1,346 research outputs found
Craft so long to learn
Speech delivered by George Connor, identified by the author as "one of the 2 or 3 most signifcant speeches in my career.
Craft so long to learn
Speech delivered by George Connor, identified by the author as "one of the 2 or 3 most signifcant speeches in my career.
Jere Nash Interview with Peggy Connor
Interview conducted by author Jere Nash with Peggy Connor as research for Mississippi Politics: The Struggle for Power, 1976-2006. Connor was the lead plaintiff in the case Connor v. Johnson on legislative voting districts in Mississippi. Topics covered include Connor\u27s family, background, and her participation in the civil rights movement; Fannie Lou Hamer; attempting to integrate precinct meeting and registering to vote; Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party; 1964 Democratic National Convention; Connor v. Johnson lawsuit; and civil rights demonstrations in Hattiesburg, Mississippi
Public Safety Commissioner Bull Connor being released from the Jefferson County jail in Birmingham, Alabama.
Connor had served a 48-hour sentence for contempt of court after police seized a print of the controversial movie, FRENCH GIRLS CLUB, despite a court order allowing the movie to be shown. This photograph was published in the Birmingham News on January 22, 1941, with the following caption: "No Parade for Bull - They had a band and hundreds of Police Commissioner Eugene (Bull) Connor's friends ready for a parade from Courthouse to City Hall Wednesday when he was released from County Jail, but Connor passed up the parade with his thanks. But the band, pictured below, serenaded Connor with 'Dixie' and went on to the commissioner's City Hall office to play 'Happy Days Are Here Again.' Shown at top are Connor (right), being welcomed back to City Hall by Commissioners Jimmie Morgan (left) and Cooper Green (center). Inset shows Connor as he departed from the jail, after paying 60 cents food bill required by a 1907 statute.
Public Safety Commissioner Bull Connor standing by a car after his release from the Jefferson County jail in Birmingham, Alabama.
Connor had served a 48-hour sentence for contempt of court after police seized a print of the controversial movie, FRENCH GIRLS CLUB, despite a court order allowing the movie to be shown. Several related photographs were published in the Birmingham News on January 22, 1941, with the following caption: "No Parade for Bull - They had a band and hundreds of Police Commissioner Eugene (Bull) Connor's friends ready for a parade from Courthouse to City Hall Wednesday when he was released from County Jail, but Connor passed up the parade with his thanks. But the band, pictured below, serenaded Connor with 'Dixie' and went on to the commissioner's City Hall office to play 'Happy Days Are Here Again.' Shown at top are Connor (right), being welcomed back to City Hall by Commissioners Jimmie Morgan (left) and Cooper Green (center). Inset shows Connor as he departed from the jail, after paying 60 cents food bill required by a 1907 statute.
Public Safety Commissioner Bull Connor standing behind his desk at city hall in Birmingham, Alabama.
A sign on the front of the desk reads, "Welcome Back." Connor had just been released from the Jefferson County jail after serving a 48-hour sentence for contempt of court after police seized a print of the controversial movie, FRENCH GIRLS CLUB, despite a court order allowing the movie to be shown. Several related photographs were published in the Birmingham News on January 22, 1941, with the following caption: "No Parade for Bull - They had a band and hundreds of Police Commissioner Eugene (Bull) Connor's friends ready for a parade from Courthouse to City Hall Wednesday when he was released from County Jail, but Connor passed up the parade with his thanks. But the band, pictured below, serenaded Connor with 'Dixie' and went on to the commissioner's City Hall office to play 'Happy Days Are Here Again.' Shown at top are Connor (right), being welcomed back to City Hall by Commissioners Jimmie Morgan (left) and Cooper Green (center). Inset shows Connor as he departed from the jail, after paying 60 cents food bill required by a 1907 statute.
Cutting'aesthetic teeth' : Flannery O'Connor's habit of art
Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro de Comunicação e ExpressãoEste trabalho foi sugerido pela afirmação de Flannery O'Connor que sua "dedicação estética" nasceu através do contato com Art and Scholasticism de Jacques Maritain. O propósito foi chegar a uma interpretação do sentido da frase. Uma investigação detalhada foi feita do conteúdo de Art and Scholasticism, posteriormente contrastada com os resultados de uma pesquisa feita em seus ensaios e suas cartas, o que revelou numerosos ecos de diversos trechos constando no texto de Maritain. Três pontos principais foram escolhidos como critérios na análise do hábito artístico de O'Connor: 1) a prática de arte implica uma luta; 2) a arte somente pode ser percebida pelos sentidos; e 3) a prática de arte exige do artista a dedicação indivisa à obra nascente. O estudo conclui que, para O'Connor, o brotar da dentição estética, através da leitura de Art and Scholasticism, significou que, ao perceber na análise da natureza da arte algo com que podia concordar, ela reconheceu tanto sua própria capacidade de tornar-se uma artista literária, quanto sua vontade de assumir a tarefa de desenvolver em sua pessoa o hábito de arte
Band playing to welcome Public Safety Commissioner Bull Connor after his release from the Jefferson County jail in Birmingham, Alabama.
Connor had served a 48-hour sentence for contempt of court after police seized a print of the controversial movie, FRENCH GIRLS CLUB, despite a court order allowing the movie to be shown. This photograph was published in the Birmingham News on January 22, 1941, with the following caption: "No Parade for Bull - They had a band and hundreds of Police Commissioner Eugene (Bull) Connor's friends ready for a parade from Courthouse to City Hall Wednesday when he was released from County Jail, but Connor passed up the parade with his thanks. But the band, pictured below, serenaded Connor with 'Dixie' and went on to the commissioner's City Hall office to play 'Happy Days Are Here Again.' Shown at top are Connor (right), being welcomed back to City Hall by Commissioners Jimmie Morgan (left) and Cooper Green (center). Inset shows Connor as he departed from the jail, after paying 60 cents food bill required by a 1907 statute.
Public Safety Commissioner Bull Connor shaking hands with men after his release from the Jefferson County jail in Birmingham, Alabama.
Connor had served a 48-hour sentence for contempt of court after police seized a print of the controversial movie, FRENCH GIRLS CLUB, despite a court order allowing the movie to be shown. Several related photographs were published in the Birmingham News on January 22, 1941, with the following caption: "No Parade for Bull - They had a band and hundreds of Police Commissioner Eugene (Bull) Connor's friends ready for a parade from Courthouse to City Hall Wednesday when he was released from County Jail, but Connor passed up the parade with his thanks. But the band, pictured below, serenaded Connor with 'Dixie' and went on to the commissioner's City Hall office to play 'Happy Days Are Here Again.' Shown at top are Connor (right), being welcomed back to City Hall by Commissioners Jimmie Morgan (left) and Cooper Green (center). Inset shows Connor as he departed from the jail, after paying 60 cents food bill required by a 1907 statute.
Public Safety Commissioner Bull Connor leaving the Jefferson County courthouse in Birmingham, Alabama, after his release from jail.
Connor had served a 48-hour sentence for contempt of court after police seized a print of the controversial movie, FRENCH GIRLS CLUB, despite a court order allowing the movie to be shown. Several related photographs were published in the Birmingham News on January 22, 1941, with the following caption: "No Parade for Bull - They had a band and hundreds of Police Commissioner Eugene (Bull) Connor's friends ready for a parade from Courthouse to City Hall Wednesday when he was released from County Jail, but Connor passed up the parade with his thanks. But the band, pictured below, serenaded Connor with 'Dixie' and went on to the commissioner's City Hall office to play 'Happy Days Are Here Again.' Shown at top are Connor (right), being welcomed back to City Hall by Commissioners Jimmie Morgan (left) and Cooper Green (center). Inset shows Connor as he departed from the jail, after paying 60 cents food bill required by a 1907 statute.
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