63,214 research outputs found
Michael Kelly
Michael Kelly entered Japan Airlines as an aviation English instructor for the Flight Crew Training Department in June, 1987. In 2006, he was assigned as a committee member to assist in developing the testing and evaluation system for the ICAO English Language Proficiency Test in Japan. Since September, 2010, Mr. Kelly has been teaching in the Flight Operations program at Oberlin University in Tokyo, Japan. He is a licensed FAA / JCAB private pilot and is designated by the Radio Institute of Japan to teach the Radio Aeronautical Operator course for foreign pilots.https://commons.erau.edu/icaea-workshop-images/1057/thumbnail.jp
Letter from Archbishop Michael Kelly to Hagan
Holograph letter from Archbishop Michael (Kelly), St. Mary's Cathedral, Sydney (Australia), to Hagan. Introducing Mr. Michael Meagher, Bathurst, visiting Rome; recommending his piety and efforts for Catholicity in Australia
Emmanuel Mounier and the awakening of Black Africa
Emmanuel Mounier, Director of the Catholic review Esprit, was a pioneering participant in criticising French colonial activities. The debates of the 1940s were strongly framed by France’s ‘mission to civilise’ its colonies, which was supported by universal humanist aspirations but was also criticised as masking policies of exploitation and oppression. The resulting tensions are well demonstrated by Emmanuel Mounier’s book L’Éveil de l’Afrique noire, published after a visit to several areas of French West Africa in the spring of 1947, at a crucial moment in France’s relations with its colonies. This article focuses on the components published in Esprit, Combat, and Présence africaine, which outlined the positive roles that France could play in the region, but warned against the dangers if opportunities were missed, and recognised the particular difficulties confronting the rising African elites. A closer examination of the discursive strategies he deployed shows that Mounier’s frame of reference remained within the paternalist paradigm of republican humanism, and that he saw France’s role as a duty to guide the development of Africa. However, in the myths and metaphors he adopted a more radical vision can be identified, which expressed an underlying anti-colonialism
Letter from Archbishop Michael Kelly to Hagan
Holograph letter from Archbishop Michael (Kelly), St. Mary's Cathedral, Sydney (Australia), to (Hagan), introducing Mrs. Johanna Scott
Letter from Archbishop Michael Kelly to Hagan
Holograph letter from Archbishop Michael (Kelly), St. Mary's Cathedral, Sydney (Australia), to Hagan, introducing [Mr.] and Mrs. Armstrong
Letter from Archbishop Michael Kelly to Hagan
Holograph letter from Archbishop Michael (Kelly), St. Mary's Cathedral, Sydney (Australia) to Hagan, introducing Mr. John [Davis] and son Albert
Letter from Archbishop Michael Kelly to Hagan
Holograph letter from Archbishop Michael [Kelly], St. Mary's Cathedral, Sydney (Australia), to Hagan, asking for accommodation during his visit ad limina in March and April 1920
Letter from Archbishop Michael Kelly to Hagan
Holograph letter from Archbishop Michael (Kelly), St. Mary's Cathedral, Sydney (Australia), to Hagan, asking to arrange a papal audience for Mr. Lawrence Cotter, Sydney; recommending him
Letter from Archbishop Michael Kelly to Hagan
Holograph letter from Archbishop Michael (Kelly), St. Mary's Cathedral, Sydney (Australia), to Hagan, introducing the bearer as Fr. Patrick Crowley who is their diocesan school inspector
Letter from Archbishop Michael Kelly to Hagan
Holograph letter from Archbishop Michael [Kelly] of Sydney, St. Mary's Cathedral, Sydney (Australia), to Hagan, with season's greetings to the College, wishing him good health. Asking about his Sydney student and requesting he choose another one of good promise
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