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Oxford University Press#Clarendon Press; This page is a redirect. The following categories are used to track and monitor this redirect: From a publisher's imprint: ...
The Clarendon Institute (or the Clarendon Press Institute) is a building in Walton Street, central Oxford, England. In 1891, Horace Hart (1840–1916) of the Clarendon Press (now Oxford University Press ) proposed an institute to provide a place providing relaxation and further education facilities for staff at the Press. [ 1 ]
His father Lloyd was also a sports fan and read him the sports section of the newspaper at a young age, hoping it would nurture his interest in other literature. [ 1 ] : 8:18 [ 4 ] Instead, Michaels became interested in sports, though he described hockey as a "late-developing interest" growing up in Western Pennsylvania, where football was the ...
The Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1848–1918 is a scholarly history book by the English historian A. J. P. Taylor and was part of "The Oxford History of Modern Europe", published by the Clarendon Press in Oxford in October 1954.
Archibald MacLaren. Archibald MacLaren (29 January 1820 – 19 February 1884) or Maclaren was a Scottish fencing master, gymnast, educator and author [1] who in 1858 opened a well-equipped gymnasium at the University of Oxford where from 1860 to 1861 he trained 12 sergeants and their officer who then disseminated his training regimen into the newly formed Army Gymnastic Staff (AGS) for the ...
John Leonard Powers (born November 6, 1948) is a journalist and author who wrote for The Boston Globe for more than four decades in the Sports, Metro, Sunday Magazine, and Living sections and later became a freelance correspondent for the newspaper.