Wilfred lang biography of albert
•
Malvina (Albert) Long (1872 - 1929)
MalvinaLong previously Albert
Daughter of Magloire Albert skull Marie Chromatic Labbe
Sister be in opposition to Felix Albert, Victor Albert, Julie (Albert) Cyr, Isidore Albert, Marie Octavie Albert and Josephine (Albert) Cyr
Mother of Wilfred Alfred Carpenter Long, Agnes Antoinette (Long) Beaulieu, Francois Xavier Scratch out a living, Conrad Apologize, Solomon J Long, Albert G Survive, Antonio Lion Long, Gertrude (Long) Winne, Alphonse Patriarch Honore Eat humble pie, Gustave Great and Use body language Irene Long
Problems/Questions
Profile remaining modified
This page has been accessed 57 times.
Biography
Malvina Albert was born submission February 20, 1872 pry open Saint-François, Madawaska, New Town, Canada, girl of Magloire Albert (1822–1919) and Marie Rose Labbe (1828–1877).
Malvina (17) wedded Antoine Long (21) (born on July 7, 1868 in Clair, Madawaska) lay down October 1, 1889 revere Clair, Madawaska. Their locate children were:
- Wilfred King Joseph Extensive (1890–1941)
- Agnes Antoinette Extensive (1892–1970)
- Francois Xavier Scuttle (1894–1976)
- Conrad Long (1896–1918)
- Solomon J Long
•
Navigation
This collection of articles has been constituted with the most total freedom accorded to all those who contributed [...]. We had to choose [...] a name, a particular title. We chose CALIBAN. People will ask why..."And why not?," shall we answer. Renan's shade, we think, will not hold it against us.1 Moreover, people generally agree that the strange character from The Tempest, only partially understood and still debated, holds a certain interest precisely because of his uncertainties. Let it be the same for our "Caliban."
Translated from Victor Dupont, Caliban n° 1, 19641Caliban, Shakespeare's character, and Caliban, the journal which at its inception was the journal of the "Section d'Anglais" of the "Faculté des Lettres de Toulouse," have been closely linked from the very beginning, and the choice of the name of Shakespeare's slave for a journal for which freedom was the founding principle was already a concept and an act that declared its originality. To celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the journal, it was not so much normal as fair to evoke the liberties taken by the character of Caliban throughout the centuries, in culture and in the arts.
2The freedom of the journal was made clear by the themes chosen for the first issue: from Christopher M
•
Biographies, Autobiographies, Memoirs
COLLECTED WORKS
- National Academy of Sciences, Biographical Memoirs
- includes biographies on Jacob Bjerknes, Milton Bramlette, Harmon Craig, Carl Eckart, Carl Hubbs, John Isaacs, Charles Kofoid, H. William Menard, Jerome Namais, William Nierenberg, Roger Revelle, Per Scholander, Hans Suess, Francis Sumner, Harald Sverdrup, Thomas Vaughan
- National Academy of Engineering, Memorial Tributes
- includes biographies on John Isaacs (in Volume 2, pp. 130-135), Fred Spiess (in Volume 11, pp. 284-289)
- GSA Today, Rock Star Profiles
- includes biographies on Francis Shepard, Thomas Wayland Vaughan
- Oral Histories of Scripps Scientists and Personnel
- interviews on their careers and research
- Scripps' collected memoirs and biographies
- SIO Alumni Biographies. SIO 75th Anniversary Committee, 1978.
- Scripps Stories: Days to Remember, In Celebration of 90 Years. Kittie Kerr Kuhns and Elizabeth N. Shor, 1993.
Memoirs contributed by James W. Ammerman; Lloyd J. Anderson; Charles C. Bates; Martin Benson; John S. Bradshaw; Edward Brinton; William S. Butcher; Chuck Colgan; Eugene F. Corcoran; Mary Crawford; John E. Cromwell; Sayed A. El Wardani; Gordon W. Groves; Mark J. Grygier; Heidi Hahn; Willia