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[Report on Officer's Duties, by M. G. Hall #2]
Report written by M. G. Hall regarding his duties and actions the day Lee Harvey Oswald was murdered
[Report on Officer's Duties, by M. G. Hall #1]
Report written by M. G. Hall regarding his duties and actions the day Lee Harvey Oswald was murdered
[Report on Officer's Duties by M. G. Hall in regards to Lee Harvey Oswald's death #2]
Report on Officer's duties by M. G. Hall, in regards to Lee Harvey Oswald's murder. Hall states that he went into the office on Sunday, November 24, 1963, when he learned of Oswald's death. He assisted in routine office work and spoke to Jack Ruby, along with F. B. I. Agent Hall
[Report on Officer's Duties by M. G. Hall in regards to Lee Harvey Oswald's death #1]
Report on Officer's duties by M. G. Hall, in regards to Lee Harvey Oswald's murder. Hall states that he went into the office on Sunday, November 24, 1963, when he learned of Oswald's death. He assisted in routine office work and spoke to Jack Ruby, along with F. B. I. Agent Hall
[Report on Officer's Duties by M. G. Hall in regards to the President's murder #2]
Report on Officer's duties by M. G. Hall, in regards to the President's murder and his duties on November 23, 1963. Hall states that he issued a pass to Lee Harvey Oswald's mother, wife and later his brother to visit him in jail, and held a suspect line-up with Oswald
[Report on Officer's Duties by M. G. Hall in regards to the President's murder #1]
Report on Officer's duties by M. G. Hall, in regards to the President's murder and his duties on November 23, 1963. Hall states that he issued a pass to Lee Harvey Oswald's mother, wife and later his brother to visit him in jail, and held a suspect line-up with Oswald
[Report on Officer's Duties by M. G. Hall in regards to the President's murder #1]
Report on Officer's duties by M. G. Hall, in regards to the President's murder. Hall states that he was on a day off when he learned that the President had been shot, and reported to work that afternoon. He took an affidavit from Lee E. Bowers and assisted other officers in taking Lee Harvey Oswald down for three separate suspect line-ups
[Report on Officer's Duties by M. G. Hall in regards to the President's murder #2]
Report on Officer's duties by M. G. Hall, in regards to the President's murder. Hall states that he was on a day off when he learned that the President had been shot, and reported to work that afternoon. He took an affidavit from Lee E. Bowers and assisted other officers in taking Lee Harvey Oswald down for three separate suspect line-ups
(7) G. Stanley Hall to Sigmund Freud, April 15, 1909
The seventh piece of correspondence between G. Stanley Hall and Sigmund Freud. Hall answers Freud\u27s previous letter concerning travel coordination.
Clark University\u27s 1909 conference was a celebration of the institution\u27s twentieth anniversary. The conference is most notable for the participation of Sigmund Freud who, along with Carl Jung, would take their first and only trip to America to attend. The five lectures Freud gave, collectively titled “The Origin and Development of Psychoanalysis” and subsequently known in print as “Five Lectures on Psychoanalysis”, mark the formal introduction of his theories to the United States.
This is only a partial copy of the letter - the following sign-off by Hall is absent from the available document: I am, Very truly yours, G. Stanley Hall Hall\u27s sign-off is reproduced from Freud, Jung, and Hall the King-Maker: The Expedition to America (1909) by Saul Rosenzweig (1992)
(29) G. Stanley Hall to Sigmund Freud, January 31, 1917
The twenty-ninth piece of correspondence between G. Stanley Hall and Sigmund Freud. Hall laments that one result of the war (World War I) is that he has stopped receiving Freud\u27s Jahrbuch. He mentions reports that it has ceased publication and inquires if there is any option for the volumes to be sent to him personally. In his book Hall the King-Maker: The Expedition to America (1909) by Saul Rosenzweig (1992), the author questions whether this letter ever made it to Freud. The letter is not located in the Freud Archives in London, and Hall never appears to have received a response.
Clark University\u27s 1909 conference was a celebration of the institution\u27s twentieth anniversary. The conference is most notable for the participation of Sigmund Freud who, along with Carl Jung, would take their first and only trip to America to attend. The five lectures Freud gave, collectively titled “The Origin and Development of Psychoanalysis” and subsequently known in print as “Five Lectures on Psychoanalysis”, mark the formal introduction of his theories to the United States
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