Academic literature on the topic 'New York Free Circulating Library'

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Journal articles on the topic "New York Free Circulating Library"

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McDonough, Kristin. "The Science, Industry and Business Library of the New York Public Library: A High-Technology Research Centre for High-Volume Public Use." Alexandria: The Journal of National and International Library and Information Issues 10, no. 1 (April 1998): 39–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/095574909801000103.

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In 1996, its centenary year, the New York Public Library opened its Science, Industry and Business Library (SIBL) in a former department store in mid-town Manhattan, occupying 160,000 square feet of usable floor space. The building, which has received six awards, is designed to be both attractive and highly functional. The $100 million project was funded by a combination of private and government funds. The concept is of a specialized high technology research centre with unparallelled older and current print collections (1.2 million books and serials) and access to electronic resources, which also incorporates a 50,000-item circulating library of popular print, audiovisual and multimedia materials. All of the resources are available to the public at no charge. Much of the collection is on open access. There are several professionally staffed information service points. The provision of extensive training sessions is proving to be an outstanding success, more than 20,000 people having registered since SIBL opened. A three-year grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation has enabled SIBL to train information professionals in the three crucial areas of technological competence, customer service and professional development.
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Regalado, Mariana, and Maura A. Smale. "“I Am More Productive in the Library Because It’s Quiet”: Commuter Students in the College Library." College & Research Libraries 76, no. 7 (November 1, 2015): 899–913. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/crl.76.7.899.

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This article discusses commuter students’ experiences with the academic library, drawn from a qualitative study at the City University of New York. Undergraduates at six community and baccalaureate colleges were interviewed to explore how they fit schoolwork into their days, and the challenges and opportunities they encountered. Students identified physical and environmental features that informed their ability to successfully engage in academic work in the library. They valued the library as a distraction-free place for academic work, in contrast to the constraints they experienced in other places—including in their homes and on the commute.
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Parrucci, Jennifer. "Metadata at The New York Times : organizing and leveraging news content from 1851 to today." Indexer 41, no. 4 (December 20, 2023): 349–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/index.2023.43.

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The New York Times has been a leader in metadata since the birth of The New York Times Index in 1913. Today, a team of taxonomists uses natural-language processing and a human-in-the-loop model to organize, analyze, and push content to readers. Looking to the future, the taxonomy team hopes to free up resources with the help of new technologies so that the metadata practices already in place can be expanded to other areas beyond core news content.
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Halbirk, Mads, Helene Nørrelund, Niels Møller, Ole Schmitz, Liv Gøtzsche, Roni Nielsen, Jens Erik Nielsen-Kudsk, et al. "Suppression of circulating free fatty acids with acipimox in chronic heart failure patients changes whole body metabolism but does not affect cardiac function." American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology 299, no. 4 (October 2010): H1220—H1225. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00475.2010.

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Circulating free fatty acids (FFAs) may worsen heart failure (HF) due to myocardial lipotoxicity and impaired energy generation. We studied cardiac and whole body effects of 28 days of suppression of circulating FFAs with acipimox in patients with chronic HF. In a randomized double-blind crossover design, 24 HF patients with ischemic heart disease [left ventricular ejection fraction: 26 ± 2%; New York Heart Association classes II ( n = 13) and III ( n = 5)] received 28 days of acipimox treatment (250 mg, 4 times/day) and placebo. Left ventricular ejection fraction, diastolic function, tissue-Doppler regional myocardial function, exercise capacity, noninvasive cardiac index, NH2-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-pro-BNP), and whole body metabolic parameters were measured. Eighteen patients were included for analysis. FFAs were reduced by 27% in the acipimox-treated group [acipimox vs. placebo ( day 28 − day 0): −0.10 ± 0.03 vs. +0.01 ± 0.03 mmol/l, P < 0.01]. Glucose and insulin levels did not change. Acipimox tended to increase glucose and decrease lipid utilization rates at the whole body level and significantly changed the effect of insulin on substrate utilization. The hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp M value did not differ. Global and regional myocardial function did not differ. Exercise capacity, cardiac index, systemic vascular resistance, and NT-pro-BNP were not affected by treatment. In conclusion, acipimox caused minor changes in whole body metabolism and decreased the FFA supply, but a long-term reduction in circulating FFAs with acipimox did not change systolic or diastolic cardiac function or exercise capacity in patients with HF.
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Bischoff, Karyn, Gregory Finstad, Michael Cary, Joseph Hillebrandt, Jennifer Moiseff, and Hollis Nancy Erb. "Variation in blood selenium and serum vitamin E in reindeer (Rangifer tarandus tarandus) described by location, husbandry, and season." Rangifer 37, no. 1 (January 11, 2017): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.7557/2.37.1.3782.

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Reindeer (Rangifer tarandus tarandus) are important livestock for arctic and subarctic herders, including those in North America, but as climate change affects traditional herding practices, alternative methods of rearing (such as captive rearing) will likely become common. Proper nutrition is critical in livestock production, but there is minimal information available on circulating nutrient concentrations in reindeer, who are adapted to a unique climate. This study looks at 2 important antioxidants. Blood and serum were taken from female reindeer from three herds: a free-ranging herd from the Seward Peninsula, Alaska (AK), during the summer, and two captive herds (one in Fairbanks, AK and one in Upstate New York (NY) during the summer and winter. Selenium (Se) and vitamin E concentrations were described stratified on season (when possible), location, and management practices (captive or free range). Herd mean values across seasons for Se ranged from 2.42 to 4.88 µmol/L. Herd mean values across seasons for vitamin E ranged from 5.27 to 6.89 µmol/L.
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Cocciolo, Anthony. "Challenges to born-digital institutional archiving: the case of a New York art museum." Records Management Journal 24, no. 3 (November 11, 2014): 238–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/rmj-04-2014-0023.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to highlight the challenges to born-digital institutional archiving using a New York Archive Museum (NYAM) as a case. Design/methodology/approach – The digital record-keeping practices at NYAM were studied using three data sources: focus groups with staff, totaling 81 individuals, or approximately one-third of all staff; analysis of network file storage; and analysis of digital records in archival storage, or specifically removable media in acid-free archive boxes. Findings – This case study indicates that the greatest challenges to born-digital institutional archiving are not necessarily technological but social and cultural. Or rather, the challenge is getting individuals to transfer material to a digital archive so that it can undergo the technological transformations needed to ensure its long-term availability. However, transfer is impeded by a variety of factors which can be addressed through education, infrastructure development and proactive appraisal for permanent retention. Practical implications – This paper highlights the challenges to born-digital institutional archiving, yet notes that these challenges can be overcome by following a multi-pronged approach. Originality/Value – This paper outlines the challenges to born-digital institutional archiving, which is not often discussed in the literature outside of the context of higher education.
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Milin-Lazovic, Jelena, Petar Madzarevic, Nina Rajovic, Vladimir Djordjevic, Nikola Milic, Sonja Pavlovic, Nevena Veljkovic, Natasa M. Milic, and Dejan Radenkovic. "Meta-Analysis of Circulating Cell-Free DNA’s Role in the Prognosis of Pancreatic Cancer." Cancers 13, no. 14 (July 6, 2021): 3378. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13143378.

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Introduction: The analysis of cell-free DNA (cfDNA) for genetic abnormalities is a promising new approach for the diagnosis and prognosis of pancreatic cancer patients. Insights into the molecular characteristics of pancreatic cancer may provide valuable information, leading to its earlier detection and the development of targeted therapies. Material and Methods: We conducted a systematic review and a meta-analysis of studies that reported cfDNA in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). The studies were considered eligible if they included patients with PDAC, if they had blood tests for cfDNA/ctDNA, and if they analyzed the prognostic value of cfDNA/ctDNA for patients’ survival. The studies published before 22 October 2020 were identified through the PubMED, EMBASE, Web of Science and Cochrane Library databases. The assessed outcomes were the overall (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS), expressed as the log hazard ratio (HR) and standard error (SE). The summary of the HR effect size was estimated by pooling the individual trial results using the Review Manager, version 5.3, Cochrane Collaboration. The heterogeneity was assessed using the Cochran Q test and I2 statistic. Results: In total, 48 studies were included in the qualitative review, while 44 were assessed in the quantitative synthesis, with the total number of patients included being 3524. Overall negative impacts of cfDNA and KRAS mutations on OS and PFS in PDAC (HR = 2.42, 95% CI: 1.95–2.99 and HR = 2.46, 95% CI: 2.01–3.00, respectively) were found. The subgroup analysis of the locally advanced and metastatic disease presented similar results (HR = 2.51, 95% CI: 1.90–3.31). In the studies assessing the pre-treatment presence of KRAS, there was a moderate to high degree of heterogeneity (I2 = 87% and I2 = 48%, for OS and PFS, respectively), which was remarkably decreased in the analysis of the studies measuring post-treatment KRAS (I2 = 24% and I2 = 0%, for OS and PFS, respectively). The patients who were KRAS positive before but KRAS negative after treatment had a better prognosis than the persistently KRAS-positive patients (HR = 5.30, 95% CI: 1.02–27.63). Conclusion: The assessment of KRAS mutation by liquid biopsy can be considered as an additional tool for the estimation of the disease course and outcome in PDAC patients.
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Wang, Chengzhi. "PRED Bank 3.020036PRED Bank 3.0. New York, NY: United Nations Population Division 2002. US$75.00 (free to developing country institutions)." Online Information Review 27, no. 3 (June 2003): 214–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/14684520310481481.

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Zeng, Liqiong, XiaoLong Liang, Qin Liu, and Zhu Yang. "The Predictive Value of Circulating Tumor Cells in Ovarian Cancer: A Meta Analysis." International Journal of Gynecologic Cancer 27, no. 6 (July 2017): 1109–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/igc.0000000000000459.

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ObjectiveStudies have confirmed that patients with circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in their peripheral blood (PB) or disseminated tumor cells (DTCs) in bone marrow (BM) might have bad prognosis. In this paper, we discuss whether CTCs/DTCs would be an appropriate biomarker to predict the prognosis of ovarian cancer.MethodsWe systematically searched PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane library, and Chinese National Knowledge Infrastructure to collect relevant studies published from the time the database were created to February 2014. Studies quality was assessed by Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. The effect size was estimated by hazard ratio (HR) and corresponding 95% confidence interval (95% CI). Meta-analysis was conducted with STATA Version 12.0.ResultsEight studies of 1184 patients were included in the final analysis. In the PB group, it showed that patients with positive CTCs had significantly shorter overall survival and disease-free survival than patients with negative CTCs (HR, 2.09; CI, 1.13–3.88 and HR, 1.72; CI, 1.32–2.25, respectively). The same result was shown with DTCs in the BM group (HR, 1.61; CI, 1.27–2.04 and HR, 1.44; CI, 1.15–1.80, respectively). We also discussed the influence of CTCs/DTCs on International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage, pathological grade with odds ratio and 95% CI. However, it did not show any statistical significance.ConclusionsThe CTCs/DTCs might be a new biomarker to predict the prognosis of ovarian cancer. Future studies are needed to confirm this consequence.
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Deutch, Samantha. "ARt Image Exploration Space (ARIES): A response to the image needs of art library patrons." Art Libraries Journal 46, no. 1 (January 2021): 7–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/alj.2020.31.

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AbstractARt Image Exploration Space (ARIES) is a free, cloud-based dynamic environment offering art historians and others an extensive array of practical tools for analysing images. It is the product of a successful collaboration between art historians, librarians, computer scientists, and engineers from the Frick Art Reference Library, New York University's Tandon School of Engineering, and Brazil's Universidade Federal Fluminense. ARIES is a powerful tool for art historians, both replicating and augmenting traditional methods they have long-used to study images.1 With the advent of the prevalent use of digital photos, art historians lacked the technology capable of replacing what they had previously been able to accomplish in the analogue world. Wood Ruby and Deutch realized that art historians needed an out-of-the-box solution that didn't require extensive knowledge of other disciplines (computer science and engineering). The result of successful collaborations and a generous donation, ARIES is now available in BETA form at www.artimageexplorationspace.com.
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Books on the topic "New York Free Circulating Library"

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Slyck, Abigail Ayres Van. Free to all: Carnegie libraries & American culture, 1890-1920. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995.

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Guarnieri, Patrizia. Intellettuali in fuga dall’Italia fascista. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-5518-648-3.

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Intellectuals Displaced from Fascist Italy is a bilingual (IT/ EN), free access and in progress website that draws attention to the migration of intellectuals during Fascism. Italy is usually considered a land of poor and uneducated migrants. But during the twenty years of Fascism, especially after the anti-Jewish laws but even before, professionals, students and scholars, including foreigners, expatriated alone or with families for political and racial reasons to the Americas, England, Mandatory Palestine, Switzerland. It is a limited but important phenomenon of brain drain, which in the case of Italy has yet to be investigated. Who were the people who decided to leave in search of freedom, work, and then salvation, and what did they do? Their names and stories were cancelled. This work attempts to reconstruct their lives thanks to foreign archives, letters, scattered memories and hundreds of photos. What difficulties did they face in their host countries? How many of them returned? The stories speak of devastating losses to the detriment of the country, of responsibilities and injustices, but also of resources and talents of Italian culture, of commitment and determination. This 2nd edition contains some new features, improves consultation with research functions and, as regards content, it enhances family mobility from a generational and gender perspective. The project was promoted by the University of Florence and has been supported by the Regione Toscana and by various institutes, with the sponsorship of the New York Public Library; Council for At-Risk Academics, London; J. Calandra Italian American Institute, CUNY; The Central Archives for the History of Jewish People, Jerusalem, UCEI and others.
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Guarnieri, Patrizia. Intellectuals Displaced from Fascist Italy. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/979-12-215-0032-5.

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Intellectuals Displaced from Fascist Italy is a bilingual (IT/ EN), free access and in progress website that draws attention to the migration of intellectuals during Fascism. Italy is usually considered a land of poor and uneducated migrants. But during the twenty years of Fascism, especially after the anti-Jewish laws but even before, professionals, students and scholars, including foreigners, expatriated alone or with families for political and racial reasons to the Americas, England, Mandatory Palestine, Switzerland. It is a limited but important phenomenon of brain drain, which in the case of Italy has yet to be investigated. Who were the people who decided to leave in search of freedom, work, and then salvation, and what did they do? Their names and stories were cancelled. This work attempts to reconstruct their lives thanks to foreign archives, letters, scattered memories and hundreds of photos. What difficulties did they face in their host countries? How many of them returned? The stories speak of devastating losses to the detriment of the country, of responsibilities and injustices, but also of resources and talents of Italian culture, of commitment and determination. This 2nd edition contains some new features, improves consultation with research functions and, as regards content, it enhances family mobility from a generational and gender perspective. The project was promoted by the University of Florence and has been supported by the Regione Toscana and by various institutes, with the sponsorship of the New York Public Library; Council for At-Risk Academics, London; J. Calandra Italian American Institute, CUNY; The Central Archives for the History of Jewish People, Jerusalem, UCEI and others.
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Printed books and manuscripts including miniature books ...: Monday, May 11, 1987 ... Christie's, 502 Park Avenue at 59th Street, New York, New York 10022. New York, New York: Christie, Manson & Woods International Inc., 1987.

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Bronte, Charlotte. Jane Eyre: Abridged and Retold, with Notes and Free Audiobook. Geddes & Grosset, 2015.

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Free to all: Carnegie libraries and the transformation of American culture, 1886-1917. Ann Arbor, Mich: University Microfilms International, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "New York Free Circulating Library"

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"Circulating Collection Style: Pictures as Documents at the New York Public Library." In Picture-Work, 25–78. The MIT Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.7551/mitpress/14086.003.0005.

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Faherty, Duncan. "“UNIVERSAL EMANCIPATION!”." In The Haitian Revolution in the Early Republic of Letters, 143–70. Oxford University PressOxford, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192889157.003.0006.

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Abstract The chapter positions New York as a microcosm of national anxieties by surveying how the local press connected domestic insurrection to rumors of Haitian intrigue. Beginning in 1799, New York enacted a series of gradual Emancipation Acts that finally “freed” all enslaved people in 1827. Unsurprisingly, racism within the state increased as white citizens openly questioned what it would mean for formerly enslaved people to become “free.” The chapter culminates by reading the first American vampire tale which was itself torn from the pages of New York’s periodical press. The pseudonymous The Black Vampyre (1819) openly riffs on a multiplicity of discourses about African American emancipation and fears about international Black solidarity. Considering the text alongside the anti-Black anxieties circulating in the New York press, the chapter unpacks how the domestic implications sensationalized in The Black Vampyre parallel contemporaneous periodical accounts as a means of grounding its otherwise outlandish plot.
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Niven, John. "Mixed Results." In Salmon P. Chase, 314–29. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195046533.003.0024.

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Abstract On an evening in late January 1863 Chase departed from his customary routine of relaxing with a book in his library. Instead he was writing letters at his table and he was in a grim mood, which matched the disagreeable weather outside the window. It had been a month since that ugly interlude in the White House when Lincoln exploded so adroitly the case Chase had been building up against the administration. He still felt acutely the humiliation he had suffered on that occasion. And he was still seeking to justify a stand he believed was correct. If he did not himself write, he certainly encouraged a memorial urging a reconstruction of the Cabinet that had been circulating among radical groups in New York for the past two weeks.
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Brown, Jeannette. "Marie Maynard Daly." In African American Women Chemists. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199742882.003.0007.

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Dr. Marie Maynard Daly was the first African American woman chemist to receive a PhD in chemistry. In addition, she was part of a research team that was working on the precursors to DNA . Marie was born Marie Maynard Daly on April 16, 1921, to Ivan C. Daly and Helen Page, the first of three children. Her father, who had emigrated from the West Indies, received a scholarship from Cornell University to study chemistry; however, he had to drop out because he could not pay his room and board, and he became a postal worker. Daly’s interest in science came from her father’s encouragement and the desire to live his dream.” He later encouraged his daughter to pursue his dream, even though she was a woman and had brothers who were twins. In the 1920s, as a result of the women’s suffrage movement, some women began to aspire to achievement in areas outside the domestic sphere. Marie’s mother encouraged reading and spent many hours reading to her and her brothers. Marie’s maternal grandfather had an extensive library, including books about scientists, such as The Microbe Hunters by Paul De Kruff; she read that book and many others like it. Growing up in Queens, one of the boroughs of New York City, she attended the local public school, where she excelled. She was able to attend Hunter College High School, an all girls’ school affiliated with Hunter College for women. Since this was a laboratory school for Hunter College, the faculty encouraged the girls to excel in their studies. Since Marie had an aptitude for science, the teachers there encouraged her to study college-level chemistry while still in high school. One of the many advantages of living in New York City during that time was that students who had good grades could enter one of the tuition-free colleges run by the City of New York. As a result, Daly enrolled in Queens College, then one of the newest institutions in the City College system, in Flushing, New York.
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Gilmore, Lois. "“Where Childhood’s dreams are twined”: Virginia Woolf and the Literary Heritage of Lewis Carroll." In Virginia Woolf and Heritage. Liverpool University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5949/liverpool/9781942954422.003.0017.

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Philadelphia is celebrating 150 years of Alice in Wonderland with public programming and multiple exhibitions beginning in 2015 through 2016. There are lectures, tea parties, hands-on tours at the Rosenbach of the Free Library of Philadelphia, talks of medical oddities of Alice, costume parties, and more. Carroll’s original manuscript is traveling around the East coast in pop-up displays in Philadelphia and New York. This focus on Lewis Carroll’s work provides an intriguing opportunity to examine Woolf’s review, which was written on the occasion of the Nonesuch Press issue of the complete works in 1939. Woolf ‘s response to Carroll’s legacy, in the midst of what she calls “non-war” and “written in barren horror,” hones in on the construction of childhood, the relationship of the child to the adult, and the illusory nature of the author. Woolf’s diary entries, documenting what she calls the many distractions surrounding her, point to the irony of composition and the world Carroll creates. In this paper I will approach these topics and consider the ways in which Woolf reflects on, engages with, and represents the connections and disconnections with the literary heritage of Alice and her enduring appeal.
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Dusinberre, William. "Manigaults and Heywards." In Them Dark Days, 28–47. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195090215.003.0002.

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Abstract In the first part of the nineteenth century-even after slavery had been put on the road to extinction in the North-a number of great Southern planters resided in Pennsylvania, New York, and Rhode Island, and married into the top stratum of Northern society. Charles Izard Manigault was an offshoot of this transsectional alliance, his maternal grandfather, Ralph Izard (who later became a U.S. senator from South Carolina), having married into New York’s well-known DeLancey family (see genealogical table 4). Margaret Izard, the eldest child of this union, spent twelve impressionable early years in Europe,1 and she wrote and spoke French as fluently as English. Unusually well educated, she implanted a French-speaking tradition so firmly into the family of her husband Gabriel Manigault II that their son Charles Manigault and their grandson Louis Manigault both cherished it. Margaret Izard Manigault regarded herself (through her DeLancey mother) as a Northern woman; and finding Charleston dull, she finally persuaded her husband to move to the North in 1805. The family soon acquired an estate north of Philadelphia. And from about 1809 until her death in 1824, Margaret established a free-thinking salon in Philadel-phia itself-her winter residence there becoming (according to a contemporary) “the resort ofall the [city’s] intellectual and refined society. [The orthodox in Philadelphia considered her] to have had no very good influence on the religious sentiments of her entourage.” Her son Charles Manigault further unsettled matters when, upon returning from South America in 1823, he introduced a “Spanish dance ... , the first insinuation of the waltz into [Philadelphia’s] precise society.” Margaret bequeathed to Charles, her favorite son, her library of French and English classics; and he inherited from her his cultivated tastes.
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Conference papers on the topic "New York Free Circulating Library"

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Dupuis, Nicholas, Jakob Vowinckel, Daniel Heinzmann, and Claudia Escher. "Abstract B010: A survey of circulating biomarkers in subjects with NSCLC using library-based data independent acquisition mass spectrometry reveals host immune response mechanisms." In Abstracts: Fourth CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR International Cancer Immunotherapy Conference: Translating Science into Survival; September 30 - October 3, 2018; New York, NY. American Association for Cancer Research, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/2326-6074.cricimteatiaacr18-b010.

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