2,575 research outputs found
[Report concerning an interview with Warren Ferguson]
Report to Chief J. E. Curry by F. I. Cornwall concerning an interview with Warren Ferguson. Cornwall states that he interviewed Ferguson with Lieutenant Jack Revill in Houston, Texas, at the Houston Police Department. Ferguson stated that he was working for ABC Television as a sound man for James R. Davidson, who was a cameraman. His crew was taking pictures inside the basement and stayed at that location until Oswald was brought down on the elevator, but his escort blocked their view of the shooting. Ferguson further stated that he had been interviewed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation
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
Grateful to Bear and Pass the Torch
Introduction: On Tuesday night we honoured Warren Ferguson at his retirement gathering for his decades of service to the school, our department, our community, his patients, correctional health and so much more.
Along with being blessed with Warren’s mentorship, coaching, collegiality, leadership, and friendship over the past 3+ decades, we also had a chance to hear his musings during a speech he made at the retirement event. He has made some edits and includes them here so everyone on FMM can benefit from his experience, wisdom, and advice. Thanks again Warren
Making addiction treatment work for inmates
Nationwide, 65 percent of inmates meet the medical criteria for substance use disorder, but just 11 percent receive treatment while incarcerated. Warren J. Ferguson, MD, writes in CommonWealth magazine about the need to improve treatment of substance use disorder in justice-involved individuals. A UMass Medical School correctional health collaborative will address substance use disorder by assessing current screening and treatment practices for opioid addiction, making recommendations for improvements, and implementing proven practices to create a model. The collaborative partners include the state departments of corrections in Connecticut and Rhode Island and Massachusetts sheriffs who oversee houses of correction in Middlesex and Barnstable counties. The initiative is funded by National Institute on Drug Abuse the Agency for Health Care Research and Quality
Withholding methadone from inmates is wrong
$1.2 billion in taxpayer dollars will be spent on incarcerated individuals in the Commonwealth this year alone. Warren Ferguson, the board chair of the Academic Consortium on Criminal Justice Health, believes that spending a portion of this amount on methadone, a drug used to treat opioid use disorders, could have dramatic positive results on the 1/3 of inmates with narcotic addictions in Massachusetts prisons. Despite the 45-year long history of success methadone has had in treating opioid use disorders, the drug has yet to be approved for use in this state
[Report from F. I. Cornwall to Chief J. E. Curry, December 9, 1963]
Report from F. I. Cornwall to Chief J. E. Curry, concerning an interview with Warren Ferguson at the Houston Police Department. At the time of the shooting of Lee Harvey Oswald, Ferguson was a cameraman for ABC Television
The northern spy; or, The fatal papers. A tale of South Carolina, by J. Thomas Warren.
72 p
Fly about round me coursing, swallow sweet birds come near [first line]
strophicpiano and voiceCover is duplicated in 125.115b.Johns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box
125, Item 115aTranslated From the French of Volney L'Hotelier by Samuel J. Gardner, Esq. The Music by Felicien David (Author of "Le Desert").E.G. Warren, Engr
Fly about round me coursing, swallow sweet birds come near [first line]
strophicpiano and voiceCover is duplicated in 125.115b.Johns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box
125, Item 115aTranslated From the French of Volney L'Hotelier by Samuel J. Gardner, Esq. The Music by Felicien David (Author of "Le Desert").E.G. Warren, Engr
The warren court and the black community, 1980
U.S. Supreme Court decisions involving the black community were studied for the 1953-1969 terms, the Warren Court ear. The hypothesis of the study was that after 1962 when the Court achieved a liberal majority the decisions would be more favorable to the black community than was true before 1962. This hypothesis was tested by the use of an eight point scale evaluation of each c-f the. sixty-eight cases studied. The hypothesis was proved correct. The Warren Court was more favorable to the black community during its liberal period than during its conservative period
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