8,982 research outputs found

    Afghanistan, Harrison Forman smoking hookah with Joe Donohue and other man

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    Afghanistan: Misc. Oct. 1953See Harrison Forman Diary page 34 for description of hookah and page 35 for men's names. Harrison Forman in middle and Joe Donohue on right. On left, possibly Bill Roy or Jim Luquer (unconfirmed).Harrison Forman Diary, Afghanistan, August 1953 accessible at http://collections.lib.uwm.edu/cdm/ref/collection/forman/id/55GrayscaleForman Safety Negatives, Box 2

    Afghanistan, Joe Donohue, Bill Roy, and Jim Luquer smoking hookah

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    Afghanistan: Misc. Oct. 1953See Harrison Forman Diary page 34 for description of hookah and page 35 for men's names. Joe Donohue on right. Bill Roy and Jim Luquer unconfirmed (left and middle).Harrison Forman Diary, Afghanistan, August 1953 accessible at http://collections.lib.uwm.edu/cdm/ref/collection/forman/id/55GrayscaleForman Safety Negatives, Box 2

    L. Roy Harrison

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    Roy F. Harrison

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    The Oklahoma A&M College World War I Veterans collection captures the memories and experiences of the men and women of Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College who served in World War I. In 1919, a project headed by Maude Cass, the editor of the 1919 Redskin; Professor Maroney of the Department of History; Margaret Walters, Librarian; and J.W. Cantwell, the College President, was undertaken to survey these veterans. The surveys were returned along with photographs, letters, and newspaper clippings documenting these veterans’ experiences during World War I

    Roy H. Waite Collection

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    Roy Harrison Waite (born in 1885) began lecturing at the Maryland Agricultural College in 1911 and later became a professor in the College of Agriculture and a poultry expert on the Maryland Agricultural Experiment Station staff. This collection contains 28 black and white photographs of the College Park campus and buildings taken by Waite between 1932 and 1944. Many of Waite's photographs of campus were used in the Reveille yearbook between the 1910s and 1940s

    Old is New: Notes about Carrie Fisher and Harrison Ford as Vintage Celebrities in Star Wars: The Force Awakens Reviews

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    This article examineS the critical reception of the film Star Wars: The Force Awakens, in order to assess the “old celebrity” status of Carrie Fisher and Harrison Ford in the movie

    Letter from Executive to Assistant Secretary of War to Roy Suzuki dated February 12, 1944

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    Letter from Harrison Gerhardt to Roy Suzuki, who is requesting a medical waiver so that he may join the 442nd despite 20/400 vision. Mr. Suzuki's handwritten letter is enclosed, as is a letter of rejection from the Surgeon General

    E. R. Harrison Collection

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    Photograph of Kelsey Warren, E. R. Harrison, and Roy Grider, c. 1909-1912

    United They Fall: Why the International Community Should Not Promote Military Integration after Civil War

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    The single strongest predictor of civil war is a nation having had one in the past, and preventing the recurrence of civil war has thus become the critical problem for both scholarship and policy. The conventional wisdom urges the creation of capable, legitimate, and inclusive postwar states to reduce the risk of relapse into civil war, and international peacebuilders have often encouraged the formation of a new national army including members of the war’s opposing sides. However, military integration has received little theoretical or empirical attention. Filling that gap, we argue that both the theoretical logics and the empirical record identifying military integration as a significant contributor to durable post-civil war peace are weak. Our analysis of eleven cases finds little evidence that military integration played a substantial causal role in preventing the return to civil war and little support for the likely causal mechanisms. Military integration does not usually send a costly signal of the parties’ commitment to peace, provide communal security, employ many possible spoilers, or act as a powerful symbol of a unified nation. We conclude that it is both unwise and unethical for the international community to press military integration on reluctant local forces.Based in part on a larger collective project: Roy Licklider (Ed.). (2014). New Armies from Old: Merging Competing Military Forces after Civil Wars. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press; see http://press.georgetown.edu/book/georgetown/new-armies-old
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