2,727 research outputs found
Letter from Ralph H. Cameron to Carl Hayden
Letter from Ralph H. Cameron asking to speak to Carl Hayden concerning a matter relevant to the bill granting National Park status to the Grand Canyon
Columbia, victorious Soon thou shalt be [first line of chorus]
strophic with choruspiano and voiceDedicated to "Our Boys Across the Sea"Johns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box
012, Item 050aLyric by Maurice Freeman. Music by Ralph Garre
Letter from Carl Hayden to Ralph H. Cameron
Letter from Carl Hayden to Ralph H. Cameron responding favorably to a request to meet in regards to the bill granting National Park status to the Grand Canyon
Columbia, victorious Soon thou shalt be [first line of chorus]
strophic with choruspiano and voiceDedicated to "Our Boys Across the Sea"Johns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box
012, Item 050aLyric by Maurice Freeman. Music by Ralph Garre
Letter from Ralph H. Cameron to Carl Hayden
Letter from Ralph H. Cameron to Carl Hayden thanking him for forwarding Senate Bill No. 390 with the report of March 31st, 1918, and expressing interest in their upcoming meeting in Washington
Letter from Ralph H. Cameron to Carl Hayden
Letter from Ralph H. Cameron to Carl Hayden requesting a delay on the introduction of the Grand Canyon bill until he can meet with himself and Senator Ashurst in Washington
Native drama entitled The panting patriot of the pattern parliament, or The palmy parient of the peerless prodigies : in five acts / by the author.
Attributed to Ralph Delaney. Refer to Morris Miller's Australian literature 1795-1938, p. 377.; Electronic reproduction. Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, 2013.; ANL's copy lacks cover and is slightly damaged.Panting patriot of the pattern parliament.Palmy parient of the peerless prodigies
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Life History of Ralph W. Spitzer
A detailed biographical sketch of Ralph W. Spitzer (b. 1918), a graduate student of Linus Pauling's and promising academic who joined the Oregon State College chemistry department in 1946. Promoted to Assistant Professor in 1947, Spitzer was nonetheless fired from the OSC faculty in 1949 by President August L. Strand, almost certainly because of progressive political views espoused by Spitzer and his wife Teresa. Spitzer eventually matriculated to Canada where he earned an M.D. specializing in chemical pathology and co-founded a successful diagnostic laboratory firm, C.J. Coady Associates.
The paper is based upon a series of oral history interviews conducted by the author with Ralph Spitzer, his daughter Eloise Spitzer, and his wife Hisako Kurotaki
William E. Hoy, letter to Mr. Ralph Elliot Lin Weber, July 8, 1943, with envelope and newspaper articles
This letter was sent from William E. Hoy to Mr. Ralph Elliot Lin Weber and is dated July 8, 1943. The letter recounts information about the only baseball game where Hoy, a deaf athlete, was at-bat against Taylor, also a deaf athlete. Mentioned in the letter is a typewritten play by play of the same game, copied from the Enquirer of May 17, 1902. Also included is an envelope and newspaper articles. The envelope, from International League Information, is addressed to Ralph E Lin Weber and has handwritten lists of players of N.Y. and Cincinnati. The newspaper articles are from the Dayton Daily News and the Cincinnati Enquirer and feature pictures of William E. Hoy, the author of the letter
January 22, 1985 letter from Ralph A. Patterson, Jr., Diamond Shamrock Thermal Power Company, to Takeshi Yoshihara, DPED, Energy Division
The author of the letter is named as Ralph A. Patterson Jr., but "crn" actually wrote the letter (per "RAP/crn"). The original letter included attachments (not included in the digital file)
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