1,849,726 research outputs found

    Fremont, Ohio, Mayor Walter Oxley

    No full text
    Five photos of Fremont, Ohio, Mayor Walter Oxley during an interview with the News-Messenger. Oxley said he was surprised by the scope of his responsibilities as mayor

    Plenty of Pattern

    No full text
    News-Messenger photographer Bruce Crippen found pattern in a stack of pipes in Fremont, Ohio

    Plenty of Patterns

    No full text
    News-Messenger photographer Bruce Crippen captured patterns formed by this building's facade in Fremont, Ohi

    Bill Duell Wins State Award

    No full text
    Bill Duell, News-Messenger classified advertising manager, won first place for classified promotion for newspapers under 20,000 circulation at the Ohio Newspaper Classified Clinic in Columbus, Ohio

    Picture Better Than Reality

    No full text
    News-Messenger photographer Bruce Crippen turned a stagnant pond at the bottom of fairgrounds hill in Fremont, Ohio, into an attractive picture

    Juanita Henry

    No full text
    Five photos of Juanita Henry during "Close-up" interview with News-Messenger. Mrs. Henry was the founder and president of the Fremont Community School Mothers Association. Its goal is to improve Fremont, Ohio, schools

    Michael P. Hoffman Honored

    No full text
    Army Spec. 5 Michael P. Hoffman, a native of Fremont, Ohio, received the George Washington Honor Medal from the Freedom Foundation for a letter he wrote to the News-Messenger in Fremont, Ohio

    CORRESPONDENCE IN THE MESSENGER: IDENTIFYING THE AUTHOR BY TEXT IN THE CONTEXT OF THE TRANSFORMATION OF INDIVIDUALIZING FEATURES

    No full text
    The article discusses the texts of Internet-based communication and correspondence in a messenger, the attention is paid to description of similarities and differences between oral and written dialogical speech. The problems of neutralizing speech features in the format of Internet-based communication and the transformation of attributes, which provide individual characteristic of the author demonstrated whilst exchanging messages in a messenger. It has been proposed to define the form of speech, typical of correspondence in the messenger, as dialogical written (printed) speech, with reference to it as to the product of intellectual activity in combination with the form of its implementation, taking into account the factor of the author’s usage of technical means for typing. The author represents the approaches to identifying significant speech characteristics, which are demonstrated by the addresser in written correspondence in the messenger; these approaches are often analyzed in the process of authorship identification tests. The possibility of revealing a complex of author’s individualizing features is proved. This paper emphasizes the importance of studying the signs of the graphic and communicative levels of the analysis of dialogical texts, provides the examples of implementation of such signs. In this article the relevance of combining linguistic and quantitative methods of analysis in revealing the author’s individualizing identificational features is proved, the paper also outlines the prospects for further research in the field of studying the linguistic personality of the digital age

    Horizon Club Members Help People

    No full text
    Volunteers from the "Sounds of Silence" Horizon Club sort clothes for the Fremont, Ohio, "People Helping People" campaign. About 100 boxes of clothing will be distributed to needy people by Boy Scouts. The campaign is organized by the Fremont News-Messenger. Pictured are Lou Anne Young and Tina Freeh, seniors at Fremont St. Joseph High School

    Locating the ‘radical’ in 'Shoot the Messenger'

    No full text
    This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final published article is available from the link below, copyright 2013 @ Edinburgh University Press.The 2006 BBC drama Shoot the Messenger is based on the psychological journey of a Black schoolteacher, Joe Pascale, accused of assaulting a Black male pupil. The allegation triggers Joe's mental breakdown which is articulated, through Joe's first-person narration, as a vindictive loathing of Black people. In turn, a range of common stereotypical characterisations and discourses based on a Black culture of hypocrisy, blame and entitlement is presented. The text is therefore laid wide open to a critique of its neo-conservatism and hegemonic narratives of Black Britishness. However, the drama's presentation of Black mental illness suggests that Shoot the Messenger may also be interpreted as a critique of social inequality and the destabilising effects of living with ethnicised social categories. Through an analysis of issues of representation, the article reclaims this controversial text as a radical drama and examines its implications for and within a critical cultural politics of ‘race’ and representation
    corecore