156,967 research outputs found

    [Amnesty Letter ID092] / [Freeman, Michael B.

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    This letter was written by Michael B. Freeman to President Andrew Johnson in response to the President's Amnesty Proclamation of 29 May 1865. The writer indicates his county of residence as Rutherford Co. (North Carolina) and states his occupation as Farmer

    Verne C. Freeman Interview

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    Oral history interview with Verne C. Freeman by Robert B. Eckles.

    Letter from secretary for Wm. B. Freeman to Cyrus S. Avery, dated July 7, 1958

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    Letter from secretary for Wm. B. Freeman to Cyrus S. Avery, dated July 7, 1958 writing on behalf of Mr. Wm. B. Freeman stating Freeman will write soon to CyrusThe Cyrus S. Avery Collection chronicles the life and times of Cyrus Stevens Avery. Known as the 'Father of Route 66', Avery served in government positions and elected offices as well as in highway associations that led him to have an influential impact on the planning and development of the initial American highway system. Through Avery's involvement with the City of Tulsa, Oklahoma and his own agricultural interests, the collection also documents a growing city and its' rural life in the early twentieth century

    Just an old fashioned song at twilight / words by Victor Wetzel ; music by Harold B. Freeman.

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    Song for voice and piano.Caption title.Cover illustration: a stem with three roses.Archived web conten

    Interview with Grace B. Freeman - OH 161

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    Grace Beacham Freeman (1916-2002) was a writer, poet, and educator and was the fourth South Carolina Poet Laureate (1985 to 1986). She was married to Winthrop Biology Professor John Alderman Freeman. In this interview, Mrs. Freeman discusses her early interest in poetry, her first published poem, her experience as an undergraduate student at Converse College with her friend Poppy Birch, awards she won at Converse, Archibald Rutledge as her mentor, her most popular poem, her hiatus from writing and publishing poetry, writing feature articles for the New Orleans Times, her work on a radio show, raising a family, her experience in the James Dickey poetry workshop at the University of South Carolina, her experience with teaching children to write poetry, poetry as therapy, writing for the “At Our House” Syndicated Newspaper Column by Kings Feature Incorporated from 1954 to 1964, her children’s experience with her poetry, her poetry book Children Are Poetry and her other published poetry books, her experience with publishing, her experience with coming to terms with the concept of death, and positive reviews of her poetry books. Mrs. Freeman concludes her interview by discussing her identity and style as a contemporary poet.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/oralhistoryprogram/1086/thumbnail.jp

    Letter from Wm. B. Freeman to Cyrus S. Avery, dated November 7, 1952

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    Letter from WM. B. Freeman to Cyrus S. Avery, dated November 7, 1952 discussing election of General EisenhowerThe Cyrus S. Avery Collection chronicles the life and times of Cyrus Stevens Avery. Known as the 'Father of Route 66', Avery served in government positions and elected offices as well as in highway associations that led him to have an influential impact on the planning and development of the initial American highway system. Through Avery's involvement with the City of Tulsa, Oklahoma and his own agricultural interests, the collection also documents a growing city and its' rural life in the early twentieth century

    Letter from S. B. Simmons to Dr. J. N. Freeman

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    Letter from S. B. Simmons to Dr. J. N. Freeman, concerning federation meeting

    Letter from Wm. B. Freeman to Cyrus S. Avery, dated July 31, 1958

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    Letter from Wm. B. Freeman to Cyrus S. Avery, dated July 31, 1958 congratulating Avery on a fine retirement party and asking Avery to stop by the next time he's in CaliforniaThe Cyrus S. Avery Collection chronicles the life and times of Cyrus Stevens Avery. Known as the 'Father of Route 66', Avery served in government positions and elected offices as well as in highway associations that led him to have an influential impact on the planning and development of the initial American highway system. Through Avery's involvement with the City of Tulsa, Oklahoma and his own agricultural interests, the collection also documents a growing city and its' rural life in the early twentieth century

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
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