He reckons it will take 18 months to get the 4,000 programs in the software library built, and has taken the CD off the market. |
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A library that knowingly fails to comply with certification must reimburse the funds and discounts received for that period. |
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No self-respecting physicist goes to an actual library any more, much less uses a Xerox machine. |
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In the library of the mind, all knowledge on any topic came up by simply reflecting on it. |
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In Haworth she saw that the library had been redecorated, recarpeted and refurnished, and provided with many new books. |
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The biggest reference library was the Lenin Library in Moscow, developed from an 1862 foundation. |
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Why not do all that at its present site, where it is close to the reference library, the Minster library and the art gallery? |
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After joining the service in 1966, Mrs Lord has worked in the central children's library, the reference library and has been a branch librarian. |
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If only they had walked into the library that day so long ago and met the prince, sitting there in worriment. |
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I'm sitting at the library across from a very skinny woman and I'm thinking about how fat I am. |
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Later I expect to gaze in wonderment at how large a university library can be. |
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I usually recur to books at the public library or information from websites. |
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And being a computer-head, Norman has very thoughtfully stuck huge wodges of his library up on the web for all to see. |
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The contract also reclassifies secretaries, library and teaching assistants in a higher pay grade. |
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The winning entries of a local photography competition will be displayed in the town library for a week. |
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The library has shelves built into the inner recesses of the walls to house the king's collection of books. |
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When the library was started, the Stanford University computing center was a little building with keypunch machines and a line printer. |
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The aggregation of materials in a digital library can be greater than the sum of its parts. |
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Armed with read-write data, library managers can fine tune performance and ensure that all disks are operating at appropriate levels. |
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The release of the third movie means books in the series continue to spend more time with readers than on library shelves. |
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This year, more such exhibitions, designed to take the library to the reader, may be held in schools and other institutions in the city. |
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But now thanks to the generosity of readers the library is planning for the future and already buying new toys. |
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Without the money raised by our readers, the library would have been forced to close next month. |
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A Burnley writer has won a national award from librarians and library readers for his best-selling series of crime novels. |
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Now library bosses have moved to reassure readers, saying the planning application is at an early stage. |
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It is not only that readers build up a library, but also that a library builds up its readers. |
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The children were asked to participate in the summer reading scheme and the library have kept a record of all books read. |
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The school is incredibly well resourced with a computer suite, dedicated library area and interactive whiteboards. |
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Two kakemono hung in the library of the Ho-o-den, and one hung in Silsbee's dining room. |
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There were more entries in the card catalogue of the library on rapeseed than on rape, she writes. |
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It is widely recognised as Britain's finest residential library and Jessica said she is keen to take advantage of what is on offer. |
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The earthen plaster-covered adobe walls are thick enough to include built-in book-shelves, creating a small library alcove behind the kitchen. |
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Similarly, my local library is full of books in Asian languages but no books in Gaelic. |
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Lastly, the coach should maintain a good reference library on the subject of judo. |
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In a weird turn of fate, the library conference I am going to is walking distance from his house in Adelaide. |
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After perusing the biology library at Berkeley regarding radiobiology, I found that there was much to learn about the field. |
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He owns a personal library which receives several Urdu dailies, weeklies and monthlies published in different parts of the country. |
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Lately, this digital resource has been moving actively and successfully into library consortium sales. |
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More choice in formats for library customers may mean more constraints on choices in materials acquisition. |
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Somewhere in the library an old water clock chimed the hour, making him glance at his timepiece for confirmation. |
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The library is now compliant with federal accessibility standards, incorporating ramps, automatic doors, and an elevator. |
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The soft-ware applications in the library continue to be used to increase safety for the warfighter and ensure combat effectiveness. |
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Yobs have thrown eggs and stones at the new library in Brewery Street while hurling abuse at readers. |
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I'm at the library every morning at opening time to check the want ads, make phone calls and surf the web looking for openings. |
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The campus has plenty of spots for students tired of slaving over their books in the library or dorms to get some fresh air. |
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Chessington Library was set ablaze with the result that the main part of the library is unusable due to the roof being unsafe. |
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The library is open to the public every day except Mondays with late opening hours on Wednesdays and Thursdays until 7pm. |
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Update the software library to get rid of old software versions, beta versions and out of date service packs. |
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The archive functions as a dance library and research center, much like the New York City Public Library's Dance Collection. |
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Our personal backgrounds in library science and our passion for findability have led us to focus a good deal of our energy on content-rich sites. |
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Experts analysing the anthrax used in the US attacks are comparing its DNA with a library of strains collected worldwide. |
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He left behind a much smaller library of recorded works than Sun Ra, but what a collection it is. |
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A Dutch publisher plans to release the complete series in a library of 12 hardcovers. |
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The floating glass divider turns up again to encapsulate a private library and two guest bedrooms. |
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The museum houses a library with about 60,000 books related to Gandhi and the various causes he espoused. |
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They visited the stables, admiring the horses, and settled in to read from the extensive library Geoff had collected. |
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I researched sailboat building at our town library and Boston Public Library. |
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By publicly borrowing library books, patrons forfeit any constitutional protections they may have had in their reading habits. |
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Students in year three and four were given two days off, and are now back at the school using the library as a temporary classroom. |
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For sixty years the Geology Museum remained in the public library building. |
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It's easier to borrow the book from a public library or buy it from a second-hand bookshop. |
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When interrupted or just merely looking up, common places like my bedroom, the library or my school gym are foreign to me. |
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Each month 10 per cent of all book sales to library members goes back to the Richmond-Tweed Regional Library for the purchase of new books. |
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A newspaper dating from 1867 was one of three items found in a glass bottle in the wall cavity between the school library and a classroom. |
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This included various workshops and activities and visiting speakers were available to youngsters in the library and the school hall. |
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In 1911 the collection was placed on view in a third-floor gallery at the new public library building at Forty-second Street. |
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She described a library technician as occupying a place between a librarian and a clerk. |
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In the library that has no computers the librarian is a lot friendlier and knows me and my family well. |
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With my keen observation skills, I have noticed that a lot of librarians and library workers like to knit. |
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All library items are listed through a main author, title, and subject index. |
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The difficult job of retrofitting the historic library for adaptive reuse as a museum went to Gaetana Aulenti of Milan. |
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In 1853, the archaeologist Austen Henry Layard and his team were excavating the palace library of the ancient Assyrian capital Nineveh. |
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I found myself in the library the following morning returning the books I had thoroughly sifted through. |
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In 1860 a lending library was begun and in 1966 the biggest book club operation in Britain began. |
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He holds a bachelor's degree in sociology from Creighton University and a master's in library science from the University of Illinois. |
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The Reference library is, as the name suggests, not a lending library but made up of archives, periodicals and other research materials. |
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We can only hope this includes restocking the lending library with lots of new books. |
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In addition to being a lending library it is today a repository for hundreds of historical photographs. |
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The public lending library is located in the principal basement, with all deliveries one level beneath, while major book storage is off-site. |
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The ground floor is the lending library with a self-service cafe, and separate reading areas for children and teenagers. |
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Canon Draper said the lending library would be closed to make savings, but the conservation studio and archives would remain open. |
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A library user is presented with an array of other online and CD-ROM products, some offering abstracts or full-text retrieval. |
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Josh, feeling restless, read a book he'd checked out from the library in his bed. |
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I mean, everything that I found in the library was written, you know, was not in layman's terms, but in medical terms. |
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The school library was replenished every couple of years when boxes of second-hand books collected by students in Ireland arrived. |
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As a section's inventory ran low, library volunteers carted out cases of books from the front of the warehouse to replenish it. |
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I recalled how I had gazed dreamily at his picture in the yearbook in the library at school today. |
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She shipped in a huge library of books and arranged all 600 of them into alphabetical order, which was stipulated in the script. |
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There is a vast library of historical and cultural works about the Lakotas, many of which focus on the Ghost Dance and Wounded Knee. |
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She met no one along the way and only had one brief scare when she ran into a house cat, yet she made it to the library quietly unnoticed. |
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Please can something be done to reinstall this extremely important telephone in the library entrance. |
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Start your library by researching other denominational hymnals. |
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These include a large hall with an elegant stairway leading to the galleried mezzanine floor with its glass roof and a circular library and anteroom with a small open fire. |
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The 36,000-plus images in the historic photograph and print collection are divided between the reference library in Trowbridge and the library in Salisbury. |
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One of his biggest achievements was erecting a library annex that had needed to be completed for 25 years. |
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A bureaucrat goes into a library one day and pulls a poem off a shelf, and it changes the world. |
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Hundreds of DVDs, CDs and PlayStation games were stolen in the biggest raid on a west Wiltshire library in 20 years, with police at a loss to explain how the burglars got in. |
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One of the tallest barriers to improving mature learners ' skills is simply stepping back into a classroom, whether that is a library reading group or a pub language class. |
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The library includes new technology which means children can borrow a book by putting their thumb on to a machine which recognises their individual thumbprints. |
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It had a dining room, spacious living room with a central fireplace, an impressive kitchen, a small breakfast room, a large library and a sitting room. |
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From his personal library of images Paul has used footage shot almost 20 years ago of his daughter Kyra at age 3, representing the role of Nijinsky's own daughter Kyra. |
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Onboard, take advantage of the research library and expert naturalists. |
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And she has amassed a world-class 10,000-volume library devoted to botany through the ages. |
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One of her earliest memories of life in the Bronx is visiting the library with her mother and sister. |
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And the vermillion wall covering in the library that seemed very 19th-century bordello. |
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The library in Williamsburg itself is illuminated with antique filament bulbs and everything inside is of the past or a nod to it. |
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The accrington Public Library was a fully stocked library built out of stone on the values of an age of self-help and betterment. |
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I knew every volume by its colour and examined them all, passing slowly around the library and whistling to keep up my spirits. |
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Mayo County librarian, Austin Vaughan, told the Western People that the mobile library is currently being upgraded to become wheelchair accessible. |
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His library became a nest, a retreat of perfect ideas perfectly poised. |
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So a university gets a new library building but no funds for new books. |
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Swindon looks set to gain a new central library at long last. |
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If you know where your grandfather lived when he was about 18, and if he graduated from public schools, see if the local library has yearbooks from back then. |
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The library has been reprieved and will remain open for at least another year. |
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The facts are a matter of record and any interested party can go to the library and pull out the newspapers of the day and they can acquaint themselves with those facts. |
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The struggling public library was quartered in an 18th-century stone building that had been, in the course of its 185 years, an almshouse, an orphanage, and an insane asylum. |
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Swindon Council is still eyeing up the Wyvern Theatre car park for a flagship central library as well as a museum and art gallery to create a cultural quarter for the town. |
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The prison library is open an average of four hours per day on weekdays. |
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What if I hadn't rushed into a semi-academic job and had pursued my plan B, which was to work as a library assistant and write in every spare moment of the day? |
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It's bad enough people yabbering on when you're in a library but when it comes to brain-bubbling, mind-twistingly awful ring tones, there should be no escape. |
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Often, I've found, it's just the coincidental timing of first hearing and life events that have made them assume a special place in the recording library inside my head. |
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Why don't we create a foundation to be a lending library for museums? |
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The book begins with a historical perspective on the National Medical Library, followed by a detailed explanation of the way the library indexes journal articles. |
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Could this mean that the differing titles were all the result of a long-dead library clerk having incorrectly entered the book's title details on an index card? |
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In the non-academic world, information professionals don't necessarily possess an advanced degree in library science, information science, or a related field. |
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As she waited for her hearing, Sclove saw her attacker around campus, in the library and in the dining hall. |
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Participants were required to adhere to the same library rules regarding respect for copyright and general behaviour as are other members of the university. |
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Okay, they're clearing out the library and making ready for the party. |
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Kudos to the library there for taking the lead on this project! |
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I'm in Atlanta, and I am blogging from the public library this morning. |
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Trowbridge library has two publicly accessible computers equipped with the special software, one in the lending library and one in the reference library. |
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Armed with a master's degree in library science from Atlanta University and a commitment to the profession, Johnson joined the Brooklyn Public Library System 20 years ago. |
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Just this week I spent a few hours shuttling between Amazon and their accursed recommendations and my library to see what was available to borrow. |
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There will also be mini-laboratories featuring equipment such as electron microscopes and an information centre with a reference library linked into sources such as web sites. |
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Two weeks ago, we reported how hordes of rowdy teenagers were congregating in the library entrance hall, causing mayhem and hurling abuse at users. |
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The talk will be held at the Trowbridge reference library from 7.30 pm. |
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Inside, it boasted a lending library as well as a newspaper room. |
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On the first floor, a new, more accessible, counter has been fitted in the reference library and an improved air-flow system will help to stabilise the temperature. |
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Here also is the seat of the Istituto Nazionale del Rinascimento and the noted Gabinetto Vieusseux, with the library and reading room. |
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This library has dependencies on a lot of other libraries. We have to compile all of those other libraries first. |
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He suffered in the Great Fire of London, losing his vicarage, library and scientific instruments. |
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This includes promoting the information literacy skills training considered vital across the library profession. |
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The library has many dictionaries and other reference books. |
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From what I recall, I think the library is two blocks down on the left. |
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It was almost impossible to locate specific books in the library until we had alphabetized them by the authors' surnames. |
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You can find the most bodacious barbecue and a library designed by noted postmodernist architect Michael Graves. |
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Carlotta paused at the door. She had spent very little time in the library and was unfamiliar with the booklined shelves. |
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The story that the library is sinking because the architect forgot to allow for the weight of the books is an old campus legend. |
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If you have no library commission, consult a lawyer and get from him a careful statement of what can be done under present statutory regulations. |
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Gopherspace is like a huge electronic library that needs a workable indexing and catalogue system. |
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If and when the EWG closes those holes with better language extensions, the library hackarounds can be refined or abandoned. |
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Senator X placed a hold on the bill, then went to the library and placed a hold on a book. |
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Bede's monastery had access to an impressive library which included works by Eusebius, Orosius, and many others. |
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Individuals who belong to a library which subscribes to the service are able to use the service from their own home without charge. |
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He established a library in the Lyceum which aided in the production of many of his hundreds of books. |
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The library was on Clifford Street but a new building was erected on Museum Street in 1927 and is still the library today. |
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The library, which opened in 1653 and is still open to the public today, is the oldest free public reference library in the United Kingdom. |
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The former Birmingham Central Library, opened in 1972, was considered to be the largest municipal library in Europe. |
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There are 41 local libraries in Birmingham, plus a regular mobile library service. |
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Orion Security Print, north of Stanton steel works in Ilkeston, produces Odeon cinema tickets and library cards. |
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The old City library designed by Basil Spence, was demolished in 2006 and replaced. |
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There is also a public library in nearby Knebworth, located in St Martin's Road. |
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At this phase, most of TCGs only allow players drawing card from a pack which is also called library or deck. |
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The attached school and library were established and by the 8th century were some of the most substantial in Northern Europe. |
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On the remains of the old refectory, the Dean, John Sudbury founded a library of early printed books. |
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As of 2011, they are used as offices, a library and as the houses for the Dean and Canons. |
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The library's holdings are included in the online catalogue of the library of the University of Kent. |
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The library of the Royal Academy is the oldest institutional fine art library in Britain. |
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Many private antiquarians and book collectors, such as Sir Robert Cotton, used their own library classification systems. |
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This took place at the library of the Queen's house, and it was organised by Barnard, the King's librarian. |
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Austen apparently had unfettered access both to her father's library and that of a family friend, Warren Hastings. |
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The library of the University of Iowa has an almost complete collection of Roxburghe Club publications. |
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George donated the royal library to the British Museum in 1757, four years after the museum's foundation. |
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Once a pass to the library had been issued, the reader was taken on a tour of the library. |
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The British Library is the national library of the United Kingdom and the second largest library in the world by number of items catalogued. |
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The new library was designed specially for the purpose by the architect Colin St John Wilson. |
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As well as these collections, the library actively acquires literature on the subject. |
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A National Library is that library which has the duty of collecting and preserving the literature of the nation within and outside the country. |
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After his death his grandson donated the library to the nation as its first national library. |
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The first true national library was founded in 1753 as part of the British Museum. |
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The British Museum Act 1753 also incorporated the Cotton library and the Harleian library. |
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During his tenure, the Library's holdings increased from 235,000 to 540,000 volumes, making it the largest library in the world at the time. |
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After four centuries of control by the Crown, this great library now became the property of the French people. |
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Voltaire's personal library is still one of the highlights of the collection. |
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A library is a collection of sources of information and similar resources, made accessible to a defined community for reference or borrowing. |
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A library is organized for use and maintained by a public body, an institution, a corporation, or a private individual. |
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There is also evidence of libraries at Nippur about 1900 BC and those at Nineveh about 700 BC showing a library classification system. |
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Philosopher Laozi was keeper of books in the earliest library in China, which belonged to the Imperial Zhou dynasty. |
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The Library of Alexandria, in Egypt, was the largest and most significant great library of the ancient world. |
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The library was built to store 12,000 scrolls and to serve as a monumental tomb for Celsus. |
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In those rare cases where it was possible for a scholar to consult library books, there seems to have been no direct access to the stacks. |
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Han Chinese scholar Liu Xiang established the first library classification system during the Han dynasty, and the first book notation system. |
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At this time, the library catalogue was written on scrolls of fine silk and stored in silk bags. |
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While monastic library scriptoriums flourished throughout the East and West, the rules governing them were generally the same. |
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Constantine himself wanted such a library but his short rule denied him the ability to see his vision to fruition. |
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His son Constantius II made this dream a reality and created an imperial library in a portico of the royal palace. |
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Constantius II appointed Themistius, a pagan philosopher and teacher, as chief architect of this library building program. |
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At its height in the 5th century, the Imperial Library of Constantinople had 120,000 volumes and was the largest library in Europe. |
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As a theological library, it was known to have employed a library classification system. |
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In the end, however, the library at Vivarium was dispersed and lost within a century. |
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The resulting conglomerate libraries are the basis of every modern library today. |
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The Republic of Venice patronized the foundation of the Biblioteca Marciana, based on the library of Cardinal Basilios Bessarion. |
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Tianyi Chamber, founded in 1561 by Fan Qin during the Ming dynasty, is the oldest existing library in China. |
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Only one important library in Britain, namely Chetham's Library in Manchester, was fully and freely accessible to the public. |
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However, there had come into being a whole network of library provision on a private or institutional basis. |
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One of the most popular versions of the private subscription library was a gentleman's only library. |
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The advocacy of Ewart and Brotherton then succeeded in having a select committee set up to consider public library provision. |
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The library still exists and can justifiably claim to be the forerunner of later public library systems. |
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Unlike a public library, a national library rarely allows citizens to borrow books. |
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A library can serve only their city, however, if they are not a member of the county public library system. |
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Much of the materials located within a public library are available for borrowing. |
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The library staff decides upon the number of items patrons are allowed to borrow, as well as the details of borrowing time allotted. |
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Typically, libraries issue library cards to community members wishing to borrow books. |
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For many communities, the library is a source of connection to a vast world, obtainable knowledge and understanding, and entertainment. |
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The introduction of electrical lighting had a huge impact on how the library operated. |
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The basic form of library instruction is sometimes known as information literacy. |
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The Online Computer Library Center allows library records to be searched online through its WorldCat database. |
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Online information access is particularly attractive to younger library users. |
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The potential decline in library usage, particularly reference services, puts the necessity for these services in doubt. |
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Public library advocacy is support given to a public library for its financial and philosophical goals or needs. |
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Users may also be able to access the collection remotely if they have a valid library card and the library offers secure access to its resources. |
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The library as solely a physical space will not survive in the digital milieu. |
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The National Library of Wales is the national legal deposit library of Wales. |
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The church's central offices are in Rathmines, adjacent to the Church of Ireland College of Education, and the Church's library is in Churchtown. |
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New institutions like the circulating library create a new market with a mass reading public. |
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In 1943 Larkin was appointed librarian of the public library in Wellington, Shropshire. |
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When Larkin took up his appointment there, the plans for a new university library were already far advanced. |
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He and Yorke won a Grammy in 2002 for the special edition of Amnesiac packaged as a library book. |
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The Mackintosh School of Architecture and the school's library and learning resources are situated in The Bourdon Building. |
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The book library is one of the UK's largest archives of art history books, periodicals and exhibition catalogues. |
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His general scholarship found expression in his library, which became part of the library of the University of Glasgow. |
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The Mongols destroyed the city and burned its library during the siege of Baghdad in the 13th century. |
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The Liechtenstein State Library is the library that has legal deposit for all books published in the country. |
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Many departments also maintain a library in addition to the subject collections in the central and college libraries. |
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Readers are also entitled to use the theology library housed by Durham Cathedral in its cloister. |
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Parque Teniente Guerrero is a park located downtown with a public library and weekend entertainment by clowns. |
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To get a library card one must have a government issued id card plus one has to provide two special size photographs. |
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In addition, quantities of the other texts in the court library were also produced locally. |
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The library system also includes an extensive number of faculty and collegiate libraries. |
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Sorting out his affairs, Childe donated most of his library and all of his estate to the Institute. |
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Even now, the Groat is archived in the public library in Wick, while the Courier is similarly archived in the library in Thurso. |
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Ferrario established an impressive library and wrote works of Scottish history and biography. |
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Voltaire's library is preserved intact in the National Library of Russia at Saint Petersburg, Russia. |
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The library was destroyed, but firefighters managed to save the rest of the building. |
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In reply, it was proved that the Advocates' library at Edinburgh contained Gaelic manuscripts 500 years old, and one of even greater antiquity. |
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The library collection contains over a million volumes and over two hundred thousand rare and antique books. |
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From 1710 to 1837 the library functioned as a legal deposit library, and as a result has an extensive collection of 18th century literature. |
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The number of books purchased through subscription eventually rose to over 2,000 and in 1851 a new library was built and survives to this day. |
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The plan proposed demolishing some existing buildings to create a new civic centre, health centre, library and shopping facilities. |
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Another wealthy Scot, Peter Redpath, was responsible for financing the museum, the library and a University chair. |
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The library wing was converted into an exhibition and conference venue in the 1990s and today also houses the university's Business School. |
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When he returned, he brought back an extensive library with him, and was sought after as a master teacher. |
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The old-style library uses a less-complicated, nontemplatized class hierarchy. |
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In 1882 the library was moved to the Assembly Rooms which were leased to the council for 21 years. |
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The National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth, is the national legal deposit library of Wales. |
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The school was once in the town centre, in the buildings that are now the main county library on Castle Street. |
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Orton himself notoriously defaced library books before starting to write books himself. |
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It had been his personal collection, which he kept in the library of his home, Llanstephan mansion, Carmarthenshire. |
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In the late 1970s, the library acquired an archive recording the work of the Birdsall bindery, Northampton. |
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Around 2,500 archives of various sizes have been collected since the library was founded. |
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It is now housed in Hereford Cathedral in the largest surviving chained library, a library in which the books are chained so as to prevent theft. |
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In 1646, during the English Civil War, Lichfield Cathedral was sacked and its library looted. |
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The Book of Kells, located in the library of Trinity College, Dublin, is one of the city's most visited sites. |
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The city's main library is the City Central Library in Hanley, which is also home to the city's archives. |
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Since 2010, the council's library service has run a competition to appoint a Young Poet Laureate for the city. |
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A new library has been built to cater for education purposes and also to increase tourism in the area. |
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Beside the maritime museum is the DLR Lexicon, the central library and cultural centre of DLR County Council. |
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It opened in 2014, replacing the Carnegie library opened in 1912 on Library Road. |
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In 1856, Birkenhead Library was opened as the country's first public library in an unincorporated borough. |
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The library was situated in Hamilton Street until 1909, when it moved to a new building in Market Street South, near Birkenhead Market. |
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The library also participates in the Normannia project of the Norman digital library. |
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The library was lost, along with its collections of photographs, scientific instruments and archives. |
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The main library is located in the city centre, named after the writer Armand Salacrou. |
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John enjoyed reading and, unusually for the period, built up a travelling library of books. |
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The Royal Library of Alexandria, in Alexandria, Egypt, was once the largest library in the world. |
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A copy printed in 1472 by Nicolas Jenson of Venice is held in the library at Wells Cathedral. |
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The college's library was looted and its sole building requisitioned for use as a military hospital first by American and then British forces. |
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To access this website, registration is required, usually through a library connected to a college or university. |
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The Winnipeg Public Library is a public library network with 20 branches throughout the city, including the main Millennium Library. |
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The public library in Alice Springs, Northern Territory is the Nevil Shute Memorial Library. |
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Blackwater Regional Library is the regional library system that provides services to the citizens of Isle of Wight. |
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Increasingly they are available through library pools that allow many academic institutions to pool subscriptions to online versions. |
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In 800, Charlemagne enlarged the hostel at the Muristan in Jerusalem and added a library to it. |
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At Charlemagne's court, a library was founded and a number of copies of books were produced, to be distributed by Charlemagne. |
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While little is known about Nursling outside of Boniface's vitae, it seems clear that the library there was significant. |
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It is open for public access and allows borrowing of books after requesting a library card. |
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These belonged to a library of clay tablets perfectly preserved by having been baked in the fire that destroyed the palace. |
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Pope Nicolas was also important in establishing the Vatican library and protecting scholars who came to study the works found there. |
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He saved many Greek works and writing using the library as a safe haven for them during the time period. |
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The very first library in Malacca was the Khutub Khanah Malacca, established in 1881 and was located at the Stadthuys. |
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Francis set an important precedent by opening his library to scholars from around the world in order to facilitate the diffusion of knowledge. |
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In 1537, Francis signed the Ordonnance de Montpellier, which decreed that his library be given a copy of every book to be sold in France. |
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The Franciscan monastery's library possesses 30,000 volumes, 216 incunabula, 1,500 valuable handwritten documents. |
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It may also be applied to publication titles, especially in bibliographic references and library catalogues. |
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His library contained over three hundred volumes from which he was able to draw upon classical, patristic, and scholastic works. |
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We can disinfect headsets and teach a group of fifth graders how to play library quidditch. |
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A library of twelve hundred volumes was presented to Bright as a memorial of the struggle. |
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An objective of refactorization is to clear up the global scope of all the library variables, functions and objects. |
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Although, the University of Leuven did not see a need for a university library based on the idea that professor were the library. |
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The Thayer Family donated the local public library which is located in the Uxbridge Common Historic District. |
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