1,722,990 research outputs found
Dean W. Coston Papers
Dean W. Coston first worked for WUOM, Ann Arbor, as chief engineer from 1948 to 1961. In 1961, he joined the Department of Health, Education and Welfare in 1961 as Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary (Legislation). In 1963, he became Deputy Assistant Secretary, and was Deputy Under-Secretary by 1966. His main concern was the development, implementation and administration of legislation in various areas including education. Coston helped advance the cause of radio by including it in the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967, which he helped write. The collection documents Coston's involvement with the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare's Task Force on Educational Television and the passage of the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967
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[E-mail from Dean W. Anthony to J. Blake DeHart, June 2, 1986]
An e-mail from Dean W. Anthony to J. Blake DeHart about addressing elementary school staffing and offering recommendations
Letter from Dean W. Park to John Muir, 1898 Jul 1.
[letterhead]Box 118, July 1, 98John Muir,Dear Sir,I have long meant to write to you and ask you about an article on the water ousel which Mr. Foley told me of while I was at Yosemite. Please tell me if it is a pamphlet and price. I am much interested in your writings - and in birds, but it has been my fortune not to meet your articles on birds but on mountains, glaciers, etc. Your article on King\u27s River Carron in old Century, I read lately and visited the Carron.If I remember aright you have written a pamphlet on the Redwoods.Please inform me briefly what printed matter you have on these subjects.I am your grateful reader,Dean W. Park.02442https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/27376/thumbnail.jp
Diary excerpt, Mississippi State University President Dean W. Colvard, 1962-1965
In these diary excerpts, MSU President Dean W. Colvard documents events happening during the early 1960s at the university and in the state, including the integration of the University of Mississippi. Colvard details the events surrounding he and Coach Babe McCarthy\u27s decision to send the MSU basketball team to play Loyola Chicago in Michigan in March 1963, despite Governor Ross Barnett\u27s order that the team not be allowed to go. Colvard also details the integration of MSU in July 1965, when Richard Holmes enrolled as the first Black student in the university\u27s history.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/ua-msu-loyola-1963/1040/thumbnail.jp
Dr. Dean W. Colvard
Dr. Dean W. Colvardhttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/ua-photo-collection/3572/thumbnail.jp
Dr. Dean W. Colvard
Dr. Dean W. Colvard reading Newsweek magazinehttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/ua-photo-collection/3573/thumbnail.jp
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