184,380 research outputs found

    John J. Buchanan to C. S. Buchanan, January 13, 1862

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    In this letter of January 13, 1862, John J. Buchanan writes to his brother C. S. Buchanan from Beaufort District, South Carolina. John Buchanan acknowledges that he received C. S. Buchanan's letter with heartbreaking news and feels mournful. He has the measles, but is getting better, and he urges the boys of Jackson County to not join W. H. Thomas’s new company

    Robert Buchanan 1841-1901: an assessment of his career.

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    PhDRobert Buchanan was widely regarded during his lifetime as a poet of distinction, a capable and powerful novelist, and a critic of some perception, yet his name is now associated only with one regrettable episode, while those of lesser men and women continue to be remembered for work inferior to his. A man possessing large reserves of energy, and pressed to write for a living at an early age, he produced much work that deserves the oblivion it has found; but his early verse, expressing his profound compassion for the sufferings of the unfortunate in the simplest language, some of his ballads, and not a little of his later more vatic verse, is still worthy of study. As a novelist his work is provocative and readable, but too often descends to the level of the sentimental melodrama which earned him, for a while, a very good income from the stage. As a critic he was not profound, but was quick to detect and praise expression of his own sympathy for humanity that came to represent for him art's highest aspiration; Dickens, Browning and Whitman were his heroes, and for the last two he did sterling work in helping them to gain widespread recognition. As a polemist he rushed into several arenas, for some of which his talents were not especially suited; but he publicly supported C. S. Parnell and Oscar Wilde when few found the courage to do so. An interesting man of impressive variety and undoubted talent has found an undeserved neglect, and a full-scale critical biography of Robert Buchanan is long overdue

    Tedi Reynolds, Soprano, in Graduate Recital, with C. Barron Buchanan

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    How do I love thee? (Dello Joio) / Tedi Reynolds -- Love bade me welcome (Williams) / Tedi Reynolds -- The call (Williams) / Tedi Reynolds -- Where you there? (Sowerby) / C. Barron Buchanan -- We three kings (Wyton) / T C. Barron Buchanan -- La Virgen lava panales (Cassler) / Tedi Reynolds -- Sweet litle boy Jesus (Niles) / Tedi Reynolds -- No lullaby need Mary sing (Clokey) / Tedi Reynolds -- Te Deum (Langlais) / C. Barron Buchanan -- Loveliest Immanuel (Antes) / Tedi Reynolds -- Oh had I Jubal\u27s lyre (Handel) / Tedi Reynolds.https://place.asburyseminary.edu/ecommonsevents/1328/thumbnail.jp

    Photograph of Thelma C. Buchanan, Burmah Carr and George Buchanan

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    Black and white photograph of Thelma C. Buchanan, Burmah W. Carr and George Buchanan. Insert reads: "Thelma, Aunt Burma and George Buchanan.

    Photograph of Thelma C. Buchanan

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    Black and white photograph of Thelma C. Buchanan. Front reads: "Cousin Thelma Carr Buchanan.

    Letter, James Franklin Buchanan to Anna Buchanan, July 1968

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    In this letter, dated July 1968, James Franklin Buchanan writes to his sister, Anna Buchanan concerning the death of their older brother, Webster. He informs her of all the cards and memorials he\u27s received and shares a portion of a letter he received from Senator John C. Stennis about their brother\u27s death.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/mss-james-franklin-buchanan/1019/thumbnail.jp

    Buchanan, Sam, D.O.

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    Dr. Buchanan, a member of TCOM's 2nd graduating class, served as Chairman of the Surgery Department. He shares highlights from his school days and his hopes for the surgery department. Interviewed by C. Ray Stokes, October 21, 199

    The Theory of `Internal Exit', a comment on Buchanan and Faith (1987)

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    The purpose of this note is to correct an error in the seminal article on secession by Buchanan and Faith (1987). In their paper, Buchanan and Faith neglected an important effect: political separation affects markets and consequently individual private incomes.secession;public good.

    The Black Cloak Murders / Carl Buchanan

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    Carl Buchanan. The Black Cloak Murders. London: C. Arthur Pearson, c.1936.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/ms_mystery/1119/thumbnail.jp

    The Theory of `Internal Exit', a comment on Buchanan and Faith (1987)

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    The purpose of this note is to correct an error in the seminal article on secession by Buchanan and Faith (1987). In their paper, Buchanan and Faith neglected an important effect: political separation affects markets and consequently individual private incomes.secession, public good.
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