8,429 research outputs found

    Grace Crouch

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    Photograph of a woman. Photo by Grace Crouch, Alva, O

    [News Clip: Crouch]

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    Video footage from the WBAP-TV television station in Fort Worth, Texas, to accompany a news story about Jackson County attorney David C. Whitlow alleging that Fort Worth District Attorney Doug Crouch assaulted him during a meeting

    Jeffrey Crouch Interview, April 17, 2021

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    In this first part of a two-part interview, Jeffrey Crouch talks about his store, Grizzly Liquor, a privatized state liquor store in Missoula. Crouch and his wife have owned it for eight and a half years. The store has a “franchise agreement” that allows it to sell retail alcohol, as well as sell to sell alcohol to restaurants and bars. The state government regulates the sale of alcohol to restaurants and bars and requires fixed prices, but Grizzly Liquor can mark up prices for retail sales. Crouch states that during the COVID-19 pandemic, his store never shut down since it and other stores selling alcohol in Montana were designated as essential businesses by the governor. Finally, Crouch talks about how COVID-19 affected him personally in dealing with the different thoughts and opinions of family and friends on how they think the authorities should handle the COVID-19 pandemic.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/wetmissoulacovid19_oralhistory/1007/thumbnail.jp

    Jeffrey Crouch Interview, April 18, 2024

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    In this second part of a two-part interview, Jeffrey Crouch talks about his store, Grizzly Liquor, a privatized state liquor store in Missoula. Crouch says that he wasn’t aware of any talk about whether liquor stores in Missoula should be closed during the COVID-19 pandemic and how issues such as health, especially for alcoholics, as reasons for designating retail alcohol stores as essential. Crouch reflects on receiving government assistance early in the COVID-19 pandemic, enforcing mask mandates for staff and customers, limiting bulk sales due to panic buying, buying more expensive alcohol during the COVID-19 pandemic, and experiencing increased sales with other retail businesses selling alcoholic beverages. Finally, Crouch talks about still having issues with the supply chain and how retail sales have dropped off since the reopening of restaurants and bars.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/wetmissoulacovid19_oralhistory/1008/thumbnail.jp

    Europe's Fraying Democracy: A Q&A with Colin Crouch

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    Colin Crouch is one of Britain’s and Europe’s leading social and political scientists. In 2000, he famously coined the term post-democracy, which has been widely drawn upon by scholars seeking to understand Europe’s contemporary condition and which has since gained renewed relevance in light of the ongoing European debt crisis. Earlier this year, Professor Crouch went into conversation with the German sociologist Wolfgang Streeck at a seminar organized by the Marxism(s) in Social Movements working group at the European University Institute. This interview was taken by email following that conversation

    Letter to Jane Howe Gregory from Barry A. Crouch regarding Gregory's research involving women in the Texas Penitentiary.

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    Letter from Barry A. Crouch to Jane Howe Gregory, in which Crouch refers to an enclosed document from the National Archives which includes information on women in the Texas Penitentiary during the reconstruction era

    Letter to John B. Boles from Professor Barry A. Crouch concerning Jane Howe Gregory's thesis.

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    In this letter Barry A. Crouch makes comments on Jane Howe Gregory's thesis manuscript at the request of Rice University Professor John B. Boles

    Photograph of gravestone of Jane Crouch, West Hobart, Tasmania

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    Photograph of gravestone of Jane Crouch taken in the Quaker (Society of Friends) Burial Ground established in 1836 at Mellifont Street, West Hobart, Tasmania until it was closed in 1912. The gravestones have been moved to the edge of what is now the Friends' Park, a recreational park and children's playground. Inscription reads: 'Jane Crouch - Born ? 7th month 18? Died 17th of 8th Month ? 18?'

    Photograph of gravestone of Sarah Rothwell Crouch, West Hobart, Tasmania

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    Photograph of gravestone of Sarah Rothwell Crouch taken in the Quaker (Society of Friends) Burial Ground established in 1836 at Mellifont Street, West Hobart, Tasmania until it was closed in 1912. The gravestones have been moved to the edge of what is now the Friends' Park, a recreational park and children's playground. Inscription reads: 'Sarah Rothwell Crouch, Died ? Month ?' Gravestone badly weathere
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