1,722,053 research outputs found

    John Kaldor, Henry Giroux, et al_in conversation with Mark Smith

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    Documentation of conversations (audio files and transcripts) between Mark Smith and research participants, including John Kaldor, Henry Giroux, Peter Naumann, Ben Cook, Steven Ball

    Mark Smith

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    Mark Smith is pictured by Thorne Studio

    Mark Smith

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    Collection of studio portraits of entertainers, actors and actresses who performed on the American stage in the mid-1800s. Actor brother of Sol Smith, Jr. b. 1829, Louisiana d. 1874, France Handwritten on verso of image: Mark Smith Stamped on verso of image: C.D. Fredricks & Co., 587 Broadway, New York ... PH Coll 75.52

    Mark Smith

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    Collection of studio portraits of entertainers, actors and actresses who performed on the American stage in the mid-1800s. Actor brother of Sol Smith, Jr. b. 1829, Louisiana d. 1874, France Caption on mount: Sarony, 680 Broadway, N.Y. Handwritten on verso of image: Mark Smith, 1874 PH Coll 75.52

    Ann Adkins, Jo Shelby, and Mark Smith

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    Ann Adkins, Jo Shelby, and Mark Smith eating at the Johnson family reunion

    Mark Smith, 1989 ROTC Commissioning 1

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    Jacksonville State University held rotc commissioning ceremonies on April 28, 1989. Major General Ivan R. Smith, state adjutant general and JSU alumnus, was guest speaker for the event. Shown Mark Smith receives his commissions from Maj. Gen. Ivan R. Smith.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/rotc_photos/2286/thumbnail.jp

    Mark Smith, 1989 ROTC Commissioning 2

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    Jacksonville State University held rotc commissioning ceremonies on April 28, 1989. Major General Ivan R. Smith, state adjutant general and JSU alumnus, was guest speaker for the event. Shown is Mark Smith during his bar pinning ceremony.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/rotc_photos/2287/thumbnail.jp

    Mark Smith Interview, 25 February 2025

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    In this 2025 interview, Mark Smith, pastor at Sanctuary Baptist Church, talks about his early life in Hartford, Connecticut, his move to Cleveland, and his life in and outside of the church. He discusses his career path, his involvement in the Mt. Pleasant and Union-Miles neighborhoods, and his hopes for the future of Sanctuary Baptist Church

    Mark Smith, 7th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Called a resurrected Charles Dickens by The New York Times, and one of the most ambitious, original, and thought-provoking novelists writing today by The Chicago Daily News, Mark Smith is the author of seven novels. His stunning The Death of the Detective became a New York Times Bestseller and was nominated for the 1974 National Book Award. The Moon Lamp and The Delphinium Girl were both Book-of-the-Month Club selections. Doctor Blues, published in 1983, further enhanced Smith\u27s reputation; John Irving found it funny and boisterous and wise. The Boston Sunday Herald described Smith\u27s second book, The Middleman, as one man\u27s voice speaking clearly above the mass voice, a superb example of the novelist\u27s art. Smith\u27s newest work, Smoke Street, a surrealistic adventure set in South America, has just been published this fall. On Wednesday morning he and Robley Wilson, Jr., will talk about fiction writing and will answer questions from the audience. Smith will read his fiction that evening
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