811 research outputs found
Letter from Dwight Heard to Carl Hayden
Letter from Dwight B. Heard, president and publisher of The Arizona Republican, to Carl T. Hayden about a visit by Stephen Mathe
Letter from Carl Hayden to Dwight Heard
Letter of introduction for Dwight B. Heard on the arrival of National Park Service Director Stephen T. Mather to Phoenix. Mather's visit includes trips to Roosevelt Dam and Tumacácori
Theology : explained and defended, in a series of sermons ... with a memoir of the life of the author.
Memoir by the author's sons, Sereno E. Dwight and William T. Dwight.Mode of access: Internet
Four Year's Relics Volume 1
First volume "Four Year's Relics" from the papers of Henry Otis Dwight, consisting of original drawings, documents, maps, and a partial narrative of 1st Lieutenant Dwight's service in the Ohio Volunteer Infantry 20th Regiment. The drawings and narrative depict camp life and fellow officers during the Civil War. Henry Otis Dwight was born in Constantinople, Turkey, to missionary parents. He traveled to the United States to attend college at Ohio Wesleyan in Delaware, Ohio, and while there in September 1861 enlisted as a private in Delaware's "Lenape Greys" and subsequently mustered as Company D, 20th Ohio Volunteer Infantry. He rose through the ranks to brevet Captain before mustering out in July 1865. For four years of campaigning with Union armies in the west, he made notes and sketched. In November 1864 Harper's Magazine published an account he wrote on the Atlanta campaign. After the war he married and then returned to Turkey where he had a long and distinguished career as a missionary and author
An Essay on education; delivered at the public commencement, at Yale-College, in New-Haven, September 9th, 1772.
8 p. ; 21 cm.Trumbull suggests Timothy Dwight as author
Mr. Dwight L. Hunter Jr. and Mrs. Dwight L. Hunter Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight L. Hunter Jr., friends of author Paul Horgan, is examining volumes in the collection of the Amon Carter Museum of Western Art. Fort Worth Star-Telegram Evening January 24, 1961.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1960s/1326/thumbnail.jp
Dwight Duncan and Richard Mohr: Who Should be Allowed to Marry: The Same Sex Debate
A debate on issues surrounding same-sex marriage.
Dwight Duncan, a professor at the Southern New England School of Law, is one of the nation\u27s leading conservative authorities on legal ethics and constitutional law. He has written extensively about First Amendment rights, euthanasia and same-sex marriage, and has participated in many legal debates on gay and lesbian rights.
A practicing member of the Supreme Court of the United States Bar, Duncan is the principal co-author of the Supreme Court briefs on the prevailing side of Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Organization, in which the court ruled that forcing a veteran\u27s group to include a gay faction in its yearly St. Patrick\u27s Day parade violated the First Amendment.
Duncan holds degrees from Harvard University, Georgetown University Law School and the Roman Athenaeum of the Holy Cross in Rome, Italy.
Richard Mohr, author of A More Perfect Union: Why Straight America Must Stand Up for Gay Rights and one of America\u27s foremost gay thinkers, is a professor of philosophy at the University of Illinois. In 1988, he published Gays/Justice, a book documenting gay public policy issues, and his Gay Ideas: Outing and Other Controversies, raised national furor in the literary world when almost two dozen publishers refused to print it due to homoerotic representations.
Mohr lectures frequently on topics ranging from anti-gay violence, domestic partnership issues and the implementation of nondiscrimination policies for gays in the workplace
Development of irrigation in the Bend area c. 1890 to 1940
prepared by: Dwight A. Smith, Cultural Resources Specialist.Title from PDF title page (viewed on January 29, 2020).This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references (pages 8-9).Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
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