675 research outputs found
Mary Katherine Smith Reynolds.
Mary Katherine Smith Reynolds. The photo was taken at Reynolda House, about the time of her marriage to John Edward Johnston, in 1921
Mrs. Katherine Detmold, 1962.
Mrs. Katherine Detmold, 1962. This was a concert honoring the retirement of Mrs. Detmold who was the coordinator of public school music.WSJ 5-19-62 p.1
Winston-Salem debutants, 1957.
Winston-Salem debutants, 1957. The women are: Mary Lee Walker, Kathryn Thomas Dalton, and Katherine Mosby Sandridge.WSJ 12-28-57 p.5
May Day celebration at Salem College, 1941.
May Day celebration at Salem College, 1941. The photo shows the crowning of May Queen Katherine King, and her court standing nearby
Sisters taking a bus trip together, 1963.
Sisters taking a bus trip together, 1963. The women are: Ola Stoltz, Martha Beck, Agnes Cromer, Treva Allen, Lula Darnell, Maggie Chambers, Elsie Caudle, Katherine Bovender, and Evelyn Fulp.WSJ 3-29-63 p.20
Dr. Katherine Anderson
Dr. Katherine Anderson came to Winston-Salem in 1943 when there were only three private practice pediatricians in the area. She joined the Bowman Gray School of Medicine on a part-time basis for 25 years and in 1968 was appointed to full-time Associate Professor of Pediatrics. During this time, Anderson directed the outpatient services for the Department of Pediatrics and also was supervisor of the newly-developed Physician’s Assistant Program until her retirement in 1976. Dr. Anderson died from cancer on October 20, 1978.Info from biography in exhibit cabinet in Archive
Katherine and George
Katherine Davis and George Jones are shown here in 1990 in the Coy C. Carpenter Library’s director’s office at Bowman Gray School of Medicine. Davis came to the school in November 1942 and was the assistant for many former deans and administration personnel at the medical school. Jones came to the school in 1947 as the chief engineer. Davis is still involved with the medical school in various activities in 2008 and Jones died in 2007.Info from: Around the Medical Center, March 1974, May 1976, and December 1982; 1961 Gray and White Matter yearbook, p. 7
Iona in the Viking Age: laying a ‘zombie narrative’ to rest
The traditional story of Iona’s early medieval monastery ends in tragedy and bloodshed, with the religious community wiped out by vicious Viking raiders. Increasingly, though, the archaeological and historical evidence does not support this persistent narrative, as Adrián Maldonado, Ewan Campbell, Thomas Owen Clancy, and Katherine Forsyth report
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