10,468 research outputs found

    Jack Anderson

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    "VX110480 Jack Anderson 7 Fortress Coy R.A.E. Dudley Point 1941-2"VX110480 Jack Anderson, 7 Fortress Company, Royal Australian Engineers, Dudley Point 1941 - 1942

    Jack Anderson

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    Nationally syndicated columnist Jack Anderson at the podium during College Union lecture

    Jack Anderson 02-20-1969

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    Gregory Fitzgerald and Steven Bird interview Jack Anderson. Jack Anderson, at the time of filming, had authored two collections of poetry: "The Hurricane Lamp" and "The Invention of New Jersey". Anderson opens the interview with a reading of "Smoking in Bed". The first topic of discussion is the dream-like nature of "Smoking in Bed". Anderson talks about the surrealist art and poetry that he enjoys and how he constructs the concept of the self as it relates to the objects he mentions in his work. Anderson is invited to talk about the different schools of thought of popular art and poetry that had influence in Anderson's work. He mentioned his greatest influence was Keates, due to being profoundly impressed by his work early in his writing career. The conversation shifts to an exploration of the structure of the poem, "Smoking in Bed", and why Anderson writes in the forms he chooses and how the literary devices he uses serve his work. Anderson gives a number of different examples of different poems he has written to demonstrate the function of those literary devices. Most examples cited are from "The Hurricane Lamp". The interview takes a beat for a reading of "Shutters". The discussion returns as an exploration of the literary devices Anderson used in "Shutters", particularly, how Anderson's poetry lends itself to the imagery his work conjures. Anderson outlines the speakers he writes as being in a state of emotional distress and distinguishes how emotional distress and "madness" are different for him and the speakers he writes. The discussion closes with a brief explanation of his latest 1969 work "The Invention of New Jersey", a collection of poetry Anderson had written over the course of eight to ten years.Archived web conten

    Letter, 1956 Jan. 10, Anderson, S.C. to Reverend Jack W. Cole, Pendleton, S.C

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    Letter; E.L. Griffin, Clerk of Court, Anderson County, Anderson, S.C., to Reverend Jack W. Cole, Pendleton, S.C., January 10, 1956; certificate of incorporation for St. Paul's Episcopal Churc

    Jack Anderson portrait, undated

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    Black-and-white photograph of Jack Anderson. The captions on the reverse of the image read, "Jack Anderson" and "D 97.

    Jack Anderson portrait, undated

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    Black-and-white photograph of Jack Anderson. The captions on the reverse of the image read, "Jack Anderson" and "D 97.

    Jack Z. Anderson to Senator James O. Eastland, 4 March 1958

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    Typed letter signed dated 4 March 1958 from Jack Z. Anderson, Administrative Assistant to the President, to Eastland, re: enclosed. Attached: typed memorandum from True D. Morse, Under Secretary of Agriculture, to Sherman Adams, Assistant to the President, re: credit situation in the Delta area of Mississippi, Tennessee, Arkansas, and Missouri, Small Business Administration, disaster areas, farms, emergency loans; 2 pages. Attached: Small Business Administration press release dated 24 February 1958, re: above topics.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/joecorr_c/1012/thumbnail.jp

    Jack Anderson portrait, undated

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    Black-and-white photograph of Jack Anderson. The captions underneath the image read, "JACK ANDERSON" and "AMERICAN PROGRAM BUREAU; 850 Boylston St., Chestnut Hill, Mass. 02167*(617) 731-0500." The captions on the reverse of the image read, "Jack Anderson" and "P.F. speakers." The stamp on the reverse of the image reads, "Would appreciate your returning to; Public Relations; University of Tennessee at Chattanooga; Chattanooga, Tennessee 37401.

    Jack Anderson portrait, undated

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    Black-and-white photograph of Jack Anderson. The captions underneath the image read, "JACK ANDERSON" and "AMERICAN PROGRAM BUREAU; 850 Boylston St., Chestnut Hill, Mass. 02167*(617) 731-0500." The captions on the reverse of the image read, "Jack Anderson" and "P.F. speakers." The stamp on the reverse of the image reads, "Would appreciate your returning to; Public Relations; University of Tennessee at Chattanooga; Chattanooga, Tennessee 37401.

    Jack Anderson

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    Nationally syndicated columnist Jack Anderson talking to Betty Rankin, College Union Lecture Committee chair
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