106 research outputs found
Card from Sigma Debs to Mrs. Masukawa, May 12 1944
An invitation card to the Mothers' Day Party held on Friday May 12, 1944 at the Dining Hall at the Poston camp in Arizona. The party was coordinated by Sigma Debs, young Nisei women's club in the camp, and the card was sent to Mitzi Masukawa Naohara's mother, Koyuta Masukawa. The caption reads: In honor of our Mothers, 1944. An item from: Mitzi Naohara scrapbook (csudh_nao_0400), page 12.The George and Mitzi Naohara Papers consists of photo albums and scrapbooks compiled by George and Mitzi Naohara, and other documents pertaining to the Naohara and Masukawa family. Contained are photographs, correspondence, documents, and memorabilia depicting their experiences during World War II. George Nobuo Naohara is a Kibei Nisei, and his experiences include his farm labor in Idaho and Utah, incarceration in the Manzanar, Jerome, and Tule Lake camps, and the U.S. Army language school training and Korean War. He also engaged in Buddhist activities for his whole life and there are moving images depicting Gardena Buddhist Church activities after the war. Mitzi Masukawa Naohara was a preschool teacher at the Poston camp, Arizona, and also a member of a young Nisei women's club, "Sigma Debs.” Her collected materials depict her life as a teacher and social events in the Poston camp during the war
The DEBS 2017 Grand Challenge
\ua9 2017 Copyright held by the owner/author(s). The ACM DEBS 2017 Grand Challenge is the seventh in a series of challenges which seek to provide a common ground and evaluation criteria for a competition aimed at both research and industrial event-based systems. The focus of the 2017 Grand Challenge is on the analysis of the RDF streaming data generated by digital and analogue sensors embedded within manufacturing equipment. The analysis aims at the detection of anomalies in the behavior of such manufacturing equipment. This paper describes the specifics of the data streams and continuous queries that define the DEBS 2017 Grand Challenge. It also describes the benchmarking platform that supports testing of corresponding solutions
Eugene V. Debs
Debs was a founder of the American Railway Union and served as the Union's first president. He organized the Social Democratic Party of America in 1897, and ran for the U.S. Presidency in 1900, 1904, 1908, 1912, and 1920. He was convicted of violation of the Espionage Act in 1918 and sentenced to ten years in prison. President Harding pardoned him in 1921.Debs is very thin and bald. He is wearing a buttoned up jacket. Wrought iron work is on the building behind him
Henri Temianka Correspondence; (debs)
This collection contains material pertaining to the life, career, and activities of Henri Temianka, violin virtuoso, conductor, music teacher, and author. Materials include correspondence, concert programs and flyers, music scores, photographs, and books.https://digitalcommons.chapman.edu/temianka_correspondence/3482/thumbnail.jp
Righting a Wrong: Woodrow Wilson, Warren G. Harding, and the Espionage Act Prosecutions
This is a story of excess and reparation. It is a chronicle of one President from the elite intellectual classes of the East, and another from a county seat in the heartland. Woodrow Wilson was the college president whose contribution to the art of government lay in the principle of expertise and efficiency. When he went to war, he turned the machinery of government into a comprehensive and highly effective instrument for victory. For Wilson, it followed that there could be little tolerance for those who impeded the success of American arms by their anti-war propaganda, draft resistance, or ideological dissent. Nor would there be any compromise with those who later opposed his plan for peace.
Warren G. Harding was a middling sort of person, simple in his virtues, mundane in his vices. Inadequately educated-as he always admitted-he nonetheless became a successful newspaper editor by overcoming the shared monopoly of two established dailies. His persistence brought him political success in the rough world of Ohio Republican politics. Where Wilson thought efficiency the hallmark of a successful administration, Harding believed it to be harmony. While Wilson sought to confine those who opposed his war aims, and unseat those who rejected his peace aims, Harding did not think a man should be in jail for what he said. Where Wilson oversaw the segregation of the civil service, Harding confronted Jim Crow in the Deep South.
Between the two stood Eugene V. Debs, the Marxist Socialist who could gather nearly a million votes for President but looked forward to a revolution that would unseat the capitalists from their positions of power. There was nothing that Debs stood for that either Wilson or Harding could abide. But while Wilson wanted to keep Debs in prison, Harding wanted to shake his hand
Socialist Convention and Eugene V. Debs Picnic photograph
Group portrait of Socialist Party members gathered for the Socialist Convention and Eugene V. Debs Picnic held in Canton, Ohio, on June 16, 1918. On this visit to Canton in conjunction with the state's Socialist Party convention, in the midst of World War I, Debs gave a speech in the city's Nimisila Park criticizing the war and its capitalist aims. He described how wealthy American businessmen were profiting from the war while the working class suffered, and encouraged listeners to resist the military draft. Two weeks after his impassioned speech, the U.S. government charged him with violating the Espionage Act, which prohibited Americans from interfering with military service or otherwise obstructing the United States' war effort. Debs was found guilty and sentenced to ten years in prison, although President Warren G. Harding commuted his sentence on December 25, 1921. During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Debs was a leading advocate for socialism in the United States of America, and ran as the party's candidate for president in five elections
Presidential returns, 1920
Gift from William Wedge.KDKA Pittsburgh announces the Presidential returns in November, 1920 with Harding well ahead of James Cox and Eugene Debs
On the theorems of Y. Mibu and G. Debs on separate continuity
Using a game-theoretic characterization of Baire spaces, conditions upon the domain and
the range are given to ensure a fat set C(f) of points of continuity in the sets of type X×{y}, y∈Y for certain almost separately continuous functions f:X×Y→Z. These results (especially Theorem B) generalize Mibu's. First Theorem, previous theorems of the author, answers one of his problems as well as they are closely related to some other results of Debs [1] and Mibu [2]
[Photograph 2012.201.B1380.0819]
Photograph used for a story in the Daily Oklahoman newspaper. Caption: "Chosen by the members of the Bachelors Club, seven of this year's debs are Diane Elizabeth Wolfe, Kerri Lynn Ellis, Casey Carlock Harding and Katheryne Payne.
Young women at scrapbook party
''Misses Carolyn Beckmann, Cynthia Harding and Anne Sheldon (L-R), are pictured at the scrapbook party Mrs. Peter Keating, Jr. gave for the debutantes on Friday at her home. The debs spent the afternoon cutting and pasting newspaper clippings of the gay events honoring them during the past year.'
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