38,212 research outputs found
Lancaster Theological Seminary 1980 Commencement
8 digital copies of black and white photos of faculty and graduating class of 1980. TIFF digital image.1 PDF listing members of the graduating class of 1980.Individual listed on the back of photograph _1:
Reuben ShearesIndividuals listed on the back of photograph _2:
Sally Cunningham, George Bricker, Ben Griffin, Dean Hartley, Fran RingerIndividual listed on the back of photograph _3:
Dr. James GlasseIndividuals listed on the back of photograph _5:
Dr. Sheares, Dean HartleyIndividuals listed on the back of photograph _6:
Alan Kroehler, Dr. ShearesIndividual listed on the back of photograph _8:
Reuben A. Shearers, IIIndividual listed on the back of photograph _9:
Dr. James Glass
1976-1977 Faculty
A digitized copy of a poster showing the Lancaster Theological College Faculty for the 1976-1977 Academic year.
1 tiff.Top Left to right: George Bricker, Robert Duke, Don Englert, James Glasse, Lloyde Hartley, Paul Irion, Allen Kroehler.
Bottom: John Payne, Francis Ringer, missing, missing, Robert Webber, D. Douglas Whitin
Photographs from the 1972 Commencement of Lancaster Theological Seminary.
Digitized copies of 4 black and white photographs from the 1972 Commencement exercises. 4 TIFF.A list of 1972 graduates. 1 PDFInformation from the back of photographs:
Recipient of S.T.M. degree James D. Corbett 1972
Rev. Robert Aregood, Sec. and the Rev. Dorothy M. Book, pres of Alumni Counci
Rev. James Patrick (Pat) Carlisle
Digitized copy of black and white photograph of the Rev. James P. Carlisle dated 1989. TIFF image file
Lancaster - James M. Lancaster
1861Notes in Pencil "James M. Lancaster, Ky."7 1/4 x 5 1/4 albumen prin
Photographs of the 1979 Commencement at Lancaster Theological Seminary and a list of the graduates.
Digitized copies of three black and white photographsList of students who graduated in 1979Back of image 1: Lyman Farrar, James Glass
Photographs of the 1974 Commencement at Lancaster Theological Seminary and a list of the graduates.
Six digitized copies of black and white photographs. 6 items. TIFFIndividuals listed on the back of photograph _1:
James Glasse, Allen Krolher, Robert Webber, Robert DukeIndividual listed on the back of photograph _5:
Richard VeithIndividuals listed on the back of photograph _6:
Mr. & Mrs. Moses, Dr. Glass
Untitled Sermon on Matthew 28:1-10
Sermon based on Matthew 28:1-10 by Lancaster Theological Seminary master's student James Catron, delivered in Santee Chapel on April 15, 2023. Digital video recording (mp4). Duration: 19 minutes, 26 seconds
Redden-Lancaster Families World War II Letters, MSS.4163
Abstract: Letters from Lloyd D. (Don) and Sergeant Glen C. Redden, and Robert Lancaster to the Redden's sister and brother-in-law and Lancaster's brother and sister-in-law, Barbara and James Lancaster. The letters illustrate the similar and differing experiences the men had during the war and depict a soldier's life from basic training to deployment.Scope and Content Note: The collection contains letters from Private Lloyd D. (Don) and Sergeant Glen C. Redden, and Robert Lancaster to the Redden's sister and brother-in-law and Lancaster's brother and sister-in-law, Barbara and James Lancaster in Peekskill, New York. The letters illustrate the similar and differing experiences the men had during the war and depict a soldier's life from basic training to deployment.Glen Redden began writing his sister Barbara Lancaster while he was serving in the Army Air Corps. Originally stationed at the Jefferson Barracks in Missouri, he qualified as a weather observer and was sent to Maxwell Field in Montgomery, Alabama, to attend "Air Education and Training Command" classes. By 1943, he was stationed in Cambridge, England, with the Eighteenth Weather Squadron of the Air Corps.The bulk of the letters, some 279, are from Lloyd D. Redden to his sister Barbara. Redden, who went by his middle name Don, enlisted in 1943, and was stationed at Jefferson Barracks for his basic training. He then attended classes with the Air Force in Minneapolis, Minnesota, for officer placement. However, Redden flunked the course and was sent to Lincoln, Nebraska. In early 1944, he attended the Army Air Forces Technical School at Chanute Air Force Base in Illinois. He was sent to Oahu, Hawaii, in 1944 and then spent most of 1945 in the Pacific Theater before being sent to Fort Dix, New Jersey, to receive his discharge.The smallest group of letters are from Lieutenant Robert C. Lancaster to his brother and sister-in-law, James and Barbara R. Lancaster. Lancaster joined the army in 1942 and received his basic training at Fort Belvoir, Virginia. He eventually entered officer training classes, becoming a 2nd Lieutenant by the end of the year. He was eventually sent to the Pacific with the Army Corps of Engineers.Biographical/Historical Note: Barbara Redden, third child and youngest daughter of George James and Nellie Lent Redden, was born on February 9, 1920, in Peekskill, New York. She married James Richard Lancaster; the couple had one son, James Richard, Jr. Glen C. Redden, oldest child and son of George James and Nellie Lent Redden, was born on July 9, 1914, in New York. He served in the Army Air Corps as a weather observer from January 1942 until 1945. After the war he married Jean Battjer. He died in Trenton, New Jersey, on November 18, 1865.Lloyd Donald Redden, youngest child of George James and Nellie Lent Redden, was born on February 11, 1923, in Peekskill, New York. He served in the Air Force from 1943 until 1946, rising to the rank of Sergeant. He died on May 18, 1963, in Peekskill; there is no current evidence that he ever married.Robert Carl Lancaster, youngest child of Chauncy Mitchell and Sadie May Post Lancaster, was born on August 6, 1919, in Westchester County, New York. By the outbreak of World War II the family lived in Peekskill, New York. He served in the Army in the Pacific theater from 1942 to 1945 rising to the rank of 2nd Lieutenant. He died in Tucson, Arizona, on April 14, 1991; there is no current evidence that he ever married
An amalgamation of the Banach spaces associated with James and Schreier, Part I : Banach-space structure.
We create a new family of Banach spaces, the James-Schreier spaces, by amalgamating two important classical Banach spaces: James' quasi-reflexive Banach space on the one hand and Schreier's Banach space giving a counterexample to the Banach-Saks property on the other. We then investigate the properties of these James-Schreier spaces, paying particular attention to how key properties of their `ancestors' (that is, the James space and the Schreier space) are expressed in them. Our main results include that each James-Schreier space is c_0-saturated and that no James-Schreier space embeds in a Banach space with an unconditional basis
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