36,607 research outputs found
Oral History Interview: James Kay Thomas
This interview contains detailed information concerning the workings of the West Virginia legislature and the governor\u27s office from approximately 1932 to 1942. James Kay Morgan, a prominent Charleston lawyer and former West Virginia legislator, discusses his years in the House of Delegates, his career in the Air Force, and his subsequent civic and professional work in the Charleston area. The interview also covers the implementation of several important legislative enactments in West Virginia history, such as the 1932 Tax Limitation Amendment and the Consumer\u27s Sales Tax.https://mds.marshall.edu/oral_history/1235/thumbnail.jp
Remembering Kay Boyle
by Red Shuttleworth A Bunchgrass Press Project © Copyright 2024 Red Shuttleworth “Have no communion with despair…” Kay Boyle Advice to the Old Songs and Shouts Kay Boyle (February 19, 1902 – December 27, 1992) was a distinguished, Nobel Prize-worthy American writer who published nearly fifty books (novels, collections of short fiction, poetry, and non-fiction). A ferociously independent woman and writer, Boyle was in Paris -as an equal- with James Joyce, Samuel Beckett, Ernest Hemingway, Wil..
ESLO1: enregistrements divers 686
Extrait du corpus d'Orléans, réalisé dans le cadre de l'Enquête SocioLinguistique à Orléans à la fin des années 1960.Porte à porte à la recherche des témoinsà la recherche de M.GMme refuse (longuement) interviewParticipants : Jack Kay ?, James Mallinson, Mme G ? Mme refuse (longuement) interview Enregistré par James Mallinson Jack Kay? Lieu : les rues d'Orléans Acoustique : moyenn
Kay frying noodles for Chow Mein Dinner
Kay Noda frying noodles for Chow Mein Dinner at Seabrook Farms
Patricia Kay Wolny and James Borden
Patricia Kay Wolny and James Borden announce their engagement and forthcoming marriage. James in the son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Borden of Bonanza
How Kay Boyle Became the Key to James Joyce’s Daughter and a First Novel
I first came across Kay Boyle when I was researching my first novel, The Joyce Girl. I knew very little about Boyle, but she turned out to be a vital source, one of the most trustworthy voices I encountered on my long journey to uncover the hidden story of James Joyce’s daughter, Lucia. Boyle’s account of 1920s Paris, co-written with Robert McAlmon, is one my favourite memoirs of that period. During my four years of research I read many, many memoirs and accounts of living in Paris during t..
James Spaniolo with Kay Bailey Hutchinson
Second MavsMeet Commencement/Convocation; UTA President James Spaniolo with Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_spaniolomaterials/1018/thumbnail.jp
Kay fries noodles as Joe adjusts lighting
Kay fries noodles as Joe adjusts lighting for a Chow Mein dinner at Seabrook Farms. Picture taken on May 3, 1951
G. A. Kay, and James D. Long
Series on Texas Livestock Sanitary Commission. Dr. G. A. Kay, state veterinarian, left, and James D. Long, administrative officer for the commission, are shown here in the headquarters office at Fort Worth.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/16381/thumbnail.jp
Kay Boyle author of herself
In her long, prolific, and tumultuous career, Kay Boyle (1902-92) published more than thirty volumes of fiction and poetry to awards and acclamations, always mining a rich vein of autobiography and innovation. Her reputation, however, has only recently begun to reemerge from the long shadow cast over it by her struggle against McCarthyism, returning to American letters some of the most vigorous writing of this centuryIn Joan Mellen's groundbreaking and provocative biography of Kay Boyle - the first ever - the full sweep of her remarkable life is revealed. As the golden girl of expatriate Paris, Kay Boyle included among her friends James Joyce, Hart Crane, Marcel Duchamp, Picabia, Brancusi, and Archibald MacLeishA literary figure in her own right, she became one of the most important contributors to the seminal magazine transition, virtually invented what came to be known as The New Yorker story, and was awarded two O. Henry Prizes for her short fiction. Kay Boyle took lovers, bore them children, and married three times. She struggled against fascism in Austria and on behalf of the Resistance in France, and in her seventh decade went to prison for her opposition to the Vietnam Wa
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