3,213 research outputs found
SIDE 1: Dick Gregory
This audio recording features an episode of Martin Luther King, Jr./SCLC Speaks. In this episode, as stated by the narrator, the "wit and wisdom" of comedian and civil rights leader Dick Gregory are featured. Gregory speaks about racism in America and the struggles of the civil rights movement as well as commentary on the healthcare system. Gregory includes moments of levity in his remarks, such as where he speaks about Michael Jackson's adoption of a chimpanzee as a pet.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Joseph & Evelyn Lowery Institute for Justice and Human Rights, the Joseph Echols Lowery Irrevocable Trust, and other donors in supporting the processing and digitization of Morehouse College's Joseph Echols and Evelyn Gibson Lowery Collection
Dick Gregory Speaks at a Youth Drug and Alcohol Abuse Campaign Event, April 15, 1986
Dick Gregory speaks at a Southern Christian Leadership Conference campaign event advocating against youth drug and alcohol abuse. Written on verso: Dick Gregory addresses the enthusiastic crowd against the use of drugs.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Joseph & Evelyn Lowery Institute for Justice and Human Rights, the Joseph Echols Lowery Irrevocable Trust, and other donors in supporting the processing and digitization of Morehouse College's Joseph Echols and Evelyn Gibson Lowery Collection
Dick Gregory Speaking at a SCLC Board Meeting, April 1990
Dick Gregory is shown speaking at a Southern Christian Leadership Conference Spring Board meeting held at Grace Temple Baptist Church in Detroit, Michigan.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Joseph & Evelyn Lowery Institute for Justice and Human Rights, the Joseph Echols Lowery Irrevocable Trust, and other donors in supporting the processing and digitization of Morehouse College's Joseph Echols and Evelyn Gibson Lowery Collection
Dick Gregory Receiving a Drum Major for Justice Award, January 15, 1980
Joseph E. Lowery (at left), Charles Kenzie Steele (first on the right), and Wyatt Tee Walker present Dick Gregory (second from the left) with a Drum Major for Justice Award. Written on verso: Atlanta, Ga. Jan. 15, 1980, Rev. C.K. Steele presenter of the Drum Major Award to Dick Gregory, at the first annual Martin Luther Award Memorial Dinner at the Atlanta, Hilton Hotel.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Joseph & Evelyn Lowery Institute for Justice and Human Rights, the Joseph Echols Lowery Irrevocable Trust, and other donors in supporting the processing and digitization of Morehouse College's Joseph Echols and Evelyn Gibson Lowery Collection
Dick Gregory and Others Sitting in Church During a SCLC Board Meeting, April 1990
Dick Gregory is shown with Claud Young (at right) and an unidentified man sitting in front of a choir at a Southern Christian Leadership Conference Spring Board meeting held at Grace Temple Baptist Church in Detroit, Michigan.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Joseph & Evelyn Lowery Institute for Justice and Human Rights, the Joseph Echols Lowery Irrevocable Trust, and other donors in supporting the processing and digitization of Morehouse College's Joseph Echols and Evelyn Gibson Lowery Collection
Gregory, Dick with Bluford Guion, 1984-01-13
Written on verso: (l-r) President Gloster, Astronaut Guion Bluford, and Dr. Lawrence E. Carter, Dean of King Chapel -- January 13, 1984.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) in supporting the processing and digitization of a number of historic collections as part of the project: Our Story: Digitizing Publications and Photographs of the Historically Black Atlanta University Center Institutions.</em
Correction: Early management of isolated severe traumatic brain injury patients in a hospital without neurosurgical capabilities: a consensus and clinical recommendations of the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES) (World Journal of Emergency Surgery, (2023), 18, 1, (5), 10.1186/s13017-022-00468-2)
Following publication of the original article [1], in this article the author name Gregory W. J. Hawryluk was incorrectly written as Gregory W. J. Hawrylux. The original article has been corrected
Negative Dialectics in Elliott Carter: Toward an Adornian Aesthetics of Carter\u27s Music
This dissertation is an attempt to lay the groundwork for an Adornian aesthetics of Elliott Carter’s music. The first chapter suggests that Theodor W. Adorno’s negative dialectics is the most appropriate paradigm for understanding the material antagonisms that characterize Carter’s music over a quasi-Hegelian “unity of opposites” as suggested in the Carter scholarship. Chapter Two demonstrates this through an Adornian reading of key aspects of the first movement of Carter’s 1948 Sonata for Cello and Piano, the watershed work for Carter’s mature style. The third chapter addresses the issue of musical time in Carter from a philosophical perspective; it discusses the philosophical thought referenced in Carter’s 1976 essay “Music and the Time Screen” and offers an Adornian critique in an effort to reframe the “matter of time” in Carter’s music on a materialist basis. Chapter Four offers a very close reading of the first page of Gra (1993) for solo clarinet in order to demonstrate how Adorno’s notion of conceptual non-identity can be applied to the analysis of a work from Carter’s later period. The final chapter briefly considers an historical framing of Carter’s periodization and suggests possible socio-historical interpretive avenues to pursue in a fuller treatment of Carter’s aesthetics
Saint-“heretic” Gregory Palamas on inner being of the Holy Trinity
The article examines the figure and the teaching of the famous Byzantine theologian, Hesychast and Church leader of the fourteenth century St. Gregory Palamas. The author considers the problem of the intratrinitarian being of God in the Palamas’ doctrine and analyses the key characteristics of this “hidden” dimension of the Holy Trinity. Special attention is paid to the analysis of the apophatic approaches in answering the question: how can God, who is actively present in the created world and filling it, be at the same time completely ontologically removed from created reality. In this context the author analyses the key notions which express the “intradivine” transcendence of God’s being: ousia, hipostasis, intratrinitarian relation, theologia, oikonomia.W niniejszym artykule autor analizuje nauczanie św. Grzegorza Palamasa, znanego bizantyńskiego teologa, hezychasty i przywódcy duchowego Kościoła XIV wieku. Autor omawia problem wewnątrztrynitarnego bytu Boga w nauczaniu Palamasa i analizuje atrybuty kluczowe tego „ukrytego” wymiaru Trójcy Świętej. Szczególną uwagę zwraca na prezentację podejścia apofatycznego w odpowiedzi na pytanie: w jaki sposób Bóg, który jest aktywnie obecny w świecie stworzonym i napełnia go, może jednocześnie być całkowicie oddalony od świata stworzonego pod względem ontologicznym? W tym kontekście autor analizuje kluczowe pojęcia, które wyrażają wewnątrztrynitarną transcendencję Bożego bytu: istota, substancja, wewnątrztrynitarna relacja, teologia, ekonomia zbawienia
Kobiety w listach Grzegorza z Nazjanzu
The article seeks to present this part of the epistolary writings of Gregory of Nazianzus that is addressed to women or applies for them. Among the female audience of the bishop we find women from diverse backgrounds and of various marital status. Widows were the most represented group. Gregory often wrote his letters on their behalf, asking powerful members of society – other bishops or high-ranking civil officials – for support their concerns. Some of these women were distressed by financial and law troubles. Unfortunately, in most of the cases we do not know the causes of their worries. It is worth to notice that among the widows that appear in Gregory’s letters there were also independent and powerful women who helped the priest or the local Church. In Gregory’s letters we also find a few ascetics. One of them, Thecla, can be acknowledged as the closest female friend of our author. There is only one letter that the bishop wrote in the name of a young maiden, his niece Eugenia, who was harmed by her coheirs. Gregory also helped two married women to solve their marital problems.Celem artykułu jest przedstawienie tego wycinka epistolarnej twórczości Grzegorza z Nazjanzu, który adresowany jest do kobiet lub ich dotyczy. Kobiety należące do kierowanej przez biskupa wspólnoty wiernych miały różne pochodzenie społeczne i status cywilny. W analizowanych listach najliczniej reprezentowaną grupę stanowią wdowy. Grzegorz często wysyłał pisma w ich imieniu, prosząc wpływowych członków społeczeństwa – innych biskupów lub wysokich rangą urzędników cywilnych – o ulżenie im w ich troskach. Niektóre z tych kobiet borykały się z problemami natury finansowej i prawnej. Niestety, w większości przypadków nie znamy szczegółów dotyczących powodów ich zmartwień. Warto zaznaczyć, że wśród wdów, które pojawiają się w listach Grzegorza, znajdujemy również kobiety niezależne i zamożne, które pomagały duchownemu lub całemu lokalnemu Kościołowi. W listach biskupa występuje także kilka ascetek. Jedną z nich, Teklę, możemy uznać za najbliższą przyjaciółkę Teologa. Zachował się tylko jeden list naszego autora, za pośrednictwem którego stara się on przyjść z pomocą młodej kobiecie niezamężnej, swojej siostrzenicy Eugenii, krzywdzonej przez współspadkobierców. Biskup listownie pomagał również dwóm mężatkom w rozwiązaniu ich problemów małżeńskich
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