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Pictured: Merritt Janson and Bill Camp
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Pictured: James A. Williams, Michele Shay, Richard Brooks
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Pictured: Lou Myers, Rocky Carroll, Samuel L. Jackson, Carl Gordon
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Pictured: Phillip Moon, Natsuko Ohama
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Pictured: David Alan Grier and Jane Kaczmarek
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Pictured: Angela Bassett (front, dancing)
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Pictured: Christopher Walken and Eugene Trobnick
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Pictured: Stephanie Cotsirilos, Carmen de Lavallade, Grace Keagy, Martha Leipsie, Sally Santacroce, Kate Stewart, Sigourney Weaver
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Pictured: Henry Winkler, Alvin Epstein
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American lithographer Robert Riggs was commissioned by Philadelphia-based pharmaceutical company Smith, Kline, and French to capture the conditions of medical facilities for the insane.
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This print, published by Nathaniel Currier of the iconic print company Currier & Ives, categorizes the major sins into three primary branches.
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This print traces an old maid’s path from youth to middle age, providing a disposition for each age.
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Ward Rounds was one of four scenes from Philadelphia hospitals rendered by Robert Riggs.
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From the series Ten Leading Causes of Death in America
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After Honoré Daumier French 1808-79. From the series L'imagination. No.10.
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Satirical print meant for popular amusement.
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The print is one of the many images of Epinal, a collection of popular prints produced by Jean-Charles Pellerin and later by his company.
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Black and White photograph of the Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library Rotunda
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Black and white photograph of the Information Room. Built with a donation from Betsey Cushing Whitney.
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The right-hand page shows the translation by Smith’s assistant, the author and scholar Buṭrus al-Bustānī (1819-1883), in his own hand, with Smith’s corrections in pencil and al-Bustānī’s alternative suggestions in red. The left-hand page is a fair copy made by the poet Nāṣīf al-Yāzijī (1800-1871), with additional corrections by Smith. Both al-Bustānī and al-Yāzijī came from villages located on Mount Lebanon, and would later became important figures in the 19th-century nahḍ̣ah (revival) of Arabic literature.
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The Arabic translation of the New Testament as completed and published by Van Dyck. This copy was sent to Salisbury from Beirut in August 1862, soon after publication, by the American missionary and Arabist Henry Harris Jessup (Class of 1851, 1832-1910). In 1866 Jessup became one of the founders of the Syrian Protestant College (the present-day American University of Beirut).