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Examples
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One of her projects led to the founding of a Camphill Village in Copake, N.Y., a community for people with developmental disabilities.
Foundation Works to Support Young Scholars Melanie Grayce West 2011
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Search the sky as I might this was the only glider I saw – a surprise because my route over the heather-tops was less than two miles from Camphill, headquarters of the Derbyshire & Lancashire Gliding Club.
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I studied Waldorf for many years and one image that I truly treasure to this day was found in a book by Karl Konig (founder of the Camphill Movement - Steiner Ed. for the developmentally disabled) where there is a beautiful mental picture he gives of the child's angel presenting the mother's soul with child's soul * before* conception - a direct image taken from the Annuciation.
Montessori Questions regina doman 2007
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Even the school at Camphill, the center for the disabled based in Otse, said he was too small and weak.
No Place Left to Bury the Dead Nicole Itano 2007
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Thabang had grown stronger, though, and could finally sit up on his own, so the school for the disabled in Otse, Camphill, had agreed to take him the following year.
No Place Left to Bury the Dead Nicole Itano 2007
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Similar local reaction to the Channel 4 documantary 'The Strangest Village in Britain' - about Botton, the Camphill Trust village in North Yorkshire.
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Cup Tie, wearing a pair of fur-lined slippers, and had her heart set on the Camphill beating the Black-and-Whites, was, indeed, the most handsome girl in the burgh.
Scottish Football Reminiscences and Sketches David Drummond Bone
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The Colonel's daughters, or "Golden Slippers," as one of them was called by several members of the Camphill, who had caught her in the act of watching a practice game on the eve of a big
Scottish Football Reminiscences and Sketches David Drummond Bone
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{157} He sleeps in Camphill Cemetery, not far from the pines and salt sea water of his boyhood, a column of Nova Scotian granite marking his resting-place; and his memory abides in the hearts of thousands of his countrymen.
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The late Mr. Serjeantson, of Camphill, Yorkshire, who put up two or three dials on his farms, had them made by two intelligent village masons, according to the directions given in the "Encyclopædia Britannica," and they were set up with the help of a candle, a piece of string, and the north star.
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