1,721,280 research outputs found
George Clark account
An account for George Clark shows that George Evans, Esquire, purchased lead for the use of the militia for the sum of 5 pounds and 5 shillings
George Clark account
An account for George Clark shows that George Evans, Esquire, purchased lead for the use of the militia for the sum of 5 pounds and 5 shillings
George Clark Leonard Portrait
The Rev. George Clark Leonard was an 1895 Wofford graduate who served on the Board of Trustees from 1914-1945. Leonard Auditorium in Main Building is named in his honor.https://digitalcommons.wofford.edu/facultyphotos/1016/thumbnail.jp
James Laurie and George Clark
James W. Laurie, Trinity's 14th president, served from 1951-1970 (right) with George Clark, President of Trinity's Alumni Association. Photograph taken in 1955 with San Antonio skyline in the background
George Clark in Ghana Costume
One black and white photographic print of George Clark of Akron, Ohio in a costume from Ghana where he taught school. He is at a dance with others in what appears to be a gymnasium, probably in Akron, Ohio
Platform, Showcase, Gathering, Exchange: A Conversation about Film Festivals with Erika Balsom, George Clark, Chris Kennedy, Eduardo Thomas, and Koyo Yamashita
The conversation includes discussions about issues of relevance to film festivals that screen experimental moving image work, including: the emergence of small festivals whose programming challenges the dominance of European or North American work; the incorporation of the moving image into the gallery scene; and the opening up of new possibilities for global exchange using digital media. Erika Balsom (United Kingdom), George Clark (New Zealand), Eduardo Thomas (Mexico), Koyo Yamashita (Japan), and Chris Kennedy (Canada) spoke about these and other developments related to experimental moving image practices in the festival scene. A postscript addresses the early impact of the COVID-19 pandemic
Died. : At the ballot box in the State of Texas at 6 o'clock p.m. Nov. 9, 1892, George Clark, Cuney and the Coons, T.L. Nugent, Jim Perdue, James B. Weaver and Ben Harrison.
Judge George Clark (1841-1918) lost his campaign for governor against Gov. James Hogg in 1892. Also mentioned in the broadside are Texas Republican Party leader, Norris White Cuney, Thomas Lewis Nugent, also a candidate for governor in the 1892 election, James B. Weaver, Populist candidate for president, and Benjamin Harrison, Republican, who lost the presidential campaign to Grover Cleveland.Title from caption and first lines
Sir George Clark, Early Modem Europe from 1450 to about 1720
Spooner Frank. Sir George Clark, Early Modem Europe from 1450 to about 1720. In: Annales. Economies, sociétés, civilisations. 14ᵉ année, N. 4, 1959. p. 780
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