28,276 research outputs found
[Memo from Captain D. F. Simpson, State Headquarters for Selective Service, Texas to T. N. Carswell - April 15, 1946]
A memo addressed to Mr. T. N. Carswell, Abilene, Texas, from D. F. Simpson, Captain, F. D. Personnel Officer, State Headquarters for Selective Service, Austin 17, Texas, dated April 15, 1946. Advisement of Refund of Retirement Deductions
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Isaac H. Kempner to A. D. Simpson informing that he received the Biography of Jesse Jones
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from I. H. Kempner to A. D. Simpson discussing the statement of the National Bank of Commerce that Kempner received and inquiring about Dee's letters of credit
James D. Simpson
James D. Simpson, Company D 1st Delaware Volunteers Wounded at Gettysburg, died a the Battle of Wilderness 186
James D. Simpson
James D. Simpson, Company D 1st Delaware Volunteers Wounded at Gettysburg, died a the Battle of Wilderness 186
Opening the can of worms: molecular analysis of schistosome populations
The Schistosomatidae are dioecious digenean parasites of the blood vascular system of vertebrates. Of the 13 genera within the family, only Sehistosoma is associated with humans and, of the mammalian blood flukes, this genus has achieved the greatest geographical distribution and diversification in terms of recognized species and definitive hosts parasitized. In this review, Dave Johnston, Emmanuel Dias Neto, Andy Simpson and David Rollinson consider some recent molecular research that either sheds light on the micro-evolutionary changes occurring within schistosome populations or provides insights into broader, macro-evolutionary questions.</p
Harriette Simpson Arnow, 1908-1986
A documentary film on southern Appalachian author Harriette Simpson Arnow. Directed by Herb E. Smith for Appalshop Productions in 1987
Recommended from our members
Mona Simpson: Q&A with the Bestselling Novelist and Professor of English
Mona Simpson writes novels. Her 1987 debut, Anywhere But Here, follows Adele and Ann August, a mother and daughter who move from the Midwest to Los Angeles in search of a less ordinary life. The novel went on to be a national bestseller, winning the Whiting Award in 1986, catapulting the author into the literary spotlight. Simpson followed her first novel’s success with a sequel: The Lost Father, published in 1992. Four years later, Simpson returned with A Regular Guy (1996). That same year Granta named Simpson one of America’s Best Young Novelists. In 2000, Simpson published Off Keck Road, a novel about a small town spinster, a man who has always been in her life, and a young girl, who completes the odd triangle. This work was a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award. Her upcoming novel, My Hollywood (Knopf, Spring 2010), depicts the upstairs/downstairs ironies, enmities, and strange affections between a community of immigrant nannies and their employers in contemporary Los Angeles. Presently, Simpson has begun a story about the lives and loves of Diaspora Arabs in Europe, the Gulf, and the United States, and of their more assimilated, half-American cousins. Simpson is also a Professor in the Department of English and plays an active part in organizing the Friends of English and Hammer Museum’s popular “Some Favorite Writers” series. On a recent summer afternoon, I sat down in a Brentwood coffee shop with Simpson to talk about her work and, in particular, The American Cousins
[Visiting Card for A. D Simpson]
Visiting card for A. D. Simpson, featuring his name centered and printed in small-caps, as well as his title and occupation in bottom-left
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