269,617 research outputs found
Ray L. Jones
"Ray L. Jones SX 25250 27th. Aust Inf. Bn(A.I.F) (S.A.Scottish Regiment) Darwin 1941/43 Now of - Burnside S.A."Ray L. Jones SX 25250. 27th. Australian Infantry Battalion (Australian Imperial Forces) (South Australian Scottish Regiment) Darwin 1941/43. Now of - Burnside South Australia
L. M. Jones
"N.X.134903 Bdr. L.M. (Lennie) Jones 14 A/A Bty (The Oval 1940-42)".N.X.134903 Bombardier L.M. (Lennie) Jones. 14 Anti Aircraft Battery (The Oval 1940-42)
Letter from Emma L. Houlsby, Chicago, Illinois, to Catherine "Kitty" M. Jones, Chicago, Illinois, December 3, 1918
A letter from Emma L. Houlsby to Catherine "Kitty" Jones asking Kitty for her brother's (John's) address
Coyt L. Jones Interview
Coyt L. Jones was born South Carolina and moved to Newark in 1927. He was the father of poet and activist Amiri Baraka (nee Leroy Jones) and the grandfather of Newark Mayor Ras Baraka. This interview details his professional life in Newark as well as his recollections of African-American political organizing, Bethany Baptist Church, and social and community activities
Mystery Author Stan Jones and Sepculative Fiction Authors Sterling Emmal and L. S. Goulet
Sterling Emmal is author of the sci-fi fantasy The Executioner of Rawule and L. S. Goulet is author of the fantasy book Sword of Dragonblood. Tundra Kill is Stan Jones' latest Nathan Active mystery. His other books include White Sky, Black Ice; Shaman Pass, Frozen Sun; Village of the Ghost Bears, and the nonfiction classic, The Spill: Personal Stories from the Exxon Valdez Disaster, coauthored with Sharon Bushell
Ira L. Jones, Tenor, August 15, 1963
Concert program for Ira L. Jones, Tenor, August 15,
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Ira L. Jones Graduate Recital, April 5, 1954
Concert program for Ira L. Jones Graduate Recital, April 5,
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Virginia L. Jones and Edward A. Jones, circa 1970
Virginia L. Jones and Edward A. Jones shake hands with others.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) in supporting the processing and digitization of a number of historic collections as part of the project: Our Story: Digitizing Publications and Photographs of the Historically Black Atlanta University Center Institutions.</em
James L. Jones Interview, 18 June 2013
James L. Jones, aka Buddy Jones, was born in Union Springs, Alabama, in 1912, the son of a sharecropper. At age 7 the family moved to Matewan, West Virginia, for his father to work in the coalfields. Trouble soon developed when his father became involved in the UMWA\u27s effort to organize coal miners in the region. Jones recalls being evicted from company housing and having to live in a tent. Company-hired detectives fired upon the tents at night in the buildup to the infamous Matewan Massacre in 1921. Jones later served in the US Army in Western Europe during World War II, where he first became aware of racial discrimination. He tells a great story about being in Texas during his wartime military service and refusing to sit in the back of a military bus. Jones also discusses his postwar migration to Cleveland, where he lived in Glenville and, later, East Cleveland. He worked in heat treating metals at National Acme in Collinwood. He also tells about supporting his friend George Forbes for city council and forming the Ghana Social Club, which operated in various bars and clubs in the early 1950s
L. Jones to Maria Thornton
In this letter, L. Jones of Farmville, VA writes to Maria Thornton regarding the death of her brother-in-law, Colonel John T. Thornton. Colonel Thornton was killed in the Battle of Antietam on September 17, 1862
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