5,708 research outputs found

    Brigadier Garrett

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    Robert Garrett, full-length portrait, seated on horse, facing left.Title transcribed from verso.Restricted access: Materials extremely fragile; Served by appointment only.Purchase; Frances M. Fenton; 1944.Forms part of: Roger Fenton Crimean War photograph collection

    Roger Abrahams, author

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    Roger Abrahams, director of the African and Afro-American Research Institute at the University of Texas-Austin and author of Positively Black, argues the case for ethnic diversity in this interview. He also discusses that the idea of "new ethnicity" is not restricted to black or brown America and he sees a widespread return to old mores inherent in the traditional ethnic value system. Interviewed by WTMJ-TV host Jim Peck.GrayscaleSoun

    Unlucky for Some : 13 poems by Roger McGough

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    Inspired by and featuring the poetry of Roger McGough (by permission of the author), Unlucky for Some is a spare, minimalistic work about homelessness, mental illness and class division performed entirely in slow motion.\ud \ud This multimedia work also utilised prerecorded and live feed video and music, and experimented with synchronous and asynchonous live and mediatised performance

    Brigadier-General Garrett & officers of his staff

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    Garrett (second from left) and four officers standing next to a sub-terranean hut.Title transcribed from verso.Alternate title from: James, Crimea 1854-56 : the war with Russia from contemporary photographs.Restricted access: Materials extremely fragile; Served by appointment only.Purchase; Frances M. Fenton; 1944.Forms part of: Roger Fenton Crimean War photograph collection.Crimea 1854-56 : the war with Russia from contemporary photographs / Lawrence James. New York : Van Nostrand Reinhold, c1981, no. 33

    Guest Recital: Roger Garrett, Clarinet; September 23, 1993

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    Kemp Recital HallThursday EveningSeptember 23, 19938:00 p.m

    Brigadier Garrett & officers of the 46th Regiment

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    Garrett and three other officers dining at a table in front of a camp tent; another man, possibly a servant stands to the right of the group.Title transcribed from verso.Alternate title from: James, Crimea 1854-56 : the war with Russia from contemporary photographs.Restricted access: Materials extremely fragile; Served by appointment only.Purchase; Frances M. Fenton; 1944.Forms part of: Roger Fenton Crimean War photograph collection.Crimea 1854-56 : the war with Russia from contemporary photographs / Lawrence James. New York :Van Nostrand Reinhold, c1981, no. 34.Roger Fenton, photographer of the Crimean War: His phyotographs and his letters from the Crimea, with an essay on his life and work / Helmut and Alison Gernsheim. London : Secker & Warburg, 1954, no. 38

    Guide to ruminant anatomy based on the dissection of the goat, par P. D. Garrett, Iowa State University Press edition, 1988.

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    Bordet Roger. Guide to ruminant anatomy based on the dissection of the goat, par P. D. Garrett, Iowa State University Press edition, 1988.. In: Bulletin de l'Académie Vétérinaire de France tome 142 n°3, 1989. p. 329

    Dr. Glendon Swarthout

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    Hosted by Roger M. Busfield, MSU Assistant Professor of Speech and Theater, Meet the Author is designed to introduce a general audience to a contemporary author and their work through in-depth interviews. This episode features a conversation between Dr. Glendon Swarthout, prolific author and English professor at MSU, and assistant professors Sam S. Baskett and Theodore B. Strandness

    A Conversation with Roger Welsch

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    In this session, moderated by Barre Toelken and William A. "Bert" Wilson, audience members have the opportunity to discuss Roger Welsch's plenary lecture, and his other works and ideas, with the author

    Enforcing Federal Civil Rights Against Public Entities After Garrett

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    In this article, I focus on the Section 5 branch of the federalism revival, the branch that was at issue in Board of Trustees of the University of Alabama v. Garrett, and the one that is most likely to arise when litigating on behalf of or against an arm of state government. In order to position Garrett doctrinally, I first describe the conceptual framework that determines the validity of Congress\u27 effort to abrogate state judicial sovereignty. This is an abridged version since more complete histories have been reported widely, both recently in these pages, and in many other journals. I then turn to Garrett\u27s holding and the Court\u27s reasoning to demonstrate that Garrett raised the bar, making it more problematic than ever that Congress will be able to deploy Section 5 to abrogate state judicial immunity. I shall argue that the outcome in Garrett was dictated neither by precedent nor by the rational basis standard of judicial review accorded disability-based discrimination. After evaluating the Court\u27s decision, I evaluate some options for enforcing federal rights that have survived Garrett. I finish with a discussion of some likely repercussions we might expect from Garrett
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