5,539 research outputs found
[Letter from Jeff Davis to T. N. Carswell - January 21, 1941]
A letter written to Dr. T. N. Carswell, Abilene, Texas from Jeff Davis, Executive Secretary, United Texas Drys, dated January 21, 1941. Davis supplies a list of names, as requested by Carswell, of key men in the District and advises that Dr. Walter H. McKenzie of University Baptist Church in Austin be their official representative to the Legislature
Correspondence - July 24, 1963 - George M. Davis
A correspondence from George T. Davis to Roland Leath, notifying him of the death of Florence Swope, wife of Lewis Walter Swope.https://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/first-baptist-shelby-lewis-walter-swope/1002/thumbnail.jp
Letter from Carl Hayden to Bishop Walter Mitchell
Letter from Carl Hayden to Walter Mitchell on building a Union Chapel in the Grand Canyon
Walter F. Carlson and Bennie Davis - A&T Marching Band
Image of university band director Walter F. Carlson and drum major Bennie Davis.https://digital.library.ncat.edu/atiqueroadshow2021/1006/thumbnail.jp
[Thomas Walter (Bud) Davis wearing a dark suit, tie, and hat]
Photograph of Thomas Walter (Bud) Davis. In the portrait, Davis is wearing a dark suit, dark tie with white striping, and a light colored felt hat with a flat, squared crown. The photograph ends just below the waist. The portrait is encased in a pale gray folder. The photograph is mounted directly on a tan matte with embossed border. In gray print near bottom of portrait: "H. H. Morris, Galveston, Texas." Front closure of folder an embossed "M" in top left corner. A tissue paper page is part of the folder and serves as protection for the photograph when folder is closed. On the back of the folder in the top left corner written vertically: "10988 [line] 2". Written in pencil at top right of inside cover: "T. W. (Bud) Davis". Image dimensions are: 13.2 cm x 18.2 cm. The photograph is adhered to the folder and is therefore accessioned as a unit
Letter from Ray T. Yasui to Mr. and Mrs. Walter Pollock, September 7, 1979
Post-WWII, Pollock maintains various correspondence with folks from the Fresno Assembly Center, as well as other correspondence with the Pentagon.Walter E. Pollock was the head of the service division at the Fresno Assembly Center. He was deeply affected by his time working at the center and was working on a memoir of his experiences there, but unfortunately passed away before it could be completed. The collection contains his research and draft chapters
The pragmatic constructions of Deleuze, Guattari and Miles Davis
The aim of the following investigation is two-fold. Firstly, the project takes as its focus the growing corpus of secondary literature written on the work of the French philosophers and theorists Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, whose work has generated a great deal of
interest in recent years and a proportionate amount of controversy. Much of this controversy can be attributed to simplifications and misunderstandings on the part of
commentators who have in some instances neglected to approach Deleuze and Guattari with sufficent rigour and care, resulting in the perpetuation of so many misunderstandings regarding their work.
Secondly, the project will seek to redress some of these misunderstandings by recourse to a pragmatic embodiment of Deleuze and Guattari's concepts and ideas through a case-study based on the life and work of the African-American jazz musician Miles Davis. In attempting to provide a new and challenging case as the basis for this investigation, the overriding aim is to assess the pragmatic remit of Deleuze and Guattari's thought, in terms of aesthetics, ethics and politics, whilst remaining sensitive to the potential limitations and dangers of their project
Vitalistic information systems in the South African public health system : a transactional analysis perspective
Includes bibliographical references
AFWR4
This fourth volume of presently six begins "Despite many requests, the flow of Foibles has continued to gush unabated (if that is the word) out of the creative organs (some would say the bowels) of their creator." Rothschild's ability to laugh with himself is a chief quality of these works. It strikes me as fitting irony that this page, verso of the title-page and facing page 3 has the page number "30." That introduction, repeating the introduction to Volume 3, has this collection right: "There is something here for everyone to find something they do NOT like but hopefully in between there might be pieces which stimulate curiosity or permit one to look at simple everyday matters in a new light." For this volume, I preselected five stories based on their titles in the opening T of C. "A Frogment of History" (#309) is a happy conglomeration of puns around a reversal: every prince that this princess kisses turns into a frog! Here is one great example: "Her suitors all croaked before they could do anything significant…." (24). I chose #313 and #314 next because they have similar titles: "Word tasting" and "Word Tasting." Unless I am missing something, the T of C has in the former case a simple typo; the story has nothing to do with tasting or the word "tasting." "Word Tasting" (#314) is just that, a delightful experiment in analyzing what it is like to taste physically some key words, including "word" and "tasting." "Dissing Abilities" (#352) questions our need to accommodate all disabilities, with sometimes hilarious results. Moral: "If you've read this far, you probably have no brain. How does it feel?" (115). "The Illegible Bachelor" (#397) is fun start to finish; the happy state of the couple does not lead to a happy ending. The author cannot reveal the couple's names because their entry in the Marriage Register is "Illegible" (219). 230 pages.Rabbi Walter Rothschil
[Notes], Ray Yasui
Handwritten notes describing Ray T. Yasui who is a former incarceree. Post-WWII, Pollock maintains various correspondence with folks from the Fresno Assembly Center, as well as other correspondence with the Pentagon.Walter E. Pollock was the head of the service division at the Fresno Assembly Center. He was deeply affected by his time working at the center and was working on a memoir of his experiences there, but unfortunately passed away before it could be completed. The collection contains his research and draft chapters
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