334,558 research outputs found
Calling card of Mrs. James S. Gale (Ada Louisa Gale) with handwritten note to William Elliot Griffis, [ca. 1900]
Name card. Includes envelope.To Dr. Griffis This will introduce Dr. Urabe to you --handwritten on the name card by Mrs. James S. Gale (Ada Louisa Gale)Envelope from Miss [Ada Louisa] Gale addressed to Miss [Alice R.] AppenzellerThe name card was probably intended for William Elliot Griffis, given to Miss Appenzeller for deliveryThis project was funded by a grant from the Overseas Korean Cultural Heritage Foundation, Seoul, Korea.Youngmee Yu Cho and Sungmin Park are responsible for the transcription and annotation of the letters
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A letter from Elliot Grant to Dr. Hector P. Garcia.
A letter from Reverend Elliot Grant to Dr. Hector P. Garcia regarding Cleo Smith's running for the Corpus Christi Independent School Districts's Board of Trustees
Plan of the city of Washington : seat of government of the United States.
Shows block numbers, wards, existing and planned government buildings, and radial distances from Capitol."Entered according to Act of Congress on the 12 day of Nov. 1822 by S.A. Elliot of the District of Columbia."Includes indexed table of points of interest
Remarks by the Honorable Elliot L. Richardson
Commencement address given by the Honorable Elliot L. Richardson, U. S. Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, to the Winter 1972 graduating class of The Ohio State University, St. John Arena, Columbus, Ohio, March 17, 1972
Letter from S. Edgar Briggs to William Elliot Griffis, September 10, 1912
Confirms sending of complimentary copies of manuscriptAppenzeller Book --handwritten by Griffis on the backThis project was funded by a grant from the Overseas Korean Cultural Heritage Foundation, Seoul, Korea.Youngmee Yu Cho and Sungmin Park are responsible for the transcription and annotation of the letters
Letter from S. Edgar Briggs to William Elliot Griffis, October 27, 1919
Confirms arrival of proposal for Korean History book.This project was funded by a grant from the Overseas Korean Cultural Heritage Foundation, Seoul, Korea.Youngmee Yu Cho and Sungmin Park are responsible for the transcription and annotation of the letters
Letter from S. Edgar Briggs to William Elliot Griffis, September 13, 1912
Explains cost needed for requested corrections for Modern Pioneer of Korea proof.Bill Corrections etc. Appenzeller --handwritten by Griffis on the backThis project was funded by a grant from the Overseas Korean Cultural Heritage Foundation, Seoul, Korea.Youngmee Yu Cho and Sungmin Park are responsible for the transcription and annotation of the letters
Letter, Elliot C. Cowden to Salmon P. Chase, September 2, 1862
This handwritten letter, dated September 2, 1862, is written from Elliot C. Cowden to Salmon P. Chase discussing the incompetence of the newly elected U. S. Collector for the 4th District of New York, John Mack, and requests Chase to investigate a possible removal. The letter is written on Elliot C. Cowdin and Co. letterhead.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/fvw-manuscripts-original-manuscripts/1129/thumbnail.jp
Letter from S. Edgar Briggs to William Elliot Griffis, October 20, 1919
Confirms sending of McKenzie's Korea's Fight for Freedom. Discusses publication of new text about the history of Korea.This project was funded by a grant from the Overseas Korean Cultural Heritage Foundation, Seoul, Korea.Youngmee Yu Cho and Sungmin Park are responsible for the transcription and annotation of the letters
Elliot Richardson, Commencement Address, 1974
Elliot Lee Richardson (July 20, 1920 – December 31, 1999) was an American lawyer and politician who was a member of the cabinet of Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. As U.S. Attorney General, he was a prominent figure in the Watergate Scandal, and resigned rather than obey President Nixon\u27s order to fire special prosecutor Archibald Cox. In this address, Richardson warns the graduates of Eastern Michigan University against being “mastered by change,” and instead encourages them to “be in charge of change,” and to resist the prevailing sense of cynicism felt in the late 60’s and early 70’s. At the conclusion of the ceremony, several people are awarded honorary degrees by President Sponberg, including new Detroit Mayor, Coleman Young.https://commons.emich.edu/speeches/1053/thumbnail.jp
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