1,220 research outputs found

    Archie Campbell

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    Portrait of Archie Campbell (1830-1867), brother of John Campbell. He came to Gippsland by 1849, finding and surveying the main track between Sale and Melbourne. He drowned at Sale during a flood

    Archie Campbell [picture].

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    Portrait of Archie Campbell (1830-1867), brother of John Campbell. He came to Gippsland by 1849, finding and surveying the main track between Sale and Melbourne. He drowned at Sale during a flood.Item held by Gippsland and Regional Studies Collection, Federation University Australia

    Box 41, Neg. No. 52662: Archie Campbell

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    This black and white photograph features a portrait of Archie Campbell - he is standing with his hands on his hips and is wearing a sweater jacket with the letter M on its front. Archie Campbell - Macksville, Kansas ordered the photograph.https://scholars.fhsu.edu/stafford_county/5930/thumbnail.jp

    Archie Campbell and the Dake Engine Company

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    Campbell's father, Archibald I, was Mayor of Grand Haven from 1909 to 1911. He later became President of Dake Engine Company from 1924 to 1936. In this interview with Dave Seibold, Archie talks about his father and his early business, Seventh Street Foundry, which fabricated parts for Dake Engine Company. Archie also gives a detailed description of the 200 block of Franklin Avenue and the people who lived there, along with a history of the family home. He recalls when streets in town were first paved and the first flush toilets

    Archie Ammons Book Review

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    Is it possible for an American poet to be influenced heavily by an encounter with another poet/painter? Throughout the pages of the book, “When I Go Back To My Home Country”: A Remembrance of Archie Ammons, author Emily Herring Wilson recounts the highlights of her 30-year friendship and association with Archie Ammons. On several occasions in the book, the author includes her own literary works to illustrate the enormous impact that her friendship with poet/painter Archie Ammons had on her own literary development. To help capture the reader’s interest, the author also includes 65 photographs, 3 color reproductions of Archie Ammons watercolor paintings, and samples of his various poems

    Initial behavioural and attitudinal responses to influenza A, H1N1 ('swine flu')

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    Copyright © 2010 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. All rights reserved.This study was sponsored by Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR), and supported by the Community Coalition Concerned about SARS and other community organisations in the great Toronto area

    Chris McGregor/Archie Shepp.

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    Photocopied article from the French magazine Jazz Magazine about Chris McGregor's Brotherhood of Breath sharing the stage with Archie Shepp at a concert at La Courneuve, France, the 18th of March 1989. The author of this article criticizes the length of the concert, which was, according to him, too long (2:30 without any break)

    Generation Scotland Survey Monkey data

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    Generation Scotland (GS) conducted a recontact survey on ~7,000 participants who could be contacted by email. The survey used Survey Monkey Inc. to understand GS participant opinions on health research. A total of 2,316 participants responded. This dataset include the summary level data and anonymised individual level data.Edwards, Rachel; Campbell, Archie; Porteous, David. (2019). Generation Scotland Survey Monkey data, 2019 [dataset]. University of Edinburgh. School of Molecular, Genetic and Population Health Sciences. Institute of Genetics and Molecular Medicine. https://doi.org/10.7488/ds/2585

    Guide to MS474 Archie Waters Papers

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    Archie Waters (1918 – 2001), journalist, author, and chess expert, moved to El Paso in 1980. After relocating to El Paso, Waters worked as a publicist in the public affairs office at William Beaumont Army Medical Center and then as a clerk-typist for El Paso Police Department headquarters. He also wrote several short articles for the El Paso Herald-Post during the 1980s, and later wrote a regular column for the El Paso Times. An enthusiastic chess player, Waters became the first African-American to be admitted to the prestigious Marshall Chess Club in New York. Waters co-wrote two books on Spanish pool checkers during the late 1940s and wrote columns on chess during the 1960s that were published in several New York community newspapers. During the late 1950s Waters became a mentor to chess prodigy Bobby Fischer in New York. The Archie Waters papers date 1939 – 2001, bulk 1970 – 2000. Types of records include correspondence, clippings, publications and other printed material, notes, story proofs, and photographs. Arranged in seven series (Biographical information, Photographs, Articles by Archie Waters, Story proofs, Topical files, Chess materials, and Publications by others), these papers document Waters’ personal life, career as a journalist, community and political activism in El Paso, and interest and expertise in chess

    Campbell, Archie

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    See entry in Pike County, volume 1, page 15: https://digital.archives.alabama.gov/digital/collection/voter1867/id/413
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