688 research outputs found

    Clyde Ellis

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    Subject: Ellis speaking to crowd at picnic. (On verso: [Clyde Ellis].) 1. Political elections

    1950 Echo Park Reservoir Public Hearing Transcript of Clyde T. Ellis (FIRST 10 PAGES ONLY)

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    Transcript of the Secretary of Interior\u27s Public Hearing for the Echo Park Reservoir Project. Included is the first ten pages of the testimony from Clyde T. Ellis, President of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association (NRECA). Ellis supports the project on behalf of NRECA because of the benefit of the abundant power that would be produced in these projects. Housed in National Archives at Denver; Record Group 79, Box 340, Folder 660-05.4 Reservoirs [Folder 6]

    Clyde Ellis Martin, Instructor

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    Clyde Ellis Martin was an Instructor in English at Jacksonville State College (now Jacksonville State University) in the 1960s. (circa 1964)https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib-ac-histimg/12908/thumbnail.jp

    Clyde Ellis Martin, Instructor 6

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    Clyde Ellis Martin was an Instructor in English at Jacksonville State College (now Jacksonville State University) in 1961-1962.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib-ac-histimg/32945/thumbnail.jp

    Clyde Holding at a meeting with a visiting Vietnamese medical team.

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/276819Clyde Holding at a meeting with a visiting Vietnamese medical team. The team visited Australia to discuss the effects of Agent Orange. John Ellis describes the background to the visit: "Thousands of tons of this herbicide, manufactured by Dow Chemical, were dropped on Vietnam during the war. It was an attempt to defoliate the vegetation, thus leaving the Vietnamese exposed to the invading U.S. and Australian troops. This act of barbarity left a legacy of deformed babies and many incurable diseases for the Vietnamese people as well as U.S. and Australian troops. A meeting was held in Clyde Holding's electoral office in Ackland Street."200428 Item: [1999.0081.00868] "Clyde Holding at a meeting with a visiting Vietnamese medical team.

    Western Union Telegram

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    Telegram: From Alex Radin and Clyde T. Ellis, to Stewart Udall, February 20, 196

    Ellis L. Armstrong Federal Commissioner of Public Roads, 1958

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    Series 13855 | Governor (1957-1965 : Clyde) | Newspaper clippings | Ellis L. Armstrong Federal Commissioner of Public Roads, 1958These newspaper clippings are a glimpse of the most prominent challenges and victories during Clyde's incumbency

    Chronicles of Oklahoma

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    Article discusses the establishment of the Rainy Mountain Boarding School for Kiowa children on the Kiowa-Comanche Reservation and the many struggles it faced until its closing. Clyde Ellis discusses the administrative motivations behind its creation as well as some of the key figures, such as principal Cora Dunn, who kept the school running throughout hard times

    Chronicles of Oklahoma

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    Article examines the cultural heritage and legacy of John Rollin Ridge, a journalist of Cherokee descent who went into hiding after killing a man. Clyde Ellis explores his relationship with Cherokee leader Stand Watie and his identity as an expatriate of his tribe

    Interview with Clyde Edgerton

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    Dr. Clyde Edgerton is a professor of Creative Writing at UNCW and the author of several novels, including Redeye, The Floatplane Notebooks, and Walking Across Egypt, and the memoir Solo: My Adventures in the Air. Many of his novels, including Killer Diller and Walking Across Egypt, have been adapted for film, and his novel Lunch at the Piccadilly became a musical production. In this interview, Dr. Edgerton discusses his background and writing life
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