|
Showing 1 - 14 of
14 matches in All Departments
Father Francis Duffy, U. S. Army chaplain during World War One,
recalls his time fighting alongside the famous 69th Infantry
Regiment on the western front. Comprised mostly of Irish Catholic
volunteers who enlisted in and around New York City, the `Fighting
Sixty-Ninth' already had a long history and a reputation for
bravery and grit. Father Duffy is frank and upfront, recalling the
conversations and mood of his fellow troops during their training
and deployment to Europe. The bloodiness and terror of battles in
World War I is related, as are the many injuries and horrors of
that war. Despite the grim situation, Father Duffy never loses his
spirit. Indeed, the adversity faced by the young men in the 69th
gave opportunity for them to show their courage and great capacity
for morale. The witty humor and can-do attitude of the Irish is
also amply displayed, this liveliness countering the darker aspects
of war.
Complete collection of the 357 episodes from all 14 seasons of the original US soap opera chronicling the familial and political wranglings of the Ewing oil empire. The already tense relationship between the Ewings and their rivals, the Barnes, only gets worse when their children, Bobby Ewing (Patrick Duffy) and Pamela Barnes (Victoria Principal), run away to get married. Meanwhile, eldest Ewing son J.R.
For the first time since its invention over 500 years ago, the
print medium is being challenged as the primary means of recording
and communicating ideas. Indeed, within the printing industry
itself the advent of digital technology has rendered the craft of
hand setting metal type obsolete - the days of the skilled
compositor are now at an end. Patrick Duffy's work sets out to
examine the experiences of the skilled compositor in the period
1850 to 1914. Focusing primarily on the workplace and the workplace
institutions, it aims to explore issues of control, co-operation
and conflict in order to determine if the compositor did, as many
labour historians claim, belong to an aristocracy of labour.
Drawing on a wide range of source material from trade society
minutes to Parliamentary Papers, the author explores the diversity
of experience that compositors had in the workplace and the uneven
patterns of change that the trade experienced. The study throws
light on some of the issues raised by these changes: what part did
ancient craft traditions play in the maintenance of control in the
workplace? Why were women excluded from this particular work when
they were accepted in most other parts of the trade? To what extent
did trade society officials represent the aspirations of the rank
and file membership? Starting with an overview of the nature,
growth and development of the trade, the book goes on to examine
the occupational and social aspects of the compositors' experience,
with a chapter devoted to women's role in the printing trade.
Finally, the formation, functions and development of relevant
trades unions and employers' associations is discussed. This
insightful analysis of the experience of the skilled compositor
provides a valuable case study for labour historians at the same
time furthering our understanding of a somewhat neglected aspect of
printing history.
For the first time since its invention over 500 years ago, the
print medium is being challenged as the primary means of recording
and communicating ideas. Indeed, within the printing industry
itself the advent of digital technology has rendered the craft of
hand setting metal type obsolete - the days of the skilled
compositor are now at an end. Patrick Duffy's work sets out to
examine the experiences of the skilled compositor in the period
1850 to 1914. Focusing primarily on the workplace and the workplace
institutions, it aims to explore issues of control, co-operation
and conflict in order to determine if the compositor did, as many
labour historians claim, belong to an aristocracy of labour.
Drawing on a wide range of source material from trade society
minutes to Parliamentary Papers, the author explores the diversity
of experience that compositors had in the workplace and the uneven
patterns of change that the trade experienced. The study throws
light on some of the issues raised by these changes: what part did
ancient craft traditions play in the maintenance of control in the
workplace? Why were women excluded from this particular work when
they were accepted in most other parts of the trade? To what extent
did trade society officials represent the aspirations of the rank
and file membership? Starting with an overview of the nature,
growth and development of the trade, the book goes on to examine
the occupational and social aspects of the compositors' experience,
with a chapter devoted to women's role in the printing trade.
Finally, the formation, functions and development of relevant
trades unions and employers' associations is discussed. This
insightful analysis of the experience of the skilled compositor
provides a valuable case study for labour historians at the same
time furthering our understanding of a somewhat neglected aspect of
printing history.
Father Francis Duffy, U. S. Army chaplain during World War One,
recalls his time fighting alongside the famous 69th Infantry
Regiment on the western front. Comprised mostly of Irish Catholic
volunteers who enlisted in and around New York City, the `Fighting
Sixty-Ninth' already had a long history and a reputation for
bravery and grit. Father Duffy is frank and upfront, recalling the
conversations and mood of his fellow troops during their training
and deployment to Europe. The bloodiness and terror of battles in
World War I is related, as are the many injuries and horrors of
that war. Despite the grim situation, Father Duffy never loses his
spirit. Indeed, the adversity faced by the young men in the 69th
gave opportunity for them to show their courage and great capacity
for morale. The witty humor and can-do attitude of the Irish is
also amply displayed, this liveliness countering the darker aspects
of war.
Off the Line is the story of Frankie, a single salesman in his
20's, who calls a telephone dating service on a lonely summer's
Saturday night. When he invites a single mother named Sandy to his
home, he reluctantly lets her into his life as he reveals a secret
that will take both of their lives on a whole new course that will
change who they are forever. When a detective and a mafia boss
uncover the events which result from Frankie and Sandy's meeting,
all lives intersect with unpredictable results. Set in the year
2000, this powerful story leads us on a journey in which the
characters discover that friendship changes everything.
|
Wheeling (Paperback)
Sean Patrick Duffy, Paul Rinkes
|
R605
R548
Discovery Miles 5 480
Save R57 (9%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
The convergence of the Ohio River, the National Road, a remarkable
bridge, and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad transformed Wheeling
into a transportation hub. Fed by an influx of immigrant labor, the
city prospered, adding industrial muscle. But global economic
changes brought the machine to a sudden halt.
|
|