3,815 research outputs found

    Edward P., Jr. wins

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    Black and white action photo of the sixth race of the day, August 27, 1941, at the Lincoln County Fair, Damariscotta, Maine. Bay gelding, Edward P. Jr. (far right) wearing head number seven, Nelson up, claimed the win in 2.14 1/2. Bay gelding Ben Hur, wearing head number two, Phalen up, claims second place. The third and fourth place horses are The Great Peter, Reed up and Dusky Dawn, Butler up.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/kendall_images/4424/thumbnail.jp

    supplemental_file – Supplemental material for Dividing the Pie: Parties, Institutional Limits, and State Budget Trade-Offs

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    Supplemental material, supplemental_file for Dividing the Pie: Parties, Institutional Limits, and State Budget Trade-Offs by Jinhai Yu, Edward T. Jennings and J. S. Butler in State Politics & Policy Quarterly</p

    Julia's prayer. Chapter 07, Influence of the church

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    Mrs. Iris Page Butler, an African-American, known as "Hamtramck's Angel of Mercy," Health Department nurse from 1918 to 1965 and resident since 1903; Dave Stober, local clothier, civic leader and Peoples State Bank Board member; Rev. Edward Sobolewski, Pastor Emeritus, Holy Cross Polish National Catholic Church and Mrs. Beatrice Kobe Adamski, Hamtramck Public Library Director, speak about the affinity Poles evidenced toward their faith and how the church held the community together. Monsignor Peter Walkowiak, the founder of St. Florian Parish, Fr. Szuk and Our Lady Queen of Apostles Church are prominently mentioned

    Author correction: obesity and ethnicity alter gene expression in skin

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    Daniel Butler was omitted from the author list in the original version of this Article. The Author contributions section now reads: “J.M.W. designed, conducted, and contributed to the writing of the manuscript, prepared Fig. 1. S.G. evaluated and did statistical analysis on the skin and fat samples, prepared Figs. 2–9. J.O.A. evaluated and contributed to writing the manuscript. D.B prepared and sequenced DNA libraries for the skin microbiota data, and wrote the applicable parts of the methods section. C.M. analyzed and wrote up the skin microbiota data, prepared Fig. 10. All authors have read the manuscript and approved its contents. D.D. analyzed and wrote up the skin microbiota data. S.Z. ran and analyzed the skin metabolite data. J.S. assisted in design, analysis and wrote up the skin metabolite data. J.K. assisted in analysis write up of skin and fat data. J.L.B. assisted in analysis, interpretation and writing of the manuscript. P.R.H. designed, analyzed, interpreted the data, and was the primary author of the manuscript.” This has been corrected in the PDF and HTML versions of the Article, and in the accompanying Supplementary Information file.</p

    56016: Letter: To Edward Marsh

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    Describes becoming reaccumulated to trench life after three months teaching in Le Havre / thanks Edward Marsh for sending a copy of Rupert Brooke's volume of prose 'Letters from America' / discusses his opinion of the book / appreciation of Samuel Butler and quotes from his poems / discusses Siegfried Sassoon's verse / friendship with Sassoon / situation at Verdun / quotes Shakespeare.</p

    Book review: To Chain the Dog of War: The War Power of Congress in History and Law. By Francis D. Wormuth and Edwin B. Firmage, with Francis P. Butler as a contributing author.

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    Book review: To Chain the Dog of War: The War Power of Congress in History and Law. By Francis D. Wormuth and Edwin B. Firmage, with Francis P. Butler as a contributing author. Dallas, Tex.: Southern Methodist University Press. 1986. Pp. xi, 347. Reviewed by: Charles A. Lofgren.Lofgren, Charles A.. (1988). Book review: To Chain the Dog of War: The War Power of Congress in History and Law. By Francis D. Wormuth and Edwin B. Firmage, with Francis P. Butler as a contributing author.. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/164965

    Hulme Among the Progressives

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    Dr. Lee Garver\u27s contribution to: Comentale, Edward P., and Andrzej Gąsiorek. T.E. Hulme and the Question of Modernism. Aldershot, England: Ashgate, 2006

    Butler: ¿Método para una ontología política?

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    This article aims to point at what we consider a set of reading strategies that Judith Butler uses. They are contingent although not eventful. Results of this strategical way we consider a sort of method constitutes a forgoing critical exercise. This practice adopts different strategies that show the influence of some philosophers (such as Nietzsche, de Man, Foucault). Butler makes that reading strategy a political action, enrooted to an ethics that makes visible vulnerability and vulnerable peoples, suggesting at the same time ways to transform society widening areas of Freedom.Este artículo tiene como objetivo mostrar que la obra de Judith Butler ofrece un conjunto de estrategias de lectura que no se reducen a principios o leyes. Por el contrario, son contingentes sin ser azarosas o arbitrarias. Los resultados de esta estrategia, que consideramos metodológica, se conforman gracias a una práctica de lectura que constituye un ejercicio crítico constante. Esta práctica adopta diversas estrategias que se condensan a partir de los aportes de diversos filósofos (entre otros Nietzsche, de Man, Foucault). Butler convierte entonces esa estrategia de lectura en un acto político, enraizado en una ética que le permite hacer visibles a quienes están en situación de máxima vulnerabilidad, insinuando, al mismo tiempo, caminos para transformar la sociedad y ampliar los espacios de libertad

    Josephine Butler, Esoteric Christianity and the Biblical Motherhood of God

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    This article addresses feminist campaigner and radical theologian Josephine Butler, who explored the idea of God as a mother in her late writings. For Butler, the metaphor of divine motherhood symbolised universal salvation, social transformation in the spirit of apocalyptic feminism, and divine immanence within the material and social worlds, including animal souls and inorganic phenomena. Her letters and her published works – including The Lady of Shunem and her privately printed ‘The Morning Cometh’ – are contextualised among the religious writings of Christian Theosophists such as John Pulsford, Elizabeth Charles, Anna Kingsford and Edward Maitland, by whom she was influenced. As well as showing Butler to have had more unorthodox religious ideas and connections than has been recognised, the article presents a late-nineteenth-century tradition of maternal theology, based on Christian sources and scripture.</p
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