610 research outputs found
Katie Lind Colton
Katie Lind Colton was born January 28, 1909 to Lewis P. Lind and Eliza Lind. Katie married Frank Edwin Colton on November 6,1929. She died on November 28, 1994. She and Frank are buried in the Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park in Millcreek, Utah
Neurological Illness -- November,1983 -- Correspondence, Miscellaneous -- letter, 1983-11-27
Letter from Colton, Lind to Sabin, Albert B. dated 1983-11-27.Sabin Collection Fair Use Policy</a
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A Norwegian grey zone: Knut Rød, Victor Lind and 'The crucial year, 1942'
This article uses Primo Levi’s concept of “the grey zone” to explore Knut Rød’s involvement in the transfer of 532 Norwegian Jews from Oslo to Auschwitz in 1942. Rød, the police chief in charge of the operation, was subsequently exonerated of any crime on the grounds that he had simultaneously used his position to help members of Milorg – the Norwegian Resistance. The legal and moral basis of this verdict has been questioned by the artist Victor Lind in a series of artworks, including his “countermonument” The Perpetrator (2005)
Katie Lind
Katie Lind is pictured her senior year at Uintah High School. She was born in 1909 to Lewis and Eliza Lind. She married Frank Edwin Colton in 1929. She died November 28, 1994
Katie Lind
Katie Lind is pictured her junior year at Uintah High School. She was born in 1909 to Lewis and Eliza Lind. She married Frank Edwin Colton in 1929. She died November 28, 1994
Katie Lind
Katie Lind is the daughter of Lewis and Eliza Lewis. She married Frank Edwin Colton
Frank Edwin Jr. and Katie Lind
Frank Edwin Colton Jr. and Katie Lind were married November 6, 1929
Letter of thanks for reciept of 25th Anniversary Library Booklet from Henry E. Becker of Florida to Judith Y. Lind, Director, Roseland Public Library, May 21, 1997
Transcript of letter written by Henry E. Becker of Florida to Judith Y. Lind, Director, Roseland Free Public Library thanking her for the 25th Anniversary Library Booklet, written on May 21, 1999
An other tongue: language and identity in translingual writing
PhDAbandoning one‟s mother tongue for another language is one of the most profound aspects of exile experience, often fraught with feelings of loss and alienation. Yet the linguistic switch can also be viewed as an advantage: the adopted language becomes a refuge, affording the writer creative distance and perspective. This thesis examines the effects of this switch as reflected in the works of two translingual Jewish authors, Stefan Heym (1913-2001) and Jakov Lind (1927-2007). Both were forced into exile after their lives in Germany and Austria were shattered by the rise of Nazism, and both chose English as a medium of artistic expression at certain periods of their lives.
Reading these authors‟ works within their post-war historical context, the thesis argues that translingualism is associated with a psychic split as the self is divided between its languages. This schism manifests itself differently in the writing of each of these authors, according to their distinct perceptions of their identity and place in the world: in Lind‟s work, it is experienced as a schizophrenic existence, and in Heym‟s – as an advantageous doubling of perspective.
The first chapter focuses on autobiographical writing in a foreign language, exploring how self and language are bound together in Lind‟s English-language autobiographies. The second chapter draws on Bakhtin‟s notion of dialogism as it considers the relationship between narration, ideology and propaganda in Heym‟s war novel The Crusaders. The third chapter examines Lind‟s and Heym‟s representations of the writer in their fiction, and how their translingualism defines their perception of their own identity and role as writers. The final chapter shows how the two authors reinterpret the figure of the Wandering Jew to construct different visions of a humanistic Jewish identity that correspond to their own diasporic existence
The Lind-Lehmer Constant for cyclic groups of order less than 892,371,480
We determine the Lind–Lehmer constant for the cyclic group Zn when n is not a multiple of 892,371,480=2³⋅3⋅5⋅7⋅11⋅13⋅17⋅19⋅23
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