4,749 research outputs found
Mitchell Sparks ledger
This collection contains a ledger kept to record transactions of the mercantile business of Mitchell Sparks at Fort Smith, Arkansas, including purchases related to an 1854 cattle drive to California made under the direction of Mitchell's brother James. The second half of the book contains copies of correspondence by Hannah Sparks, the widow of Mitchell Sparks, regarding the disposition of his estate
Interview with Coach Billy Mitchell
Coach Billy Mitchell, Assistant Head Coach of Wake Forest University’s football team, interviewed by Hannah Berkowitz
Electronic Data : Toward sustainable syntheses of Ca-based MOFs
Electronic data relating to the publication titled 'Toward sustainable syntheses of Ca-based MOFs' by Tom. S. Crickmore, Haamidah Begum Sana, Hannah Mitchell, Molly Clark and Darren Bradshaw, published in Chemical Communications, DOI: 10.1039/D1CC04032D </span
Dr Hannah Graham on Australian leadership: Integrity, relational leadership and tenacious courage of conviction
Hannah Graham talks to Victor Perton about Australian Leadership. Criminologist, author and university lecturer Dr Hannah Graham was born in Tasmania and studied and worked at the University of Tasmania, before moving to Scotland to work in the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research at the University of Stirling. Hannah has worked on justice and health-related projects with the EU, the Scottish Government, the Australian Government and Tasmanian Government, and she does ongoing research and writing on innovation and justice. Connect to Hannah on Twitter: @DrHannahGraham and @Innovative_Jus
Recommended from our members
John A. Hannah, Maurice B. Mitchell, Dr. Hector P. Garcia stand with two men (photograph)
John A. Hannah, Maurice B. Mitchell, Dr. Hector P. Garcia stand with two men
Recommended from our members
John A. Hannah, Maurice B. Mitchell, and Dr. Hector P. Garcia stands with two men (photograph)
John A. Hannah, Maurice B. Mitchell, and Dr. Hector P. Garcia stands with two men
Hannah Elizabeth Massey in a Senior Voice Recital
This is the program for the senior voice recital of Hannah Elizabeth Massey, accompanied by pianist, Bill Borland. The recital was held on March 18, 1968, in Mitchell Hall
Pittard, Hannah : Fiction Reading; February 10, 2020
Contents:
All tracks Fiction reading [complete]
Track 01 Introduction
Track 02 Reading From "Reunion"
Track 03 Reading From An Untitled Work
Track 04 Q&A
Digital Projects SAN: folder location for wav and mp3 files: J:\Elliston Working\02-10-2020 (Hannah Pittard
Pioneer personal history, Hannah McFarland Bingham
Typescript of answers by Hannah McFarland Bingham for a questionnaire filled out for Utah Works Progress Administration\u27s "Pioneer personal history" survey. She was born in West Weber, Utah, in 1863, and grew up ther
Equality Versus the Right to Choose Associates: A Critique of Hannah Arendt\u27s View of the Supreme Court\u27s Dilemma
The Supreme Court has difficulty framing a rationale for preferring the right to equality over the right of freedom of association when these values clash in cases such as school desegregation. The controversial philosopher, Hannah Arendt, attempted to reconcile the tensions between these rights in an article concerning the famous school desegregation episode in Little Rock, Arkansas. The author here explores Arendt’s analysis of school desegregation in order to probe the Supreme Court’s justifications in right to association/equality cases. This article first discusses the Supreme Court’s view of association as a fundamental right and criticizes the Court’s assumptions and justifications for protecting that right. Next, the author probes Arendt’s analysis of the right of association and explains the parallels between Arendt’s and the Court’s reasoning in the right to association/equality cases presuming the ultimate goal to be diversity. Finally, the author describes Arendt’s theory of equality in an attempt to explain why Arendt prefers associational rights over the equality principle. The author concludes that if the ultimate constitutional commitment is to societal diversity, discrimination by groups must proceed from “political” speech and action and must be based on the distinguishing actions and speech of the outsider before they can be entitled to constitutional preference
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