11,867 research outputs found
Samuel and Kate (Barney) Hatcher, Winter House Brook
Samuel (1873-1958) and wife Kate Hatcher standing in grass in Winter House Brook
Kate 2006 Winter
Each year, kate seeks to: explore ideas about normative gender, sex, and sexuality work against oppression and hierarchies of power in any and all forms serve as a voice for race and gender equity as well as queer positivity encourage the silent to speak and feel less afraid build a zine and community that we care about and trusthttps://digitalcommons.otterbein.edu/kate/1005/thumbnail.jp
Fugue -Fall/Winter 1995 (No. 12)
SONG OF THE MAGPIE
Karl Stengal
SINKING SANDY
Michael A Arnzen
WHO SAID HEROES DON'T COME
FROM IDAHO or HOW TO FIND LOVE
AFTER THIRTY
Ryan Patrick Witt
beginning
Eve Willadsen
EATING HER WEDDING DRESS
Eileen Malone
WATERMELON SEEDS
Trevor Toland
LOST THOUGHT
Travis L. Sparkman
fine
R. E. Alatee
INTERVIEW WITH SAMUEL R.
DELANY
Matt Baldwin
GRAFFITI
Editorial Comments, Etc.
GUIDELINES
For Submissions
CONTRIBUTORS NOTES
Inside Back Cover Executive Editor
Eric P. Isaacson
Associate Editors
Trevor Dodge
Scott Erickson
Kate Forster
Karney Hatch
Aimee Jost
Audra Manion
Jennifer McFarland
Mark Meyer
Michele Neurauter
Lisa Peite
Faculty Advisor/Copy Editor
Lance Olsen
Editorial Consultant
J.C. Hendee
Cover Art
Greg Stout
FUGUE #12
Fall/Winter 1995
(ISSN 1054-6014)
Ul English Dept.
Brink Hall, Room 200
Moscow, Idaho 83844-1102
1995 in the names of the
individual creators. Subsidiary
rights revert upon publication.
Published bi-annually in Fall
and Spring at the University of
Idaho. Single copy (3.00/ issue, p&h included. All
payments in US funds only.
Unsolicited submiss ions
encouraged . Opinions
expressed herein are not
necessarily those of FUGUE,
its staff, the University of Idaho
or its staff. Ad rates available
Pickard, Kate E.R., letter, Camillus, [N.Y.], April 24, 1854, to "Uncle Peter" [Peter Still]
Kate Pickard acknowledges the receipt of Peter Still’s letter; consoles Still regarding news that he has received relating to the price for freeing his enslaved family; relays family news (e.g., of her sister Julia's marriage to Mr. LeGrand Marvin, a lawyer of Buffalo, N.Y.); regrets that his summer fundraising visit to her area the previous year was not as successful as it might have been, had it occurred in the winter; and counsels Still to trust in the Lord
The poems of William Winter.
"This edition ... on hand-made Japan vellum, and containing as original print of a portrait of the author made especially for this edition, is limited to one hundred and fifty copies.... For George A. Armour, Allison House. [Signed] William Winter."Mode of access: Internet
The York and Edmonton street in winter
A group of smiling people dressed in winter urban clothing on the street outside the York in Edmonton, Alberta15.1.3 Family Life in Alberta, 1.0 Imanta, 9.1.5 Street scene
Stutherey Mercurius Das ist: Gründliche und kurtz durchgehende Beschreibung/ wie eine Stutherey anzurichten/ dieselbe in gutem Esse zu erhalten/ und wie man sich deroselben mit gutem Nutzen gebrauchen könne : dergleichen vor niehmaln in Druck geben / Durch Georg Simon Winter
Jere Nash Interview with William Winter (Part 1 of 2)
Interview conducted by author Jere Nash with former Mississippi Governor William Winter in the process of writing Mississippi Politics: The Struggle for Power, 1976-2006. Topics covered include the high number of law school students elected to the Mississippi Legislature in 1947; Soggy Sweat\u27s whisky speech; election commissioners; early Republican Party in Mississippi;Winter\u27s race for governor in 1979; Gil Carmichael; Winter on education and state government reorganization; Mississippi Democratic Party chair fight in 1980; Les McLemore; Jimmy Carter\u27s 1980 campaign; Winter\u27s administration; state revenue and deficit; Voter ID bill;and the 2004 presidential race
The privatization of schooling and the impact on children, families and English language learners
1 online resource (PDF: 11 pages)Reynolds, Kate Mastruserio. (2014). The privatization of schooling and the impact on children, families and English language learners. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/176690
George W. Ham letter to Kate Ballard, March 16, 1862
Mr. Ham writes of terrible winter storm while waiting for rail transportation. He also tells of miserable conditions in the train followed by describing marching from Bowling Green, Kentucky into Tennessee.Transcripts provided by previous owner. Catharine (Kate) Ballard became Catharine (Kate) Garman when she married George Garman in October, 1864
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