21,194 research outputs found

    Pioneer personal history, Mrs. Mary Jane Hall Van Patten

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    Typescript of a sketch biography of Mary Jane (Hall) Van Patten of Ogden Utah, from an interview. She and her husband came to Ogden from Kansas in the 1880s and lived in Ogden and Uintah, Weber County. Typed by Elvera Manful of Ogden in 194

    Oral history interview with Jane Jayroe Gamble

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    Jane Jayroe Gamble, a 2018 Oklahoma Women's Hall of Fame inductee and winner of the 1967 Miss America Pageant as Miss Oklahoma, recalls growing up in Sentinel, Oklahoma and attending Oklahoma City University. She discusses her pageant victories leading up to winning the Miss America pageant and the remarkable yet lonely year following it. Jane talks about her work as a news anchor and her writing career. She comments on the changing role of women in society and offers advice for young women.The Inductees of the Oklahoma Women's Hall of Fame Oral History Project aims to preserve the voices and experiences of inductees to the Oklahoma Women's Hall of Fame who serve as pioneers in their fields, made significant contributions to the state of Oklahoma, or have championed other women, women's issues, or served as public policy advocates for the issues important to women

    Bert Hall and Jane King

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    4 x 5 photograph, man wearing a hat standing next to a sitting woman, the woman is at a desk with a typewriter and a sign for "Junior Stock Growers"H74-181 Bert L. Hall Papers Photographs 6952B Folder Bert Hall Collection H74-181 2 Envelope H74-181 6952B Folder 2 Bert Hall Collection 9 Groups 34 Photos[stamp] 235 Bert Hall Jane Kin

    "Letter with No Address" - Poem by Donald Hall

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    Donald Hall reads his poem "Letter with No Address," an epistolary poem written for his late wife, the poet Jane Kenyon. Hall is a former U.S. Poet Laureate and the author of 16 books of poetry, as well as fiction.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/85036/1/letterwithnoaddress_donalhall.mp

    Sarah Jane Hall

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    Portrait of Sarah Jane Hall

    Barbara Brandt and Jane Tobey

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    MSU Recital Hall provides a general television audience with the opportunity to listen to and observe a recital of significant music, performed by both faculty and students alike. In this episode, soprano singer Barbara Brandt and pianist Jane Tobey perform a medley of songs. Included in the program are: Se Florindo e Fedele by Alessandro Scarlatti, Suite for Piano, Movements 1 and 4 by Norman Dello Joio, The Rose Complained by Robert Franz, Evening by John Duke, Air Vic by Francis Poulenc, Variations S 1a\ua9rieuses, Opus 54 by Felix Mendelssohn, and In Quelle Trine Moribide, from Manon Lescaut by Giacomo Puccini, Musical notes for this recital are by Gean Greenwell

    The light of the eye : doctrine, piety and reform in the works of Thomas Sherlock, Hannah More and Jane Austen

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    Bibliography: leaves 376-401.This thesis investigates the ways in which three eighteenth-century writers, Bishop Thomas Sherlock, Hannah More and Jane Austen embody orthodox Anglican doctrine according to their individual perceptions of the enlightening properties of Protestant Christianity. After situating them in their respective gender, literary and ecclesiastical contexts, I examine some of their key doctrines and analyse excerpts from their works. My selection of passages from Sherlock's works is fairly comprehensive, but in the case of More and Austen, where there is already a formidable body of literary criticism, it is more selective. Thus, I focus on doctrine in More's tracts, Strictures on the System of Female Education, An Essay on St Paul and most especially Coelebs in Search of a Wife and in the case of Austen, on her prayers and select passages from Sense and Sensibility and Mansfield Park. I conclude that, although diverse in their particular kind of Anglicanism (High, Evangelical and Median) and in their choice of genre, transparency or obscurity (anonymity and pseudonymity) and the various narratological strategies some of them invoke to circumvent certain taboos, Sherlock, More and Austen champion the same central orthodox doctrines, defend them against current alternatives to orthodoxy such as Latitudinarianism, Deism and various forms of Freethinking, and promote similar moral and ecclesiastical reforms. However, indirectly (through female characters who resist male representation or control) the women writers subject their ostensibly authorially-endorsed male narrators/characters to scrutiny and sometimes (when the males objectify the women) subversion

    Jane Hall

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    Photograph used for a story in the Daily Oklahoman newspaper. Caption: "JANE HALL professional name for a part Oklahoma City Housewife, will appear on the Arthur Godfrey Talent Scouts on CBS-TV.

    Daughters of Sarah Jane Hall and Evan Silas Frasure

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    A photograph of the daughters of Sarah Jane Hill and Evan Silas Frasure, circa. 1920

    Hall, Jane

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