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From Haig to Kitchener, and Vera Lynn to Wilfred Owen, how well you know the figures of the First World War? Who’s Who highlights the individuals who had an impact on the events of the Great War. Looking through Who’s Who, we are able to gain a snapshot of the talents and achievements of these individuals, and how they went on to influence history.
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Who’s Who is the essential directory of the noteworthy and influential in every area of public life, published worldwide, and written by the entrants themselves. Who’s Who and Who Was Who 2014 includes autobiographical information on over 134,000 influential people from all walks of life. You can browse by people, education, and even recreation. Check out the latest feature article, which offers article content on those who shaped history between the years 1897 and 1940. For free lives of the day, follow Who’s Who on Twitter @ukwhoswho
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Image credit: Field Marshal Douglas Haig. Image available via Wikimedia Commons.
The post How much do you know about the First World War? appeared first on OUPblog.
There’s something about water. We are instinctively hard-wired to respond to its presence and properties. As much as we try to avoid weather water with umbrellas and overhangs and jackets with hoods, there are moments when we all break out and embrace the deluge. What tips the balance? How do we go from pulling our coats closer and avoiding the wet one moment to dancing in the rain the next? There’s some primal threshold that, once crossed, allows us the freedom and abandon to get our clothes and hair and skin soaking wet--and revel in the drenching. My kids seem more prone than most to loving water in all its forms. Keilana was a bona fide water baby, swimming across the spa at eight months with her diapered hiney bobbing at the surface. Connor didn’t like the pool, too cold, but would stay in a steamy bath until he was as red as a lobster. Addie would cry to get out the door in stormy weather, so she could stand under the spout from the rain gutters in her diaper. We have to distract Scarlett every time we go past the Downtown Plaza fountain unless we have something to use as a towel in the van. Vera, the sassy little mouse star of Marjolein Barstin’s Vera in the Washtub, splashes in puddles, gets covered in ink, and generally makes messes that she’ll have to clean up by soaking in some kind of bath. I guess she ends up “squeaky” clean.
http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Vera-in-the-Washtub/Marjolein-Bastin/e/9780812060881
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marjolein_Bastin