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Addie Wyatt:

2022
This chapter explores the long trajectory of Addie Wyatt’s activism and leadership in the organized labor movement and women’s movement, both before and after the 1977 National Women’s Conference. Wyatt, an African American female labor leader and civil rights activist, was appointed to the National Commission on the Observance of International Women’s
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Cameras at the Addy

Journal of Media Practice, 2003
This photo-essay is about aspects of contemporary urban childhood. Its origins lie in a piece of fieldwork carried out in a children's playground in Manchester. I was interested in understanding how children explored and used space; and I wanted to find ways of working with children that gave them some agency in the research process.
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Addie Kinsinger: Memories of Addie

2019
Addie Kinsinger served AECT and all its members for more than seven decades. Her dedication to the teaching/learning profession and her love for the educators that kept that community of educators in the classroom lived in her heart. She was driven to serve.
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Ad Addis

Africa e Mediterraneo, 2020
A walk through the streets of Addis Abeba, passing by cafes and monuments, memories and traces of the colonial past. The final destination is a famous Italian restaurant, Castelli. There are many new and very good restaurants in town, but this one – elegant with an old-style – is an institution in Addis.
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ADDIE in the Library

Community & Junior College Libraries, 2006
Abstract Shifts in networked technologies have removed the need to store information geographically close to students, staff, and faculty on college campuses. This shift has put libraries on the offense to remain vital to the campuses they serve.
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Addis Ababa

Abstract Addis Ababa was founded as a military garrison in 1887 by the Amhara king and later Emperor Menilek II of Ethiopia. Its foundation was the result of a long historical process in which Christian Ethiopia (then known as Abyssinia) expanded southward, culminating in large-scale conquest and the creation of the largest empire in ...
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Margretta Eleanor Addis-Jones

BMJ, 2016
Born into a house that frequently provided hospitality to Aneurin Bevan, the local MP, and perhaps influenced by him, Margretta Eleanor Addis-Jones (“Lynne”) was always anxious to practise medicine. She spent the war years being schooled at Malvern Girls’ College in rural Worcestershire, away from the bombs, before proceeding to study classics at St ...
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