3,666 research outputs found
Dr. Nathan Nobis, Morehouse College, August 2011
This video is a conversation with Dr. Nathan Nobis. Dr. Nobis talks about his paper, "The Harmful, Nontherapeutic use of Animals in Research is Morally Wrong." Brad Ost, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer
Nathan Johnson
Nathan Johnson received his J.D. from George Washington University Law School, where he founded the GW Space Law Society, and served as Notes Editor on the George Washington International Law Review. He served as the Law Student Division Liaison to the ABA Forum on Air & Space Law, and was a research assistant to Professor Henry Hertzfeld at the Elliott School of International Affairs. He interned with the FAA Office of Commercial Space Transportation during SpaceX’s first licensed flights to the International Space Station; and he interned for the U.S. Congress House Committee on Science, Space, & Technology during markup of the NASA Authorization Act and consideration of updates to the Commercial Space Launch Act. While at Nebraska Law, he is a research assistant to Professors Matt Schaefer and Frans von der Dunk, and separately is the author of Astro, Esq., a newsletter for space law students and young professionals.https://commons.erau.edu/stm-images/1007/thumbnail.jp
Letter from Nathan Bankhead, Bankhead and Henderson, to Carl Hayden
Letter from Nathan Bankhead to Carl Hayden concerning his sheep and the accusations of Horace M. Albright
Elliott, Jr., J.N.
James Nathan Elliott, Jr.
Lexington, Kentucky
Phi Alpha Deltahttps://uknowledge.uky.edu/klapp_1938/1008/thumbnail.jp
Nathan Newsom diary
Narrative account entitled "A Short summary of a journey, taken by volunteers from Gallia County; for the purpose of destroying Indians and the invasion of Canada," written by Nathan Newsom. Newsom was an orderly sergeant in Captain Calvin Shepard's company from Gallia County, Ohio, during the War of 1812. This volume conveys conditions experienced by soldiers during the war, including low pay, shortages of food and clothing, low morale, and severe weather conditions. Newsom also describes the cooperation of the army with friendly Indians and the disciplinary measures taken for desertion and other offenses
"It Tasted Like Gasoline": The American Roman Noir and the Oil Encounter in Elliott Chaze’s Black Wings Has My Angel
This chapter undertakes a close reading of Elliott Chaze’s Black Wings Has My Angel (1953), examining how early noir fiction obliquely reflects on the rapid transformation of twentieth-century American life by the forces of oil capital. We see this not only in the material landscapes that these texts reveal, but also in their evocation of a particular type of desiring yet “alienated post-war subject”. Noir pessimism, in this sense, can be understood as a contextually specific response to the ways in which petro-modernity shifted the social, cultural and financial climate of the United States following the Great Depression
Guilt, Memory, and the Beta-God: Nathan Englander on kaddish.com
Diane Feigenson Lecture in Jewish Literature… Nathan Englander, Bestselling author, For the Relief of Unbearable Urges, What We Talk About When We Talk, About Anne Frank, and kaddish.com (2019).https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/bennettcenter-posters/1360/thumbnail.jp
Okechukwu Nzelu, Helen Palmer & Nathan Walker: North Faces
Public Reading Performance as part of Edinburgh International Book Festival 2024.
Nathan Walker will read from their publication 'Skirting' (Broken Sleep Books)
"Join Barnsley-born poet and Pity author Andrew McMillan as he hosts a showcase of literary talent from the North of England. Tonight McMillan presents a prismatic range of writers – novelists Okechukwu Nzelu and Helen Palmer, poet and performance artist Nathan Walker – as well as Alicia Byrne, the inaugural winner of the Tempest Prize for unpublished LGBTQ+ writers (run in collaboration with New Writing North). Come and hear the groundbreaking work from some of the most exciting literary talent working today.
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