Corrections.Professor Leah Middlebrook wishes to make the following corrections to her article, "'Tout Mon Office:' Body Politics BODY POLITIC, government, corporations. When applied to the government this phrase signifies the state. 2. As to the persons who compose the body politic, they take collectively the name, of people, or nation; and individually they are citizens, when considered and Family Dynamics in the verse and epitres of Marguerite de Navarre This article is about 16th-century author and queen of Navarre. For the 12th-century Sicilian queen, see Margaret of Navarre (Sicilian queen). Marguerite de Navarre (April 11, 1492 – December 21, 1549), also known as Marguerite of Angouleme and ," in Vol. 54.4.1(2001), PP. 1108-41. The citations for figures 2 and 4 on PP. 1117 and 1122 should be reversed. In addition, "Trinarium," now in the citation Citation (foaled 1945) U.S. Thoroughbred racehorse. In four seasons he won 32 of 45 races, finished second in ten, and third in two. He won the 1948 Triple Crown, and became the first horse to win $1 million. He set a world record in 1950 by running a mile in 1:33 3/5. for figure 2, should be "Ternarium." The Enseignements of Anne de Beaujeu Anne de Beaujeu (də bōzhö`), c.1460–1522, regent of France, daughter of the French King Louis XI. With her husband, Pierre de Beaujeu, duc de Bourbon, she acted as regent for her brother, Charles VIII, after the death (1483) of (note 16 on P. 1114) is now held by several libraries in the U. S. A., although it is no longer to be found in the library in St. Petersburg. She regrets the errors and wishes to thank Myra Dickman Orth and others who generously pointed them out. |
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