9,826 research outputs found

    Letter from W.M. Farrell to Fr. Montague [C.C. Greenore]

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    Eve of St. James Apostle of Cooley 1st Century' Holograph letter from W.M. Farrell, [117 North Circular Road], Dublin, to Fr. Montague [C.C. Greenore]. Offering a quotation from D'Alton's Archbishops of Dublin concerning St. James the Apostle's alleged sojourn in Ireland as based on Vincentius of Beauvais and Julian of Toledo; adding that folklore places James near Carlingford

    Handwritten Dedication to Jeremiah Farrell from Marc Romano, author of Crossworld

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    A handwritten note of appreciation sent to Jeremiah Farrell by Marc Romano, the author of Crossworld: One Man\u27s Journey into America\u27s Crossword Obsession . Farrell was the renown creator of the 1996 Election Day Puzzle that predicted the election by allowing for Clinton or Bobdole to be valid responses. Romano mentions the puzzle several times in his own work and corresponded with Farrell regarding his book and the best puzzle in the world .https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/faculty_images/1001/thumbnail.jp

    Alan Farrell Interview

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    Alan F. Farrell was born in Hanover, New Hampshire in 1945 and joined the U. S. Army (Special Forces) in 1966, serving in Vietnam from 1968 - 1970. This interview covers his Special Forces training and experiences in the Vietnam War. Following his Army service, Farrell received a Bachelor's, Master's and PhD from Tufts University and began a career in higher education

    Oral History Interview with Farrell Kluttz, January 6, 2006

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    The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with Farrell L. Kluttz. Kluttz joined the Navy in December 1937. His first assignment was aboard the USS Downes (DD-375). In 1939, he was transferred to the USS John D. Edwards (DD-216) on Asia Station. His enlistment ended the day before the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Kluttz was in San Francisco then. he elected to stay in the Navy and was assigned to the commissioning crew of the USS Electra (AKA-4) in Tampa, Florida. They delivered some Marines to New Zealand in mid 1942 and made the North Africa landing later in November. Kluttz was aboard when the Electra was torpedoed and returned to South Carolina with he in April 1943. When he returned, Kluttz attended fire control school and graduated as a Chief Firecontrolman. He served at Newport, Rhode Island getting several sailors qualified to go aboard the soon-to-be commissioned USS Franklin (CV-13). Kluttz was aboard the Franklin when is suffered the bomb hits in March, 1945. He abandoned ship off the fantail and was rescued out of the water by the USS Hunt (DD-674). Kluttz was located by the captain of the Franklin and went back aboard at Ulithi. He was aboard the Franklin at Brooklyn when the war ended. During the Korean War, Kluttz served aboard the USS Waller (DD-466)

    Thomas J. Farrell's Further Reflections about John Fugelsang's 2025 Book Separation of Church and Hate

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    See the above abstract.In the wide-ranging and deeply personal 5,281-word review essay "Thomas J. Farrell's Further Reflections about John Fugelsang's 2025 Book Separation of Church and Hate, I succinctly highlight (1) John Fugelsang's accessible and humorous 2025 book Separation of Church and Hate, and (2) the revolutionary mature work of the American Jesuit Renaissance specialist and cultural historian and media ecology theorist Walter J. Ong (1912-2003; Ph.D. in English, Harvard University, 1955) of Saint Louis University, where, over the years, I took five courses from him, and (3) my life and work.N/AFarrell, Thomas. (2026). Thomas J. Farrell's Further Reflections about John Fugelsang's 2025 Book Separation of Church and Hate. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/277928

    Jeremiah Farrell with Dennis Sasha, author of Puzzling Adventures: Tales of Strategy, Logic and Mathematical Skill

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    Jeremiah Farrell is awarded the title of Omniheurist, First-Class for solving the eloborate embedded puzzle in Dennis Sasha\u27s book, Puzzling Adventures . The cryptic puzzle required Dr. Farrell to travel to New York City on a certain day to meet two persons in yellow with one wearing a red wig. The event was featured in articles in Indy Star and the New York Sun.https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/faculty_images/1003/thumbnail.jp

    R.C. Farrell Store

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    Photograph - People standing in front of R.C. Farrell, General Merchant store, Athabasca, Alberta. Left to right: Lance Smith, Louis Menard, Romeo Farrell, Athela LaRue Farrell, and Ray Vari

    Review of Martin Seel, Aesthetics of Appearing, trans. John Farrell.

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    Martin Seel, Aesthetics of Appearing, trans. John Farrell. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2005. 283 pp. ISBN 0804743819

    Farrell, Neil. Interview about cod fishery, cod traps, grades of fish, fish plants, decline in the fishery.

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    Interview with Neil Farrell about the cod fishery, cod traps, grades of fish, fish plants, and the decline in the fishery over time.00:00-00:20 Neil Farrell, Marystown, born 1958, collector-Susanna Glavine, November 18, 2019; 00:32-last inshore fisherman, 35 years fishing; 00:41father involved in fishery, took over from him, new technology;1:03-all fishing involved cod, cod raps, cod jiggers in fall; 01:39- all fish sold to local merchant’s, Reddy, Murley, Wiscombe; 01:50- price low, fish grades, Jamaica; 02:23- quintal; 02:46-typical day, daylight, traps, splitting, salting, second trip to trap; 03:38- family, paid in September; 04:17- trap skiffs, local people, Gerard Kelly, Beau Bois, last skiff built, Dick Kelly, Edward Farrell’ 04:50- barter system; 05:20- opening of fish plant; 06:10-decline after shipyard opened, better wages; 06:41-memories, smoking on wharf, fire in shed, father, brothers, uncles; 07:30-community loss, decline of inshore fishery, no charge, no young men; 08:13- anecdotes, talk to brother John; 08:34-end of fishery, selling out licence, no one to take over, emotional at end of fishing caree

    Rewriting history : postmodern and postcolonial negotiations in the fiction of J.G. Farrell, Timothy Mo, Kazuo Ishiguro and Salman Rushdie

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    This thesis is a study of the rewriting of history in the work of four novelists: J. G. Farrell, Timothy Mo, Kazuo Ishiguro and Salman Rushdie. I argue that their work occupies a particular position that is both within contemporary British fiction, yet at one remove from it. Their work is situated within the context of critiques of history that are the source of a conflict between postmodernism and postcolonialism. I suggest that each writer engages with postmodemist aesthetics often in an attempt to produce critical histones that bear witness to the voices of those hitherto silenced in conventional historiography. However, these novelists remain anxious as to the potential consequences of mobilising postmodernist models of history, particularly as to the problems this creates concerning historical reference. The thesis aims to identify the range of related attitudes to postmodernist critiques of history at this particular juncture of contemporary fiction in English. I approach the specific position of the novelists under study through Homi Bhabha's work on the confluence of the postmodern and the postcolonial, focusing in particular on his suggestion that the postmodem refutation of Western epistemology enables a postcolonial space where a new range of histories emerge. Because each writer works between at least two cultures, and primarily within Britain, they negotiate from within received epistemology in an attempt to locate a space at its boundaries where conventional forms of knowledge no longer have efficacy. However, in contrast to Bhabha, these writers struggle to reach this space and remain sceptical as to the usefulness of postmodernism in making available new forms of historiography. Ultimately, their work enables a critique of current ways of theorising the relationship between the postmodem and the postcolonial in literary studies
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