2,544 research outputs found
Tom Blevins
Tom Blevins was born July 17, 1882 in Aurora, Texas. He lived for many years at Pat\u27s Hole on the Green River and Brown\u27s Park. His parents were Nathan W. Blevins and Luella Sharp Blevins. He was one of four children. He married Mary Ethel Gadd on April 22, 1909 and ten children were in their home. In 1920 they lived in Lay, Colorado. He died in Provo, Utah, on July 20, 1934 and is buried in the Craig Colorado Cemetery
Tom Blevins
Tom Blevins was born July 17, 1882 in Aurora, Texas. He lived for many years at Pat\u27s Hole on the Green River and Brown\u27s Park. His parents were Nathan W. Blevins and Luella Sharp Blevins. He was one of four children. He married Mary Ethel Gadd on April 22, 1909 and ten children were in their home. In 1920 they lived in Lay, Colorado. He died in Provo, Utah, on July 20, 1934 and is buried in the Craig Colorado Cemetery
Tom Blevins and Cabin
Tom Blevins was born July 17, 1882 in Aurora, Texas. He lived for many years at Pat\u27s Hole on the Green River and Brown\u27s Park. His parents were Nathan W. Blevins and Luella Sharp Blevins. He was one of four children. He married Mary Ethel Gadd on April 22, 1909 and ten children were in their home. In 1920 they lived in Lay, Colorado. He died in Provo, Utah, on July 20, 1934 and is buried in the Craig Colorado Cemetery
Dr. Nathan Nobis, Morehouse College, August 2011
This video is a conversation with Dr. Nathan Nobis. Dr. Nobis talks about his paper, "The Harmful, Nontherapeutic use of Animals in Research is Morally Wrong." Brad Ost, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer
DS_10.1177_1558944718787310 – Supplemental material for The Safety and Benefits of the Semisterile Technique for Closed Reduction and Percutaneous Pinning of Pediatric Upper Extremity Fractures
Supplemental material, DS_10.1177_1558944718787310 for The Safety and Benefits of the Semisterile Technique for Closed Reduction and Percutaneous Pinning of Pediatric Upper Extremity Fractures by Karan Dua, Charles J. Blevins, Nathan N. O’Hara and Joshua M. Abzug in HAND</p
Letter from Nathan Bankhead, Bankhead and Henderson, to Carl Hayden
Letter from Nathan Bankhead to Carl Hayden concerning his sheep and the accusations of Horace M. Albright
Remembering where we’re from: Community and individual predictors of college students’ White privilege awareness
Awareness of White privilege is associated with greater support for affirmative action and greater engagement in racial justice action (Pinterits et al., 2009; Yi et al., 2020). With notable exceptions (e.g., Spanierman et al., 2009), research has typically investigated White privilege awareness as an individual-level variable, though evidence suggests that residential environments may also influence racial attitudes (Brittian Loyd & Gaither, 2018; Glaser, 1994; Hagerman, 2020). In this study, we combine survey and U.S. Census data to explore both individual- and community-level predictors of White privilege awareness. With a sample of 1,285 White college students, we found that gender, modern racism, social dominance orientation, and subjective socioeconomic status (SES) significantly predicted White privilege awareness. After accounting for these individual-level variables, we found that some characteristics of students’ hometowns (defined by zip code) continued to predict White privilege awareness. More specifically, greater income inequality was associated with higher White privilege awareness, while greater White racial homogeneity was marginally associated with lower White privilege awareness. There was a significant interaction between community-level White racial homogeneity and individual-level subjective SES, such that students with high subjective SES and low White racial homogeneity had the highest White privilege awareness. This study highlights the importance of examining how different facets of ecological context matter in relation to White Americans’ racial attitudes. Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'U of I Access', the embargo will last until 2022-08-01The student, Emily Blevins, accepted the attached license on 2020-07-20 at 17:11.The student, Emily Blevins, submitted this Thesis for approval on 2020-07-20 at 17:20.This Thesis was approved for publication on 2020-07-21 at 11:18.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #15700 on 2020-10-02 at 15:33:58Made available in DSpace on 2020-10-07T22:44:42Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 3
BLEVINS-THESIS-2020.pdf: 384706 bytes, checksum: a6854ebdb4c7e83a283f27990e3e2a12 (MD5)
Blevins_Master_Thesis_07202020.docx: 170934 bytes, checksum: fef4a0bb2f63bebaec6338ee630d2f2b (MD5)
LICENSE.txt: 4210 bytes, checksum: 925bc7a198a8f8db9427d96cc1b57731 (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2020-07-21Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 116258
Lift date: 2022-10-07T22:44:53Z
Reason: Author requested U of Illinois access only (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemAuthor requested U of Illinois access only (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemU of I Onl
Nathan Newsom diary
Narrative account entitled "A Short summary of a journey, taken by volunteers from Gallia County; for the purpose of destroying Indians and the invasion of Canada," written by Nathan Newsom. Newsom was an orderly sergeant in Captain Calvin Shepard's company from Gallia County, Ohio, during the War of 1812. This volume conveys conditions experienced by soldiers during the war, including low pay, shortages of food and clothing, low morale, and severe weather conditions. Newsom also describes the cooperation of the army with friendly Indians and the disciplinary measures taken for desertion and other offenses
Guilt, Memory, and the Beta-God: Nathan Englander on kaddish.com
Diane Feigenson Lecture in Jewish Literature… Nathan Englander, Bestselling author, For the Relief of Unbearable Urges, What We Talk About When We Talk, About Anne Frank, and kaddish.com (2019).https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/bennettcenter-posters/1360/thumbnail.jp
Okechukwu Nzelu, Helen Palmer & Nathan Walker: North Faces
Public Reading Performance as part of Edinburgh International Book Festival 2024.
Nathan Walker will read from their publication 'Skirting' (Broken Sleep Books)
"Join Barnsley-born poet and Pity author Andrew McMillan as he hosts a showcase of literary talent from the North of England. Tonight McMillan presents a prismatic range of writers – novelists Okechukwu Nzelu and Helen Palmer, poet and performance artist Nathan Walker – as well as Alicia Byrne, the inaugural winner of the Tempest Prize for unpublished LGBTQ+ writers (run in collaboration with New Writing North). Come and hear the groundbreaking work from some of the most exciting literary talent working today.
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