305,579 research outputs found

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from I. J. Cook to Isaac H. Kempner discussing informing that the Additional insurance is not cash value

    Nur-i-Afshan V.06 no.07 February 1902

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    Contents: Editorial notes - Living witnesses - Current thought and incident : who was Jesus Christ? - No [Poetry] by Cook, Eliza, 1818-1889 - Telegrams [Letter] This volume of Nur-i-Afshan published weekly on Fridays from Ludhiana

    Oral History Interview with Loree Cook-Daniels, January 30, 2011

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    Loree Cook-Daniels has been an active member in the Milwaukee LGBT community, affiliated with FORGE, Diverse and Resilient, the Milwaukee LGBT Community Center, SAGE Milwaukee, and the Lesbian Alliance of Metro Milwaukee. Cook-Daniels discusses her marriage to her partner, Marcelle, in the mid-1980s; Marcelle's transition to a man while Loree remained a lesbian; and the lesbian community's rejection of them as a couple. She also recounts her frustration with the transgender community as it existed in the mid-1990s, and her role in advocating for the importance of Significant Others, Friends, Families, and Allies (SOFFAs) to transgender people. Cook-Daniels describes her involvement with FORGE, a Milwaukee-based organization formed to provide to provide peer support primarily to those on the female-to-male (FTM) gender spectrum and SOFFAs. She identifies two important moments in the recent history of Milwaukee's transgender community: the 2007 FORGE Forward conference, which was the first national FTM/SOFFA conference to be held in the Midwest, and the 2010 murder of Dana A. "Chanel" Larkin, which focused local attention on violence against transgender people.Milwaukee Transgender Oral History Project University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Libraries Milwaukee, Wisconsin Loree Cook-Daniels Interviewed by Brice Smith January 30, 2011 at Cook-Daniels’ home Transcribed by Matt Eidem Copyright © 2011 University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. All rights reserved. Brice Smith – BS Loree Cook-Daniels – CD BS: All right, if you could please state your name, first and last. CD: Loree Cook-Daniels. BS: All right, it looks like we’re good for the sound. Okay, alright Loree, thanks for agreeing to participate in the Milwaukee Transgender Oral History Project. If we could first start just with some general biographical information. Well for starters how is it that you identify? CD: (laughs) Oh, start with the hard one! BS: (laughs) CD: I no longer claim a sexual-orientation label. I gave that up many years ago when my first partner transitioned, and I continued at that point to call myself a lesbian and a number o

    Walter Wheeler Cook

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    My real acquaintance with Walter Wheeler Cook began in the summer of 1919, when I went on the Yale Law faculty as its greenest member. Cook was then finishing his work at Yale for what proved to be only a temporary hegira to Columbia. Since he was an inveterate office visitor, congenitally disposed to debate everything from the latest theory of jurisprudence to the smallest detail of school operation, and since he took an especial interest in the younger faculty, I would undoubtedly have seen much of him in any event. It so happened, however, that I was given a small office which opened up into his. Hence chance thus put me in the natural flow of the burning lava from his mind, and in con- sequence daily and almost hourly I basked in its glow when I did not wither in its heat. This was for me a postgraduate legal education of inestimable value. By it, as I can now see, my legal thinking and my approach to legal education and the judicial process were permanently shaped. I regard Cook as, save Holmes himself, the earliest and still in some ways the most pre-eminent of our legal realists; and though the debate as to the definition of a realist is likely to continue, I doubt if there will be real question of Cook's outstanding place in the movement and hence in American legal thought

    Nur-i-Afshan V.06 no.33 August 1902

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    Contents: Editorial notes - Current thought and incident : the sequel to gambling by Cook, Charles - She starved to death - Men women and money - For Christ is risen [Poetry] by Agnew, Mary Virginia - Telegrams [Letter] This volume of Nur-i-Afshan published weekly on Fridays from Ludhiana

    A Mexican Cook : Mexican Food and How to Cook it in Ireland

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    Hi, I\u27m Lily and I\u27m the Mexican Cook in Ireland. Before you ask, as I\u27m sure you will, after all it is the one question I get asked the most: How in the name of God did a Mexican Cook find herself living in Ireland, writing about Mexican Food and basically eating and cooking her way through everything in the Irish pantry and mashing it up with her Mexican roots

    World War I record of service survey for Lloyd H. Cook, signed 25 August 1922

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    Questionnaire about Lloyd Harlow Cook's service in World War I, 1917-1919, signed by Cook on 25 August 1922.Questionnaire originally part of a survey of Norwich University alumni conducted by a “Norwich in the World War” committee consisting of Charles N. Barber (chairman), Carl V. Woodbury, K.R.B. Flint, and Gustaf A. Nelson. Data from these questionnaires may have been used in a chapter of "Vermont in the world war, 1917-1919" by Harold P. Sheldon (1928). Transcription by Carina Berg. Transcriptions may be subject to error

    David Cook: River Road

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    Time Machine is a quarterly online photographic magazine. The editorial theme for Issue Five was 'Elegy'. My contribution is a series of 20 photographs from my River Road series. The photographs are accompanied by a written piece, in which I discuss the themes of loss and melancholy as represented in this series of photographs

    Cook, I

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    Djeboa obovata Cook 1966

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    Djeboa obovata (Cook, 1966) (Figs. 31 A–F) Mideopsis (Djeboa) obovata Cook 1966: 240. Material examined: Type series: FMC, Liberia; holotype female, Congo Town area, water filled ditch, 30.vii. 1958 Cook (Coll. 105); paratype male, same data as holotype. General features: Idiosoma tapering posteriorly, obovoid in shape (L/W ratio 1.1–1.2), dorsal shield without medial depression; muscle scars with weakly pronounced thickenings, located anterior and posterior to the postocularia; colour pattern unknown; gnathosomal bay Y-shaped, narrowing in posterior half; tips of Cx-I ending posterior to frontal margin; medial margin of Cx-IV not reduced to a median angle; Cx-III and -IV with a few longitudinal striae (two or three pairs on Cx-IV) Palp (Fig. 31 D): P- 1 without a dorsal seta; P- 2 with slightly concave ventral and convexly bowed dorsal margin; P- 3 ventral margin slightly concave; P- 4 equally narrowing from the base to distal edge. Legs: I-L (Fig. 31 E) with I-L- 6 dL/H ratio 3.2; IV-L: Fig. 31 F. Discussion: Differing from all known species of the genus in the obovate idiosoma shape. Distribution: Liberia (Cook 1966).Published as part of Pešić, Vladimir, Cook, David, Gerecke, Reinhard & Smit, Harry, 2013, The water mite family Mideopsidae (Acari: Hydrachnidia): a contribution to the diversity in the Afrotropical region and taxonomic changes above species level, pp. 1-75 in Zootaxa 3720 (1) on page 53, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3720.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/28502
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