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1 – 10 of 69The University of Wales College of Cardiff (UWCC) was formed in September 1988 by the merger of the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology (UWIST) and University…
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The University of Wales College of Cardiff (UWCC) was formed in September 1988 by the merger of the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology (UWIST) and University College Cardiff (UCC). UWCC is the largest constituent college of the University of Wales. It has a student population in excess of 9000, and about 700 academic staff.
Tianjun Feng, Chunyi Zhang and Jiani He
Established in 2010, Mellower Coffee has 40 exquisite chain stores and three branches, namely Mellower Coffee Sales, Mellower Business Management and Shanghai Mellower Roasting…
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Established in 2010, Mellower Coffee has 40 exquisite chain stores and three branches, namely Mellower Coffee Sales, Mellower Business Management and Shanghai Mellower Roasting Factory. Positioned as a premium coffee brand in China, Mellower Coffee has realized the integrated operation and management of the whole industrial chain from raw coffee trade, roasting factory, coffee retail products, specialty coffee chain, office coffee to coffee academy. It has a vision to attract and cultivate more and more coffee lovers by constant innovation coffee culture promotion.
“Deep in all of us”, wrote a Homes and gardens sub‐editor in April 1965, headlining Elspeth Huxley's article A cottage on a hillside, “is a craving for a quiet country retreat…
Abstract
“Deep in all of us”, wrote a Homes and gardens sub‐editor in April 1965, headlining Elspeth Huxley's article A cottage on a hillside, “is a craving for a quiet country retreat, old, mellow and secluded.” If true, this had clearly been true of England at least for a very long while. “Of late there has been a positive spate of books about living in the country”, wrote Philip Gosse in 1935. “The rustic life is all the rage.” “The cult of the country cottage”, declared J. Gordon Allen in 1912, “which was thought a few years ago to be merely a passing whim, has recently developed apace”. The manner in which a sizeable proportion of the English middle class were persuaded over several decades to forsake or at least to contemplate forsaking urban living is of some interest to, amongst others, sociologists and social historians. Since we are concerned here with the bibliographical aspects of this radical shift of attitudes, it would be as well to dispose at the outset of one possible analysis: namely the idea that literary precedents had much to do with this. Agreed, masters of urban living much earlier than the English—the Romans—invented apparently the away‐from‐it‐all stance: Horace, generals returning to the plough with Rome saved, the Georgics. Agreed also, their Augustan imitators had much to say about places in the country. But consider Wootton's
The very stones of the Cotswold, with the soft patina that makes them look mellow with time even when newly quarried, are conducive to quiet contemplation, and the ancient hills…
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The very stones of the Cotswold, with the soft patina that makes them look mellow with time even when newly quarried, are conducive to quiet contemplation, and the ancient hills reinforce the reflective mood. So few locations could better serve the company or professional association planning a seminar where concentrated thought is the requirement … with, say, long‐term strategic planning on the agenda rather than a slick sales presentation.
BY mid‐September when these words appear there may be the first touch of frost in the mornings : summer is irrecoverably over. There is yet, a week ahead, the Library Association…
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BY mid‐September when these words appear there may be the first touch of frost in the mornings : summer is irrecoverably over. There is yet, a week ahead, the Library Association Conference and not a few older librarians, who have a life‐long memory of Autumn conferences, are happy that we no longer hold them in May, that adolescent, variable month, but are able to catch again in the season of mists and mellow fruitfulness the pleasures we have had in our summer holidays this perfect year. The irony of it lies in the fact that there is precious little holiday in today's conference week ; we do not even have an excursion on the Friday. Such frivolities are beyond the great gatherings of multilateral interests that assemble. Time, too, has become almost sordidly precious.
Robert Jones, Guenter Arndt and Richard Kustin
Utilizes a survey of 272 Australian ISO 9002 quality certified companies to examine two issues: first, the relationship between a company’s initial motivation for seeking…
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Utilizes a survey of 272 Australian ISO 9002 quality certified companies to examine two issues: first, the relationship between a company’s initial motivation for seeking certification (QCert) and its perception of the benefits it has received; and, second, the impact of time on perceptions of benefits received. Companies which sought QCert because of an externally‐imposed perception of the necessity to “obtain a certificate” were found to experience fewer beneficial outcomes of QCert, in comparison with companies which sought QCert because of an internally‐driven desire to improve organizational performance. Additionally, no evidence was found that longer‐certified companies experience more benefits than recently‐certified companies, regardless of the initial motivation for seeking QCert. Cautions against the drive towards “forcing” companies to seek QCert as a result of a perception of an external threat. Such a process appears to be counterproductive.
“I could not love thee” said the young librarian, apostrophising the volume he was trying to classify, “I could not love thee (Dear) so much, Lov'd I not Dewey more.” The spirit…
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“I could not love thee” said the young librarian, apostrophising the volume he was trying to classify, “I could not love thee (Dear) so much, Lov'd I not Dewey more.” The spirit of Richard Lovelace will, I pray, forgive me for turning upside down those lovely lines of his. The problem which the poet, going to the wars, posed to his Lucasta always seems to me to have been a trifle twisted for the sake of poetic neatness, and I doubt whether Lucasta derived much comfort from it. The real antithesis is not between two different loves, but between love and duty; there is room for tragedy here, but not the rivalry of passion. What Lovelace meant was that the coward would make an unworthy lover. It is an aphorism we can all appreciate in theory, even though most of us would try desperately to have things both ways.
A report on the ancient joys of merrie England seen from the comforts of today, in particular from three hotels in Chester, Cambridge and the Cotswolds.
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A report on the ancient joys of merrie England seen from the comforts of today, in particular from three hotels in Chester, Cambridge and the Cotswolds.
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THAT we devote the greater part of this number to memories of Louis Stanley Jast will surprise none of our senior readers. He was the embodiment of the public library, and for…
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THAT we devote the greater part of this number to memories of Louis Stanley Jast will surprise none of our senior readers. He was the embodiment of the public library, and for that matter other library, movement in its best characteristics for the past fifty years. He was also one of the founders of THE LIBRARY WORLD and found in its pages for years the effective medium in which his technical studies could be expressed. We acknowledge with thanks the help that several of his former colleagues have given in the preparation of this memoir and we gather from Mr. Berwick Sayers that it may be the precursor of a biographical study that he will write in which what it is only possible to indicate here may be made more complete. The unanimity of opinion in our writers, none of whom has seen the work of the others, on the importance of Jast is remarkable. Incidentally we may note that the best portrait of Jast, showing his Strong, meditative and enquiring genial personality, is that which forms the frontispiece of his Libraries and Living; a selection of his essays and verses which we hope our readers will turn to again.