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Cleveland
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1380

Cleveland

Traces the history of the Ohio city from its days as a frontier settlement, through the coming of industrialization, to 1950.

A Treasury of Great Recipes
  • Language: en

A Treasury of Great Recipes

A snapshot of Vincent and Mary Price's life.

My Story
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 448

My Story

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1911
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

The Rail-road Forger and the Detectives
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 502

The Rail-road Forger and the Detectives

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1884
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Speak a Powerful Magic
  • Language: en

Speak a Powerful Magic

This beautiful and moving book, featuring a representative collection of Traveling Stanzas poetry illustrations, celebrates the tenth anniversary of this award-winning community arts project. Launched in 2009 as a collaboration between Kent State University's Wick Poetry Center and Professor Valora Renicker's visual communication design students, Traveling Stanzas pairs poems with striking graphic designs. The resulting images, in both print and digital forms, have been featured in galleries, community spaces, interactive media, and on regional and national mass transit. Speak a Powerful Magic features poems by school children, immigrants and refugees, patients and caregivers, and veterans, ...

Meet Me at Ray's
  • Language: en

Meet Me at Ray's

Stories and trivia from a beloved Kent Institution Meet Me at Ray's celebrates more than seventy-five successful years (and counting) of Ray's Place, a restaurant and bar located near the Kent State University campus in Kent, Ohio. Once referred to as the place "where the hustlers meet to hustle the hustlers," Ray's Place has survived decades of trends, changes, and events. Hundreds of students have worked there, thousands of customers have dined there, and millions of glasses have been raised there. In Meet Me at Ray's, author Patrick O'Connor features the stories, memories, and experiences of the legions of customers and employees who have made Ray's Place what it's been since 1937. Rooted...

Funky Winkerbean
  • Language: en

Funky Winkerbean

Collecting the socially aware syndicated comic strip.

Dear Vaccine
  • Language: en

Dear Vaccine

People from around the world reflect on the COVID-19 pandemic and vaccine through poetry When so much in our lives ground to a halt in the spring of 2020, no one knew how long the COVID-19 pandemic would last. After long months of shutdowns, social distancing, and worry, the first coronavirus vaccines were released in December 2020. In March 2021, the Wick Poetry Center at Kent State University and the University of Arizona Poetry Center launched the website for the Global Vaccine Poem project, inviting anyone to share experiences of the pandemic and vaccination through poetry. Dear Vaccine features selections from over 2,000 poetry submissions to the project, which come from all 50 states a...

Nuts About Squirrels
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 227

Nuts About Squirrels

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2019-02-28
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  • Publisher: McFarland

Squirrels have made numerous appearances in mass media over the years, from Beatrix Potter's Nutkin and Timmy Tiptoes, to Rocky the flying squirrel of The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle, and to Conker and Squirrel Girl of video game fame. This book examines how squirrel legends from centuries ago have found new life through contemporary popular culture, with a focus on the various portrayals of these wily creatures in books, newspapers, television, movies, public relations, advertising and video games.

Three Seconds in Munich
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 261

Three Seconds in Munich

One. Two. Three. That’s as long as it took to sear the souls of a dozen young American men, thanks to the craziest, most controversial finish in the history of the Olympics—the 1972 gold-medal basketball contest between the United States of America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, the world’s two superpowers at the time. The U.S. team, whose unbeaten Olympic streak dated back to when Adolf Hitler reigned over the Berlin Games, believed it had won the gold medal that September in Munich—not once, but twice. But it was the third time the final seconds were played that counted. What happened? The head of international basketball—flouting rules he himself had created—trot...