25,259 research outputs found
Christmas Card from Richard E. Larson to the Bryant College Service Club
[Transcription begins]
GREETINGS AT CHRISTMAS
[Inscription inside card]:…and very best wishesfor asuccessful New Year
[Handwritten]:Thanks again for your package. It helps a lot, especially at this time of year, to be remembered by your club.
Richard E. Larson
[Transcription ends
Postcard Written by Richard E. Larson to the Bryant College Service Club Dated June 14, 1943
[Transcription begins] A/S Richard E. Larson 315th C. T. D. Flight S Tempe, Arizona
June 14, 1943 [Postmark date]
Chairman Bryant Service Club Bryant College Providence, Rhode Island
Hello Folks,
So many things have happened and I have been to so many different places that some of my mail has taken quite some time to reach me. I did however receive the package you sent to me a few weeks ago. It was in fairly good shape considering the time it had been traveling. I want to thank you very much for remembering me. Expect to be here a few months at Arizona State Teachers College.
Sincerely, Dick Larson [Transcription ends
Postcard Written by Richard E. Larson to the Bryant College Service Club Dated September 30, 1943
[Transcription begins] FROM A/S Richard E. Larson Sqdn. 8 Flight C S.A.A.A.B. Santa Ana, California
September 30, 1943 [Postmark date]
Bryant Service Club Bryant College Providence, Rhode Island
U S O
BSC—
Received your latest letter a few days ago and it was with a great deal of excitement and eagerness that I read through the letter and list of addresses. I was very sorry to hear of the death of John Hull who was a close friend of mine while at college.
Recently I received a letter from Phil Dorr ’41 Class President. Certainly is good to hear from the fellows.
I appreciate very much the many kind favors you have done for me. I will try to maintain contact with you.
Right now my time is pretty well taken up and will be for quite sometime.
Thank you again.
Sincerely, R. E. Larson [Transcription ends
Richard Dorson (interview)
This interview is included in the American Folklore Society Oral History Project held at the Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. In this item, Richard M. Dorson is interviewed by Richard Reuss at the American Folklore Society annual meeting in Nashville, Tennessee for the American Folklore Society Oral History Project. Biography/History note: Richard M. Dorson, folklorist, author, and educator, was born in New York City in 1916 and died in 1981. He earned his B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. at Harvard University and taught at Harvard and Michigan State University before becoming professor of history and folklore at Indiana University where he founded its Folklore Institute in 1963 and became the first director and first chair of the Folklore Department at Indiana University in 1978. This collection consists of 1 sound tape reel (40 min.) : analog, 7 1/2 ips, 2 track, mono. ; 7 in. It was originally recorded on November 2, 1973 at the American Folklore Society annual meeting in Nashville, Tennessee by Richard Reuss on a Sony audiocassette. This is a first-generation copy
Postcard Written by Richard E. Larson to the Bryant College Service Club Dated April 21, 1945
[Transcription begins] S/Sgt. R. E. Larson 31189453 Sqdn. S Lowry Field, Colorado
April 21, 1945 [Postmark Date]
Bryant Service Club Bryant College Providence, Rhode Island
Hello People,
Your package and letter arrived a few weeks ago after being sidetracked along the route. The sweater came in very handy. Since the so called spring in Colorado has been more like winter than any thing else. Thanks a lot.
I expect to be here for about another month but the army has ways of changing things rather unexpectedly.
Thank you once again.
Sincerely, R. E. Larson [Transcription ends
Christmas Card from Richard E. Larson to the Bryant College Service Club Dated December 15, 1942
[Transcription begins] A MERRY CHRISTMAS!
[Inscription]: A HEARTY GREETING, A SONG OF CHEER FOR CHRISTMAS AND THE COMING YEAR!
[Handwritten on back]: Service Club - - -
Your package of candy was received in good condition. You can be assured that the contents didn’t last long once the boxes were opened. The boys here in the barracks and I did a quick job on the candy.
I do want to thank the Service Club very much for the gift.
Sincerely,
Dick Larson
December 15, 1942
Pvt. R. E. Larson 769th T. S. S. (Sp) Barracks E – 433 Buckley Field Colorado [Transcription ends
Richard the Third: The Dramatic Character versus the Historical Figure
Josephine Tey wrote a delightful detective novel entitled, The Daughter of Time, in which the subject of this mystery was Richard the Third, the last of the Plantagenets to occupy the English Throne. The conclusion to her detective-like analysis was that Richard the Third was the victim of ’’Tonypandy,” a term that she acquired from an incident that took place in Tonypandy, South Wales. The term, as she has coined it, is synonymous with myth or legend, but with the added connotation of a deliberate fabrication that has become a traditional belief. Miss Tey reached her conclusion through the' media of fiction. The author of this thesis reached the same conclusion, but rather by research or an analytical process that was based on fact and also on speculation.ProQuest Traditional Publishing Optio
Bioinformatics and drug discovery / edited by Richard S. Larson.
Includes bibliographical references and index.x, 444 pages
Postcard Written by Richard E. Larson to the Bryant College Service Club
[Transcription begins]
U. S. ARMY AIR FORCES
After following me all over the country your package finally reached me here at Salt Lake. The package had been thrown around quite a bit but the contents were safe. Thanks a lot everyone. It certainly helps us a lot to be remembered by you.
Right now I am trying to recuperate after nearly three months in the hospital. The news of all the boys was good to hear.
S/Sgt, R. E. Larson
[Transcription ends
Folder 9: Schwiderski, Richard Craig v. State of Texas 2, 1979-1984
Photocopy of a section of an article written by New York author Richard Reeves and titled 'Too Late to Kill the Messenger' and dated 1979, and argues for the role of media during violent situations
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