6,340 research outputs found
Simeon A. Howe Letter : April 28, 1865
Simeon tells Cindonia that General Johnston surrendered and Simeon has been ordered to march to Washington, D.C., to be mustered out of the military. He hopes to return home by the fourth of July
Simeon A. Howe Letter : June 7, 1865
Simeon writes that the long march to Washington, D.C., took a toll on his legs. He thought he may become crippled, but he treated himself with steam and claims that it cured his legs in two days. Simeon is worried that Cindonia is sick because he has not received a letter from her in some time
Simeon A. Howe Letter : May 22, 1865
Simeon explains to Cindonia that his recent travels have prevented him from writing letters to her. He also apologizes for not properly expressing his love for her in his previous letters and for jokingly referring to one of her letters as tedious. Simeon says he will be in Washington, D.C., in two days to take part in the grand review of General Sherman's army
Joseph W. Howe, D.C., D.A.C.B.R. and the development of modern chiropractic radiology
Born in Galeton, Pennsylvania, on 27 May 1930, Joseph W. Howe has been extremely influential raising the educational standards for radiology in chiropractic. After receiving his D.C. from Palmer in 1952, he worked in private practice in Pennsylvania until being drafted into the Army, where he worked as a radiologic technician. After returning to civilian life and his practice, he attended many seminars and lectures on the subject, including one in 1958, taught by Roland Kissinger, D.C. at the National College of Chiropractic (NCC), the first postgraduate course in chiropractic roentgenology ever administered by a college. Howe then took and passed the second exam given by the American Board of Chiropractic Roentgenologists and was awarded certificate number eight in 1959. He helped to form the American Chiropractic College of Radiology and became its first Radiological Health Consultant. In 1968, he joined the Associates Diagnostic and Research Center (ADRC) in Tallmadge, Ohio, where he was able to concentrate on research and establish an off-campus facility for radiology residents of NCC. During this time Howe also lent his expertise to the Houston Conference on Spinal Manipulation. However, financial difficulties with the Center led Howe to leave, and accept a full time position teaching at NCC. Howe ultimately found himself too involved with administrative duties and not enough with the radiology that he loved, so he moved his family across the country in order to accept the radiology department chair at Los Angeles College of Chiropractic (LACC) in 1978. There he was given freedom to build the department to his high standards, and it retains the strongest residency in the profession, with up to six residents at any one time and links to prestigious radiologists like Donald Resnick, M.D. and Steve Rothman, M.D. Officially, Howe retired in 1998, but he still occasionally teaches residents and the Westwood-based radiology practice that he donated to LACC continues, run by the radiology faculty
Letter from Timothy Otis Howe to William G. Ritch
Letter dated May 25, 1876 from Timothy Otis Howe, United States Senator, Washington, D.C., to William Gillet Ritch, saying he asked the Executive Clerk if there was a nomination of a new Secretary for New Mexico, records still had name of RItch. Howe went back again and he learned that Pratt had been nomintated for Secretary of New Mexico, and was some how confirmed without Howe approving, questioned how it happened, fraud, corruption? HL introduction page overlaid by document. Letter in English, handwritten, 2pp/fr
Rites of Spring concert flier, Food For Thought, Washington, D.C. - December 15, 1984
Photocopy of an advertising flier promoting a concert by the Washington, D.C. punk band, Rites Of Spring. The concert occurred on December 15, 1984 at Food For Thought, a restaurant/concert venue in Washington, D.C. The other bands on the bill were the Washington, D.C. punk bands Gray Matter and Grand Mal. The photocopy was made by D.C. artist, author, and musician Sharon Cheslow as part of the research for "Banned in D.C.," a book she co-authored with Cynthia Connolly and Leslie Clague
Notice from Timothy Otis Howe to William Gillet Ritch about his position
Notice dated April 12, 1876 from Timothy Otis Howe, Washington, D.C., to William Gillet Ritch, Santa Fe, New Mexico, stating that he, Howe had talked to the Secretary of the Interior whether he intended to remove Ritch, and believed he would not do so. HL introduction page overlaid by document. Notice in English, handwritten, 1pp/fr
#677 The New Labor Law and the U.S. Economy.
Participants include: Louis Sherman, General Counsel, Building and Construction Trades Department, AFL-CIO Jerome Powell, Attorney; Partner, Call, Lane and Howe, Washington, D.C
Letter to M. S. Howe from Alexander Eakin Shiras
Letter to Major M. S. Howe, United States Army dragoons, Santa Fe, from Alexander Eakin Shiras, Captain, Auditor, Washington, D.C., in reply to Howe's request for certified copies of all papers in the office of the auditor file regarding the Army in New Mexico. Document in English, 1 pp/fr, missing heading page
Our whole country; or, The past and present of the United States, historical and descriptive. In two volumes, containing the general and local histories and descriptions of each of the states, territories, cities, and towns of the Union; also biographical sketches of distinguished persons ... Illustrated by six hundred engravings ... almost wholly from drawings taken on the spot by the authors, the entire work being on their part the result of over 16,000 miles of travel and four years of labor.
Electronic reproduction. Washington, D.C. : Library of Congress, [2002 or 2003
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