5,757 research outputs found
Service-oriented models for audiovisual content storage
What are the important topics to understand if involved with storage services to hold digital audiovisual content? This report takes a look at how content is created and moves into and out of storage; the storage service value networks and architectures found now and expected in the future; what sort of data transfer is expected to and from an audiovisual archive; what transfer protocols to use; and a summary of security and interface issues
Moe Cohen, alias Joseph Phillips. John Mackie, alias " Paddy Irish."
HEADQUARTERS OF THE POLICE DEPARTMENT,
BOSTON, MASS.
SUPERINTENDENT'S OFFICE, 37 PEMBERTON SQUARE.
WANTED FOR PICKING POCKETS.
Moe Cohen, alias Joseph Phillips. John Mackie, alias " Paddy Irish."
This Department holds indictment warrants for the arrest of JOHN MACKIE, alias PADDY IRISH, and MOE COHEN, alias JOSEPH PHILLIPS, professional pickpockets. They will be found about celebrations, fairs, horse races, etc.
If located, arrest, hold, notify me and I will send officers with necessary papers
for them.
WM. H. PIERCE,
Superintendent of Police.
BOSTON, August 1, 1901
Business Papers (MS 80-0003)
Letter from A. B. Phillips to Joseph Seinsheimer of the H. Kempner company discussing the value of a piece of land they own
Supporting disabled children and their families in Scotland: A review of policy and research
The Joseph Rowntree Foundation has been supporting research about disabled children and their families for a number of years. An earlier Foundations covering the messages from these projects has already been published (1). This Foundations places the messages from that work into the Scottish context. It gives an overview of current policies affecting disabled children and their families in Scotland and draws on research carried out north of the border
Note from Hubert Phillips to Ernest Besig, Director, American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California
Note from Hubert Phillips to Ernest Besig: "Mr. Besig: Here is another dollar to be added to the amount formerly sent to used in connection with the Endo case. H. Phillips." Added below: "Credit Mrs. John Hoien Fowler $1.00 check encased Am. Civ. Lib. Union. Hastily _ Kellogg."The ACLU-Northern California case file records contain legal documents and correspondence pertaining to the case Ex parte Mitsuye Endo (1944), in which the United States Supreme court unanimously ruled that the federal government could not indefinitely detain United States citizens who were loyal to the government. Files include documents related to the Gordon Hirabayashi Supreme Court case Hirabayashi v. United States
Letter in letterbook from J. H. Woodward to Phillips, February 2, 1883
A document from an extensive collection spanning four generations of the Woodward family that operated merchant pig iron companies in West Virginia and Alabama. The collection begins with Stimpson Harvey Woodward (S. H. Woodward), a native of Massachusetts, who moved from Pittsburgh to Wheeling, West Virginia in 1852. He had interests in an iron company as early as 1852 in West Virginia and began Alabama operations in 1869. The family business continued in Alabama until the death of S. H. Woodward's great-grandson in 1965
Histories, Allen-Barton
The Daughters of Utah Pioneers, Phillips Camp biographies (circa 1940-1974) is a collection of biographical sketches of Utah pioneers submitted to the Phillips Camp, Daughters of Utah Pioneers, in Kaysville, Utah. The individual sketches give insight into the socioeconomic status of European, as well New World, converts to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints during the nineteenth century. They contain biographical and genealogical information, as well as descriptions of experiences crossing the Atlantic to America and traveling across the plains to Utah. Minute details of pioneering life in Davis County, Utah, and other frontier outposts of settlement are illuminated. Described also are individual occupations and survival techniques along with information on offices held in, and services to, the church and the community. Biographies include: Mary Sims Allen (1847-1925), 1 page; William Allen (1849-1928), 2 pages; Anthone Edward Anderson (1839-1906), 2 pages; Pernilla J. Anderson (1850-n.d.), 5 pages; Mary Bunting Ashton (1820-1900), 1 page; Samuel Ashton (1815-1890), 1 page; John Bair (1810-1884), 2 pages; Lucinda Owens Tyler Bair (1812-n.d.), 2 pages; Charles Barnes (1848-1926), 2 pages; Frances Fitzjohn Chapman Barnes (1818-1876), 1 page; Mary Simmons Fanning Barnes (1841-1932), 2 pages; Rebecca Phillips Barnes (1852-1906), 3 pages; Rosa Ellen Webb Barnes (1850-n.d.), 3 pages; William Barnes (1844-1904), 1 page; William Jefferies Barnes (1820-1893), 1 page; James Barnett (1812?-1894), 2 pages; John Barnett (1858-n.d.) and Ellen Mary Bone Barnett (1856-1921), 4 pages; Lewis Barney (1808-1895), 3 pages; Ellen A. Beazer Barton (1852-1918), 3 pages; John Barton (1840-1916), 3 pages; Joseph Barton (1848-1934), 5 pages; Peter Barton (1845-1912), 3 page
Letter in letterbook from J. H. Woodward to Phillips, Jackson, and Company, Nashville, Tennessee, January 13, 1884
A document from an extensive collection spanning four generations of the Woodward family that operated merchant pig iron companies in West Virginia and Alabama. The collection begins with Stimpson Harvey Woodward (S. H. Woodward), a native of Massachusetts, who moved from Pittsburgh to Wheeling, West Virginia in 1852. He had interests in an iron company as early as 1852 in West Virginia and began Alabama operations in 1869. The family business continued in Alabama until the death of S. H. Woodward's great-grandson in 1965
Recommended from our members
[Binder's Collection: Mrs. Phillips]
Bound compilation of sheet music from the collection of Thurman Morrison. An inscription on the page facing the inside front cover reads "Mrs. J.M. Phillips, Priory St.
Letter from F. P. Phillips, Federal Trust and Savings Bank, Chicago, Illinois, to J. H. Woodward, Woodward, Alabama, October 28, 1903
A document from an extensive collection spanning four generations of the Woodward family that operated merchant pig iron companies in West Virginia and Alabama. The collection begins with Stimpson Harvey Woodward (S. H. Woodward), a native of Massachusetts, who moved from Pittsburgh to Wheeling, West Virginia in 1852. He had interests in an iron company as early as 1852 in West Virginia and began Alabama operations in 1869. The family business continued in Alabama until the death of S. H. Woodward's great-grandson in 1965
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