researching American art, culture, and social history. |
brown's guide to georgia: Karen Brown's Portugal Karen Brown, Clare Brown, Cynthia Sauvage, June Eveleigh Brown, 2006 From the hustle-bustle of New York with its delicatessens and Broadway shows through Washington, the nation's historic capital to the Jersey shore and the Virginias. Explore the antique stores of the Hudson River Valley, visit with the Amish and the Mennonites. Explore the Civil War battlegrounds in the Heritage States. Eleven exciting itineraries and over 150 places to stay. |
brown's guide to georgia: Karen Brown's Italy B&B Karen Brown, Nicole Franchini, 2006 From nights in simple bed and breakfasts to luxurious villas that are rented by the week this guide features memorable places to stay. In cities such as Rome, Florence and Venice we include an excellent selection of albergos, pensiones and small hotels. Seven regional itineraries keep you on track through the romantic hilltowns of Tuscany, the beguiling backroads of Umbria, the Lake District, Amalfi coast and Sicily. |
brown's guide to georgia: Fighting for Atlanta Earl J. Hess, 2018-10-03 As William T. Sherman’s Union troops began their campaign for Atlanta in the spring of 1864, they encountered Confederate forces employing field fortifications located to take advantage of rugged terrain. While the Confederates consistently acted on the defensive, digging eighteen lines of earthworks from May to September, the Federals used fieldworks both defensively and offensively. With 160,000 troops engaged on both sides and hundreds of miles of trenches dug, fortifications became a defining factor in the Atlanta campaign battles. These engagements took place on topography ranging from Appalachian foothills to the clay fields of Georgia’s piedmont. Leading military historian Earl J. Hess examines how commanders adapted their operations to the physical environment, how the environment in turn affected their movements, and how Civil War armies altered the terrain through the science of field fortification. He also illuminates the impact of fighting and living in ditches for four months on the everyday lives of both Union and Confederate soldiers. The Atlanta campaign represents one of the best examples of a prolonged Union invasion deep into southern territory, and, as Hess reveals, it marked another important transition in the conduct of war from open field battles to fighting from improvised field fortifications. |
brown's guide to georgia: Karen Brown's Switzerland Clare Brown, Karen Brown, 2006 Travel by train, boat, bus or car visiting spectacular walled towns and dazzling mountain top villages. Rent a cow for the summer, hike beneath rugged mountain peaks, visit Switzerland's famous cheese and chocolate factories. Explore Geneva, Zurich and Lucerne. Places to stay from mountain chalets to elegant city hotels. |
brown's guide to georgia: From Civil War to Civil Rights, Alabama 1860–1960 , 1987-10-30 From Civil War to Civil Rights, Alabama 1860-1960 offers a collection of insightful and illuminating essays from The Alabama Review which trace the history of Alabama from the dramatic destruction of the Civil War to the turbulent early years of the Civil Rights movements. |
brown's guide to georgia: Psychic Intuition Nancy du Tertre, 2012-08-22 Author Nancy du Tertre, “the Skeptical PsychicTM,” takes you on a journey to find the answer to these questions and more in Psychic Intuition. She became psychic in mid-life after years of intensive study and training, and is now a believer that everyone has the potential to tap into their intuition and understand the world at a deeper level. Psychic Intuition bridges the gap between skeptics who can analyze but don’t experience psychic phenomena, and believers who have the experiences but lack the ability to analyze. This book explains, for the first time, how psychic ability works in the brain. |
brown's guide to georgia: Built to Last Stanley Turkel CMHS ISHC, 2013-09-05 Built to Last: 100+ Year-Old Hotels East of the Mississippi is a sequel to my 2011 book, Built To Last: 100+ Year-Old Hotels in New York. It has 86 chapters, one for each century-old hotel (of 50 rooms or more) east of the Mississippi River and each is illustrated by an antique postcard. The Foreword was written by Joseph McInerney, CHA, President of the American Hotel & Lodging Association. The book has been accepted for promotion, distribution and sale by the American Hotel & Lodging Educational Institute. My research into the histories of these hotels turned up fascinating stories about single-minded developers, brilliant and accidental architects, dedicated owners, famous and infamous guests and even the story of an underground bunker-shelter the size of two football fields built under a hotel to house the U.S. Government in the event of a nuclear war. |
brown's guide to georgia: Backpacker , 1978-12 Backpacker brings the outdoors straight to the reader's doorstep, inspiring and enabling them to go more places and enjoy nature more often. The authority on active adventure, Backpacker is the world's first GPS-enabled magazine, and the only magazine whose editors personally test the hiking trails, camping gear, and survival tips they publish. Backpacker's Editors' Choice Awards, an industry honor recognizing design, feature and product innovation, has become the gold standard against which all other outdoor-industry awards are measured. |
brown's guide to georgia: River of Cliffs: A Linville Gorge History Christopher Blake, 2017 Linville Gorge is one of the few examples of old-growth forest in the Blue Ridge Mountains and draws thousands of visitors every year. The Gorge was approved by Congress in 1964. The Grand Canyon of the East was named for William Linville, a member of a party of long hunters in 1766 who fell victim to a Shawnee attack. The difficult terrain made early settlements nearly impossible and logging unprofitable. Unique rock formations, from Table Rock to the Chimneys, and miles of trails attract thousands of climbers, hikers and adventure seekers each year. In this revised edition, author Christopher Blake draws on American colonial reports, travel writings, diaries, fiction and numerous archival records to weave a narrative fabric of an American treasure. |
brown's guide to georgia: Additions to the National Wilderness Preservation System United States. Congress. House. Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs. Subcommittee on Public Lands and National Parks, 1982 |
brown's guide to georgia: Karen Brown's Germany Karen Brown, 2006 Take your pick: from the Black Forest to Berlin, cuckoo clocks to Lederhosen, castles of the Rhine to Dresden Palaces our itineraries guide you through the fascinating country that is Germany. Explore the northern beaches of Sylt, experience Oktoberfest and marvel at mad King Ludwig's castles. Over 135 places to stay including 12th century castles to a simple vintners house on the banks of the Mosel. |
brown's guide to georgia: Karen Brown's Austria Karen Brown, 2006 Austrian's warmth of welcome and their love of preserving the best of their heritage produces a wonderful travel experience. Many visitors see only Vienna, Salzburg and Innsbruck, all wonderful cities but this exquisite small country has much more to offer. This guide provides you with information on attractions both on and off the beaten track. Live like royalty in a hilltop castle, relax on the shores of the emerald-green Weissensee, ride a marvelous narrow-gauge train, slip into an ancient salt mine on a wooden slide, ski world-class slopes or wander over well-marked trails into hidden hamlets. |
brown's guide to georgia: Karen Brown's Mexico Clare Brown, Karen Brown, Jane Stevenson Day, 2006 The perfect book for the well-heeled, independent traveler. Everything you need to know to plan a successful trip: drive your car, rent a car, travel by luxury bus. What to see and where to stay. Mexico is a dream destination: beautiful beaches, archaeological treasures, fascinating Colonial towns, colorful markets, breathtaking whale watching, butterfly reserves, fine golf courses, outstanding museums, delicious food, glorious cathedrals, and cosmopolitan cities. Beyond all these attractions Mexico offers a dazzling variety of accommodations from elegant city hotels to thatched-roof cottages on deserted beaches. |
brown's guide to georgia: Karen Brown's France B&B Karen Brown, Clare Brown, 2006 Exceptional places to stay & itineraries 2007. |
brown's guide to georgia: Gray's Reef National Marine Sanctuary Management Plan , 1983 |
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Brown is a leading research university, home to world-renowned faculty and also an innovative educational …
Academics - Brown University
Brown offers more than 80 programs, what some colleges call majors. You'll sample courses in a wide range of …
Admission and Aid - Brown University
Brown is renowned for its distinctive undergraduate experience rooted in its flexible yet rigorous Open …
About Brown - Brown University
Brown is a leading nonprofit research university distinct for its student-centered learning and deep sense of …
Life at Brown - Brown University
At Brown, the brightest and most exceptional students and scholars from across the globe challenge and …