5,798 research outputs found

    Third Annual Distributors Meeting

    No full text
    Third Annual Distributors Meeting at Seabrook Farms. Pictured here are Harold Doyle, Joseph Cotton, and J. P. Moffett

    Letter from John P. John to Joseph R. Goodman, 1942

    No full text
    Letter from John P. John to Joseph R. Goodman: "Here are a couple of letters Caleb received concerning the Japanese situation. I have already sent him a condensed record of their general text. Probably more material will be coming in from time to time and we will forward it to you. I guess this is sufficient since Caleb has spoken with you in detail about the problem and where he is to be contacted in the east. Louise Thompson and I are holding things down while Caleb is away and can be contacted here by mail for anything."Personal correspondence, organizational records, government documents, publications, and other papers created or collected by Joseph R. Goodman documenting the forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, as well as organized resistance to incarceration. Included in the collection are records of the Japanese Young Men's Christian Association and the Japanese American Citizens' League in San Francisco, including papers of the Japanese YMCA's executive secretary Lincoln Kanai; Sakai family papers; Goodman's correspondence to and from Japanese American incarcerees, organizations opposing forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans, the War Relocation Authority, and others; publications, photographs, and ephemera from the Topaz Relocation Center, where Goodman taught high school; War Relocation Authority records and publications; and newspaper clippings, pamphlets, and reports about forced removal and incarceration created by various government, religious, and civic organizations, in California and nationwide

    The relationship between Ford, Kipling, Conan Doyle, Wells and British propaganda of the First World War

    No full text
    PhDThis thesis resituates the war-writing of Ford Madox Ford, Rudyard Kipling, Arthur Conan Doyle and H.G. Wells in relation to official British propaganda produced during the First World War. Examining these authors' institutional connections with propaganda that was authorised by the British government locates some of their texts within a network of materials that were deployed to justify Britain's involvenlent in the war. The British government, via the War Propaganda Bureau, approached major literary figures to assist in its plan to compete vigorously with Germany to win American support. Positioning Ford's condemnation of Prussian culture within this institutional context reveals that his officially commissioned books functioned as a part of the larger yet-covert government project to influence American intellectual opinion. Although wary that Kipling's chauvinism might offend some readers, the British government reprinted and distributed his denunciations of the 'Hun'. Kipling was given access to censored letters from Indian soldiers in order to assist him in depicting the Imperial forces as united. The result, The Eyes of Asia (1918), was a set of fictional texts by Indian soldiers celebrating French and English civilisation in contrast to German barbarism. In addition to official propaganda, these authors produced pro-war stories, poems, and articles independent of direct government commission. Conan Doyle's formal call for men to volunteer to defend their country, and his public denunciations of German atrocities, were followed by his recruitment of Sherlock Holmes to repel a possible German invasion ("His Last Bow" (1917)). Adding to his support for the war in his journalism and war-time fiction, Wells was appointed the Head of Enemy Propaganda for the newly formed Ministry of Information. He resigned almost immediately following disagreements over government strategy. This project situates historically and examines critically these authors' differing roles in relation to British propaganda efforts during the First World War

    The new enfant du siècle: Joseph de Maistre as a writer

    No full text
    The essays contained within this volume were first presented at Reappraisals/Reconsidérations, the Fifth International Colloquium on Joseph de Maistre, held at Jesus College, Cambridge on 4 and 5 December 2008.Series editor-in-chief: Guy Rowlands, University of St AndrewsJoseph de Maistre's reputation as a writer is legendary. His style, unique and alive, moulded the French language anew. It sabotaged his attempts at anonymous publication and earned him, through the centuries, the praises of enemies and admirers. Yet the relationship between Maistre's thought and writing remains ill-known. This collection is the first to examine how Maistre's ideas – including his denunciation of the written word – intersected with his writing practices and personas. The essays disclose an author formed by duty and affectionate relationships, by the conventions of public combat, by an intense sense of history, and by the imperatives of Revolution.Introduction: assessing Maistre's style and rhetoric / Richard A. Lebrun -- Joseph de Maistre as pamphleteer / Richard A. Lebrun -- Joseph de Maistre, letter writer / Pierre Glaudes ; translated by Kevin Michael Erwin and Richard A. Lebrun -- Joseph de Maistre: the paradox of the writer / Benjamin Thurston -- Epilogue: the forced inhabitant of history / Carolina ArmenterosPublisher PD

    Supporting disabled children and their families in Scotland: A review of policy and research

    No full text
    The Joseph Rowntree Foundation has been supporting research about disabled children and their families for a number of years. An earlier Foundations covering the messages from these projects has already been published (1). This Foundations places the messages from that work into the Scottish context. It gives an overview of current policies affecting disabled children and their families in Scotland and draws on research carried out north of the border

    The Future of Large, Internationally Active Banks: Does Scale Define the Winners?

    No full text
    Our research as well as that by other authors has found scale economies at all sizes of banks and the largest scale economies at the largest banks – that is, larger banks are able to provide products at lower average cost than smaller banks. While the earlier literature found that scale economies are exhausted beyond a modest size – no larger than $100 billion and usually much smaller – a number of recent studies have found scale economies beyond this point, in fact, economies that increase with size. Based on a model that appropriately accounts for endogenous risk-taking and controls for any cost-of-funding advantages conferred on large banks, we find that technological factors, not advantages in funding costs, account for their scale economies. The literature does not indicate whether these benefits of larger size outweigh the potential costs in terms of systemic risk that large scale may impose on the financial system. However, if public policy considerations imply that society would be better off with smaller financial institutions, restrictions that limit the size of financial institutions, if effective, may put large banks at a competitive disadvantage in global markets where competitors are not similarly constrained. Moreover, size restrictions may not be effective since they work against market forces and create incentives for firms to avoid them. Avoiding the restrictions could thereby push risk-taking outside of the more regulated financial sector without necessarily reducing systemic risk. If such limits were imposed, intensive monitoring for such risks would be required. These factors need to be considered when evaluating policies concerning financial institution scale.Prepared for the Eighteenth Annual International Banking Conference with the theme, "Conference on the Future of Large, Internationally Active Banks", organized by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the World Bank (Chicago, IL, November 2015). Session 1: The Cross-Border Banking Landscape, November 5, 2015

    Robrecht Boudens, Two Cardinals : John Henry Newman, Désiré Joseph Mercier, edited by L. Gevers with the collaboration of Β. Doyle. Leuven, University Press et Uitgeverij Peeters, coll. « Bibliotheca Ephemeridum Theologicarum Lovaniensium » CXXIII, 1995

    No full text
    Goichot Emile. Robrecht Boudens, Two Cardinals : John Henry Newman, Désiré Joseph Mercier, edited by L. Gevers with the collaboration of Β. Doyle. Leuven, University Press et Uitgeverij Peeters, coll. « Bibliotheca Ephemeridum Theologicarum Lovaniensium » CXXIII, 1995. In: Revue d'histoire et de philosophie religieuses, 77e année n°1, Janvier-mars 1997. p. 118

    Robrecht Boudens, Two Cardinals : John Henry Newman, Désiré Joseph Mercier, edited by L. Gevers with the collaboration of Β. Doyle. Leuven, University Press et Uitgeverij Peeters, coll. « Bibliotheca Ephemeridum Theologicarum Lovaniensium » CXXIII, 1995

    No full text
    Goichot Emile. Robrecht Boudens, Two Cardinals : John Henry Newman, Désiré Joseph Mercier, edited by L. Gevers with the collaboration of Β. Doyle. Leuven, University Press et Uitgeverij Peeters, coll. « Bibliotheca Ephemeridum Theologicarum Lovaniensium » CXXIII, 1995. In: Revue d'histoire et de philosophie religieuses, 77e année n°1, Janvier-mars 1997. p. 118

    Review: Joseph Urban: Unlocking an Art Deco Bedroom

    No full text
    Review of Joseph Urban: Unlocking an Art Deco Bedroom by Amy Miller Dehan. Cincinnati Art Museum in association with D Giles Limited, February 2022. 128 p. ill. ISBN 978-1-911282-56-3 (h/c), $49.95. Reviewed July 2022 by Sara Mautino, Librarian, Oklahoma State University School of Architecture - Cunningham Architecture Library, Oklahoma State University Libraries, [email protected]

    Joseph P. Tracy Correspondence

    No full text
    Entry is the typed biography of an airplane pilot raised in Mount Desert Ferry, Maine, assigned as editor to Flying Safety magazine, the Far East Forces Flyer magazine, renamed the Pacific Air Forces (PACAF) Flyer, prior to Missile Safety publications, concerning his book about Alaskan coastal passage Low Man on a Gill-Netter for the Maine Author Collection
    corecore