2,624 research outputs found
Harding University Spring Sing Program 2024
Program for the 2024 Spring Sing performance at Harding University
Theme: Golden
Host & Hostesses: Weston Eades, Anna Grace Haley, Emma Claire Myhan, Jackson Samuel, Eli Smith, Anna Wrighthttps://scholarworks.harding.edu/spring-sing/1049/thumbnail.jp
Warren G. Harding letter to Adolphe Danziger, February 21, 1921
In this letter dated February 21, 1921, President-elect Warren G. Harding writes to Adolphe Danziger, a Jewish scholar, lawyer and author, to thank him for the poem he wrote honoring Harding titled "Within the Storm."
This letter is part of the Warren G. Harding Papers (MSS 345). This collection includes correspondence, business records, and other materials documenting Harding’s business career as owner and editor-in-chief of The Daily Marion Star, as well as the various stages of his political career. A significant portion of the collection, and what’s available on Ohio Memory, highlights his 1920 presidential campaign, spanning just before publicly announcing his candidacy to handily defeating Ohio Governor James M. Cox in the election. Correspondents include both Ohio and national businessmen, political figures, and ordinary citizens writing with questions, support, congratulatory notes, and campaign advice. Some of the most interesting insights into the tumultuous political climate in the U.S., the extreme factionalism within the Republican Party in Ohio, and Harding’s campaign strategies are described in letters between Harding and his campaign manager, Harry M. Daugherty. Some of the topics addressed include women’s suffrage, Prohibition, the League of Nations, African American representation and issues, and lingering peace negotiations following World War I
Milton Harding and Emma Tapper
Milton Harding and Emma Tapper with fly rods in hand standing over their fish catch laying on the ground before them. Circa 1935
Escaping boundaries
Holidays can be learning experiences, too…! Emma Harding decribes how her holiday with a ‘client’ caused her to re‐evaluate her perceptions of their relationship to the benefit of both of them.</jats:p
Illustrator's flat signature in The novels and stories of Richard Harding Davis
This edition includes the flat signature of Illustrator Charles Dana Gibson on the frontispiece in "Gallegher, and other stories"; and a second signature in "Soldiers of Fortune". This is a limited-edition, 256-copy run of "The novels and stories of Richard Harding Davis" [v. 4]. Richard Harding Davis, author, 1864-1916.--v.1. The bar sinister and other stories.--v.2. The exiles and other stories.--v.3. Gallegher and other stories.--v.4. Soldiers of fortune.--v.5. Captain Macklin: his memoirs.--v.6. Ranson's Folly.--v.7. The White mice.-- v.8. The Scarlet car.--v.9. The bar sinister.--v.10. The man who could not lose.--v.11. The red cross girl.--v.12. The lost road.
Davis, Richard Harding, 1864-1916
J. D. Brannan letter to Warren G. Harding, January 24, 1921
In this letter dated January 24, 1921 (the author mistakenly writes 1920), J. D. Brannan at Harvard University Law School to President-elect Warren G. Harding in regards to his choices for cabinet appointments. Brannan recommends Senator Elihu Root for Secretary of State, Charles Evans Hughes for Attorney General, Senator John W. Weeks for Secretary of the Treasury or Secretary of the Navy, and General Leonard Wood for Secretary of War, and includes qualifications for each. After discussing tensions among the government and organized labor leaders, he does not specify an appointment for Secretary of Labor, but includes Herbert Hoover as a qualified candidate.
This letter is part of the Warren G. Harding Papers (MSS 345). This collection includes correspondence, business records, and other materials documenting Harding’s business career as owner and editor-in-chief of The Daily Marion Star, as well as the various stages of his political career. A significant portion of the collection, and what’s available on Ohio Memory, highlights his 1920 presidential campaign, spanning just before publicly announcing his candidacy to handily defeating Ohio Governor James M. Cox in the election. Correspondents include both Ohio and national businessmen, political figures, and ordinary citizens writing with questions, support, congratulatory notes, and campaign advice. Some of the most interesting insights into the tumultuous political climate in the U.S., the extreme factionalism within the Republican Party in Ohio, and Harding’s campaign strategies are described in letters between Harding and his campaign manager, Harry M. Daugherty. Some of the topics addressed include women’s suffrage, Prohibition, the League of Nations, African American representation and issues, and lingering peace negotiations following World War I
Adapting The Merchant of Venice for radio : an interview with Emma Harding, adapter and director for BBC Radio Drama
Emma Harding read English Literature at the University of Oxford before training as an actor at Drama Studio London. She started working for BBC Radio as a researcher on BBC Radio 4’s In Our Time and since 2003 has been a director/producer of drama, readings and documentaries. Her radio drama productions include Othello, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, The Divine Comedy, Riot Girls and Primo Levi’s The Periodic Table. Harding adapted and directed The Merchant of Venice for BBC Radio 3’s Drama on 3 series in 2018, locating Shakespeare’s play in London during the financial crash of 2008. In this interview, Harding discusses the process of adapting Shakespeare for the radio and working collaboratively to re-imagine The Merchant of Venice in a modern context and setting. Harding discusses her process of working with actors such as Hayley Atwell and Andrew Scott on their roles and reflects on why the play continues to resonate for twenty-first-century listeners
Injections of hope: supporting participants in clinical trials
Understanding hope and better appreciating the personal investments of trial participants could improve patient experience and trial design, argue Emma Harding, Catherine Mummery, and colleague
Interview of Verna E. Howard
Noted radio evangelist, author and businessman, V. E. Howard was inducted into the Harding College Oral History library on August 14, 1970
The policy of the future after the war : how Germany should be treated and controlled, and how permanent peace, commercial and industrial progress, and the federation of all nations may be attained /
2nd ed. "Containing a criticism received by the author, and his reply thereto."; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.aus-vn436630; Aso available o; FERG copy from Ferguson First World War, 1914-1919 pamphlet collection.; Inscribed by author
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