1,721,442 research outputs found

    Telegram from Leadership of the Local 147 Tunnel Workers\u27 Union to Geraldine Ferraro

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    Telegram of endorsement from leadership of Local 147 Tunnel Workers\u27 Union to Geraldine Ferraro. Authors include Richard Fitzsimmons, Business Manager, Edward McGuinness, President, and Dennis Geaney, Secretary-Treasurer. Includes data entry sheet.https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/vice_presidential_campaign_correspondence_1984_new_york/1272/thumbnail.jp

    Catholic Communicator, TV Producer the Rev. John Geaney, C.S.P. to Receive UD\u27s 1998 Daniel J. Kane Award

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    News release announces that television shows produced by the Rev. John Geaney, C.S.P., have aired on PBS and ABC stations across the country

    An Interview with Suzanne Geaney

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    An alumna from the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts describes her student experience as a member of one of the early coeducational classes. This interview was contributed as part of Lighting the Way: Fifty Years of Women at Holy Cross, a commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of Coeducation at Holy Cross

    [Introduction to] Language as Bodily Practice in Early China: A Chinese Grammatology

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    Jane Geaney argues that early Chinese conceptions of speech and naming cannot be properly understood if viewed through the dominant Western philosophical tradition in which language is framed through dualisms that are based on hierarchies of speech and writing, such as reality/appearance and one/many. Instead, early Chinese texts repeatedly create pairings of sounds and various visible things. This aural/visual polarity suggests that texts from early China treat speech as a bodily practice that is not detachable from its use in everyday experience. Firmly grounded in ideas about bodies from the early texts themselves, Geaney’s interpretation offers new insights into three key themes in these texts: the notion of speakers’ intentions (yi), the physical process of emulating exemplary people, and Confucius’s proposal to rectify names (zhengming).https://scholarship.richmond.edu/bookshelf/1315/thumbnail.jp

    Cricklewood Community Play: minutes of Finance Committee meeting, 6 September 1992

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    Typed minutes of the meeting of the Finance Committee, with handwritten annotations. Signed by Anita Geaney

    Anglicky mluvící komunisté, komunističtí sympatizanti a podporovatelé a Českoslovesko v počátcích studené války

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    Doctoral Dissertation PhDr. Kathleen Brenda Geaney English-Speaking Communists, Communist Sympathizers and Fellow- Travellers and Czechoslovakia in the Early Cold War (Anglicky mluvící komunisté, komunističtí sympatizanti a podporovatelé a Československo v počátcích studené války) Anotace Disertace se věnuje těm členům a sympatizantům komunistické strany, kteří cestovali skrze železnou oponu, aby na vlastní oči viděli život v nové lidové demokracii. Výzkum se zaměřuje na Československo v počátcích studené války, které se stalo cílem až překvapujícího množství anglojazyčných turistů. Práce ukazuje, že sovětský příklad sloužil jako model pro přijímání těchto návštěvníků pro oficiální místa v Praze. Československé úřady si nicméně tento vzor přizpůsobily na základě získaných zkušeností, místních podmínek a také geopolitického kontextu. Přístup k nim byl přizpůsobován na základě hodnocení jejich přínosu a důležitosti pro věc komunismu. Klíčová slova: Československo, komunismus, studená války, anglicky-mluvící cizinci, metody pohostinostiDoctoral Dissertation PhDr. Kathleen Brenda Geaney English-Speaking Communists, Communist Sympathizers and Fellow- Travellers and Czechoslovakia in the Early Cold War (Anglicky mluvící komunisté, komunističtí sympatizanti a podporovatelé a Československo v počátcích studené války) Abstract The dissertation is a study of some of those people with Communist Party affiliations and fellow-travellers, who journeyed behind the Iron Curtain to see for themselves what life was like in the new people's democracy. The research focuses on Czechoslovakia as a tourist destination for a surprising number of anglophones in the early years of the Cold War. It argues that Soviet experience served as a best practices model for officialdom in Prague. This was modified where necessary to take into account the lessons learnt, national particulars, and the new geopolitical context. In both situations, foreigners were evaluated in terms of importance and potential as far as the communist cause was concerned. Key words: Czechoslovakia, communism, Cold War, English-speaking foreigners, hospitality techniquesÚstav světových dějinInstitute of General HistoryFaculty of ArtsFilozofická fakult

    Minutes of Finance Committee, 21 February

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    Typed minutes of the meeting of the Finance Committee of the Cricklewood Community Play Association. Signed by Anita Geaney. Year not stated, but probably 1993
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