12 books found
by Edward J. O'Brien
2016 · anboco
INTRODUCTION. By the Editor THE EXCURSION. By Edwina Stanton Babcock (From The Pictorial Review) ONNIE. By Thomas Beer (From The Century Magazine) A CUP OF TEA. By Maxwell Struthers Burt(From Scribner's Magazine) LONELY PLACES. By Francis Buzzell (From The Pictorial Review) BOYS WILL BE BOYS. By Irvin S. Cobb (From The Saturday Evening Post) LAUGHTER. By Charles Caldwell Dobie (From Harper's Magazine) THE EMPEROR OF ELAM. By H. G. Dwight (From The Century Magazine) THE GAY OLD DOG. By Edna Ferber (From The Metropolitan Magazine) THE KNIGHT'S MOVE. By Katharine Fullerton Gerould (From The Atlantic Monthly) A JURY OF HER PEERS. By Susan Glaspell(From Every Week) THE BUNKER MOUSE. By Frederick Stuart Greene (From The Century Magazine) RAINBOW PETE. By Richard Matthews Hallet (From The Pictorial Review) GET READY THE WREATHS. By Fannie Hurst (From The Cosmopolitan Magazine) THE STRANGE-LOOKING MAN. By Fanny Kemble Johnson (From The Pagan) THE CALLER IN THE NIGHT. By Burton Kline (From The Stratford Journal) THE INTERVAL. By Vincent O'Sullivan (From The Boston Evening Transcript) A CERTAIN RICH MAN—." By Lawrence Perry (From Scribner's Magazine) THE PATH OF GLORY. By Mary Brecht Pulver (From The Saturday Evening Post) CHING, CHING, CHINAMAN. By Wilbur Daniel Steele (From The Pictorial Review) NONE SO BLIND. By Mary Synon (From Harper's Magazine) THE YEARBOOK OF THE AMERICAN SHORT STORY FOR 1917The Biographical Roll of Honor of American Short Stories for 1917 The Roll of Honor of Foreign Short Stories in American Magazines for 1917 The Best Books of Short Stories of 1917: A Critical Summary Volumes of Short Stories Published During 1917: An Index The Best Sixty-three American Short Stories of 1917: A Critical Summary Magazine Averages for 1917
Friends meet to have a party. The radio announces a declaration of war. Molina is the beautiful doctor and is admired by Cameron, the journalist who cannot bring himself to tell her of his love. Robert has sympathies with the Germans as he trained there as a medical student. He had seen the burning of books and had joined in the fun. Cameron, with his fellow correspondent, Geordie, covers the war in France and all its dreamlike qualities of a country, not able to comprehend it was involved in a war. Cameron sees the Russians fight the German war machine at Rostov. This is the first time Russians have a real plannot to stop the enemy but to slow him down. The world of espionage is ripe in Lisbon, one of the cities where information is more precious than gold. Where the Jewish people are desperate to escape but are at the mercy of greed. Cameron finds Molina is much stronger than he is in many ways and determined to live her life as she pleases. Fear in the night. To be trained to fight by stealth in the pleasant British countryside. A short flight by Lysander, and you are in enemy territory. The radio is vital but vulnerable and dangerous to possess. Even in war, life goes on just the same.
by Edward Harry Hauenstein
1919
by Erin E. Ruel, Erin Ruel, William Edward Wagner, Brian Joseph Gillespie
2015 · SAGE
Focusing on the use of technology in survey research, this book integrates both theory and application and covers important elements of survey research including survey design, implementation and continuing data management.