113 research outputs found
Dorothy Stratton standing with Mrs. Roosevelt and others
Dorothy C. Stratton 1942 Women Service Directors. (L to R) Ldr. Dorothy C. Stratton, MSCGR, Colonel Ruth Streeter, USMCR, MRS. Eleanor Roosevelt, Colonel Oveta Culp Hobby, USAR, Captain Mildred MCAfee (Horton)
Mildred Luz presenting Farm Safey 'Lost on the Farm' CD to Sifton School
Newspaper Article - Mildred Luz, Vice President, presenting Farm Safety 'Lost on the Farm' CD and manual to Sifton School Principal, Lorne Berg and grade three teacher Claire ErgaAWI CollectionAlberta Women's I n s t i t u t e vice p r e s i d e n t Mildred Luz ( centre) p r e s e n t s a Lost on the Farm
CD- ROM a n d manual t o Sifton School principal Lome Berg and grade t h r e e t e a c h e r Claire
Erga. The CD- ROM a n d manual were created to r a i s e awareness of safety among r u r a l students.
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Wiesel\u27s Memoir and God Outside Auschwitz
Night records Elie Wiesel’s internment at Auschwitz, and it raises questions about God’s and humanity’s respective roles in the death camps. Today’s literary critics and theologians, however, highlight Wiesel\u27s gift for story-telling of his theology and miss the quality of the writer’s individual works. Tending to group all of the author\u27s Holocaust stories to illuminate a particular theme, they have failed to recognize that Wiesel’s theology in Night is manifest only when they perceive that there is meaning in [it, which] comes only when the elements that go up to make that thing appear in their relatedness. They do not see that Wiesel\u27s text is a memoir rather than a short story or autobiography, and that the meaning of Night is that God makes the conscious choice of turning away from the world when humanity assumes God\u27s role in it. This essay will prove that the book is a memoir rather than an autobiography and, through textual analysis, that Wiesel believes God was inoperative at Auschwitz
A study to ascertain the nature of the intellectual organizations of ten selected retarded children on the basis of their performance on the Wechsler intelligence scale for children, 1953
A computer program for the analysis of data obtained from an instrument for faculty and course evaluation in an institution of higher learning, 1987
FACEVA.FOR is a computer program which will analytically compute averages of each section of the instrument for faculty and course evaluation according to the manner in which each question has been answered, A pilot run of this program has been used successfully at Atlanta University and my thesis presents a refinement into a more efficient and effective software package. Initially, this program was designed to be executable on the IBM 1130 computer in batch mode only. In this paper, the program is developed and expanded to be run on any computer with a FORTRAN IV compiler. The author field tested it in a conversation timesharing mode on Digital's PDF 11/40 computer. FEVAL.FOR does the same thing as FACEVA.FOR, except the sorting of the data is done prior to inputting the data in the input file of FEVAL.FOR
A study of general achievement of pupils in reading, spelling, language and arithmetic with emphasis upon the relationship of each content area to reading achievement, 1955
Jacksonville State Teachers College Semi-Centennial 1934 Celebration
The semi-centennial celebration was held Friday, August 10, 1934 outdoors at the State Teachers College in Jacksonville, Alabama. The program consisted of a processional, welcome address given by Supt. A.F. Harman, greetings, music, recessional, barbecue luncheon, inspection of grounds and buildings, open forum, parade, historical pageant, delivery of diplomas and conferring of degrees, semi-centennial address given by President C.W. Daugette, singing of the college song, etc. The candidates for degrees were Daisy Atkins, Mary Emmie Boozer, E. Grady Cook, Barbara Harris, Mildred E. Howell, Barto Hughes, Virginia Fendley Irby, Herschel Lindsay, Vera E. Meadows, Verna Mae Sizemore, Grace Abercrombie, Kathryn Allen, James C. Bailey, Alice Barganier, Winnie Barnes, Blake Bartlett, Raymond W. Bates, Clarence Beasley, Mildred B. Eason, Lois Bedwell, Jewel V. Belcher, Travis L. Belcher, Robbie Bertram, Karl Bertram, Dove B icknell, Lewis W. Blackerby, Orion Blackwell, Daisy Blair, H. L. Blocker, Bonnie Ruth Bowers, Hampton L. Bowman, Sarah Box, Lois Brock, Ruby Brock, A. E. Bruner, Hazel Bryant, Lester Bryant, Madolyn Buffington, Mamie Oda Burke, Margaret Sue Caffee, Georgia Camp, H. Eugene Cannon, Mary Kate Cannon, B. T. Cantrell, Alma Belle Carter, Clelen Clay, Wallace Clements, Louise Corley, D. P. Culp, Cora Davidson, Jeremiah Davidson, Herbert Dick, Thomas R. Downs, Mary Willie Elliott, Harvey D. Elrod, Lucille Acker Estes, Lois V. Faught, Josephine Ford, Lois Gaines, Eunice Garren, Nellie Gauntt, Arnold L. Gilbert, Vergie Spence Gilbert, Emma Glasscock, Mildred P. Glazner, Katherine Griffin, Nora Hall, WilliamThurman Hallman, Harry Lee Haney, Inez Hamilton, Pauline Harvella, Homer E. M. Hays, Winnie Lee Higgins, Ruth Hilt, Ewell Ruth Holland, Maynard Hood, James Cullen Hunnicutt, Mary Ann Jacobs, Kermit A. Johnson, J. P. Johnson, Maude B. Johnson, Bertha Frances Karr, Rosabel Landers, Annie Mae Leath, Dixie Mae Leath, Willie Myrtle Littlejohn, Irene Looney, Vernice Lyon, Mary McClendon, Alma Ruth McWhorter, Mrs. C. A. Mathews, Lillie Belle Matthews, Lucile Morton, Annie D. Moses, Herbert C. Murphree, Martha Murphree, Annie Mae Nichols, Coley M. Nichols, Ernest M. Plunkett, Clyde W. Qualls, Dane L. Rosser, Alton Runyans, Ophelia Runyans, Lucille Scroggin, Myrtle Segrest, Edward Sewell, Lucy Shipp, Travis Shipp, Lother B. Sibert, R. D. Simpson, Gerstle Grigsby Smith, Maggie Pullen Smith, William A. Smith, Lossie Stanford, Frank Stewart, Irene Stewart, Annie Laurie Swindall, Jacqueline Thomas, Joe E. Thompson, Marjorie Thompson, Theron Vick, Nellie Waldrop, Agnes Wall, Clarke Watters, Emmett Weaver, Willa Nolen Webb, J. C. White, Louise Wright, Mary Lizzie Yates, Everett York. [donated]https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib-ac-histimg/50030/thumbnail.jp
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