19,791 research outputs found

    Interview with David Moore - OH 698

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    This interview was conducted by Dr. George Garrison with David Moore for the Emmett Scott High School project. Emmett Scott was the segregated high school for African Americans named for Emmett Scott a former aide to Booker T. Washington and President Woodrow Wilson. Emmett Scott High School was opened in 1920 and closed in 1950 with the integration of Rock Hill, South Carolina’s public school district. David Moore was a teacher at George Fish High School which was the segregated school for African Americans from 1925-1968 in Fort Mill, SC. Mr. Moore worked at George Fish beginning in 1959. Fort Mill is about ten miles from Rock Hill in York County, SC. Mr. Moore details his experience at George Fish and the differences between Emmett Scott and George Fish.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/oralhistoryprogram/1586/thumbnail.jp

    Letter to David Moore by the JACL

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    A letter sent to David Moore regarding an inquiry David Moore had about the requirements of becoming a JACL memberCollected by David Moore.Japanese American An All American 0 National 413-415 BEASON BLDG. itizens League American Citizens arters TELEPHONE 5-6501 SALT LAKE CITY 1, UTAH Mr. David c. Moore Rt. 5, Box 544 Phoenix, Arizbna Dear Mr. Moore September 9, 1944 Your letter to Mr. Joe Masaoka has been referred to our office, and we wish to thank you for your remittance of 2.50inpaymentforyourrenewaltothePacificCitizenInreferencetoyourqueryoftherequirementsofbecomingaJACLmember,weshallattempttoadviseyouofthethreedifferentdivisionswhichourorganizationembraces.TheassociatedandactivedivisionsareconsistedofJapaneseAmericans.WealsohavethesupportingmembershipdivisionwhichisconsistedofourCaucasianfriends.Threesubdivisionsareinthesupportingmembershipdivision;contributing(2.50 in payment for your renewal to the Pacific Citizen • In reference to your qu ery of the re quirements of becoming a JACL member, we shall attempt to advise you of the three different divi s i ons which our organization embr aces. The associated and active divisions are consisted of Japanese Americans. We also have the supporting membership division which is consisted of our Caucasian friends. Three subdivisions are in the supporting membership division; contri buting ( 5 .oo or more) , sustaining ( 10.00ormore),andpatron(10 .00 or more ), and patron ( 25.00 or more}. By becoming a supporting member, · you are automatically placed on the Pacific Citizen mailing list; however , in your case an extension will be made to your sub­scription inasmuch as you are already a subscriber. Also, we shall pla ce you on our bulletin mailing list. We re gret that presently we have no available copie s of our cons ti tut ion. Encl.osed please find a copy of the preamble. We ant icipate printing revised copies of the constitution as soon a s t he proposed c:hanges are s anctioned. Please remind us again, and we shall be happy to send you a copy. Mr. Ma saoka is busily occupied a ccompanying Pfc. 'l'homas Hi ga , a veteran of t he 100 t h Infantry Battalion, who is touring the differ ent commun ities speaki ng before our chapters t o relate to the people the true picture of t he battlefront and to spike all groundless rumors which are harmful. This project is being sponsored by the JACL, a nd Mr. Masaoka being our r eprese nt ati ve, undoubte dl y ha s very lit t le time to devote t o current matters, and as ks to be remembered to you. Yours very truly, ttt J APANESE AMERICAN CITIZENS LEAGUE For Better Americans in A Greater America JAPAt-J"ESE AMERICAN CITIZENS LEAGUE NATIONAL SPON SORS ARIZONA BISHOP w ALTER MTTCHELL.. ....................................... ........... Phoenix CALIFORNIA MRS. WALLACE B. ALEXANDER .................................................. Orinda BENJAMIN W. BLACK, M.D ..................................................... Oakland DR. MONROE DEUTSCH ............................................................. Berkeley Louis GOLDBLATT ............................................... ........... San Francisco KIRBY PAGE ............................................................................. La Habra RT. REV. EDWARD L. PARSONS ...................................... San Francisco REv. DR. IRVING F. RETCHERT ..................................... .San Francisco BISHOP CH ARLES S. REIFSNTDER ........................................... Pasadena BISHOP W. BERTRAND STEVENS ........................................ Los Angeles JOSEPH S. THOMPSON ..................................................... San Francisco Au GUST VOLLMER .................................................................. Berkeley ANNIE CLO WATSON ......................................................... San Francisco DR. RAY LYMAN WILBUR ...................................................... Palo Alto CONNECTICUT DR. WILLIAM ALLEN NEILSON ... ..................................... Falls Village COLORADO BISHOP W. E. HAMMAKER ........................................................ Denver }AMES G. PATTON ....................................................................... Denver FLORIDA DR. HAMILTON HoLT ................ ·······································Winter Park ILLINOIS DR. EDWIN R. EMRIIEE ............................................................... Chicago DR. CHARLES CLAYTON MonRISON .......................................... Chicago REV. DR. ALBERT W. PALMER ..... .......................................... Chicago WILLARD TOWNSEND ............................................................... Chicago KANSAS WILLIAM ALLEN WH ITE (1868•1944) .................................. Emporia MASSACHUSETTS DR. RALPH BARTON PERRY ................................................ Cambridge MICHIGAN AUGUST SCT·IOLLE MISSOURI ........... Detroit BISHOP EDWIN V. O'HARA ...................................... ......... Kansas City BISHOP WILLIAM ScARLET .......... ........................................... St. Louis NEBRASKA JAMES L. p AXTON ...................... ·················································omaha NEW YORK DR. CARL W. ACKERMAN ...................................................... New York WILLIAM AGAR .................................... .................................. New York ROGER N. BALDWIN ................................................................ New York EUGENE E. BARNETT ............................................................... New York HARRY LORIN BINSSE ............................................................ New York DR. HARRY WoO!lBURN CHASE ............................................ New York . REV. DR. DAVID DE So LA PooL ........................................... New York REV. DR. HARRY EMERSON FosDICK .................................... New York READ LEWIS ............................................................................ New York REV. DR. REINHOLD NIEBUHR .............................................. New York GEORGE SCHUYLER ................................................................. New York DR. JoHN W. THOMAS ........................................................ New York REV. DR. E. McNEILL PoTEAT ............................................. Rochester MR. AND MRS. HARPER SmLEY ............................................ Rochester NORMAN THOMAS ................................................................ New York BISHOP HENRY ST. GEORGE TucKER .................................... New York BISHOP }AMES E. WALSH .................................................... New York RICHARll J. WALSH ................................................................ New York NORTH CAROLINA DR. FRANK P. GRAHAM ...................................................... Chapel Hill How ARD W. ODUM ...................................................... Chapel Hill OHIO GEORGE T. TRUNDLE .............................................................. Cleveland DR. 0. M. WALTON ..... ........................... ............................... Cleveland OREGON E. B. MAcNAUGHTON ................. ............................................. Portland HON. CHARLES A. SPRAGUE ............................ ........................... Salem PENNSYLVANIA PEARL S. BucK ......................................................... ................. Perkasie DR. RUFUS M. }ONES ............................................................. Haverford DR. FELIX MoRLEY ................................................................ Haverford DR. JOHN W. NASON .......................................................... Swarthmore CLARENCE E. P rcKETT ...................................................... Philadelphia TENNESSEE JENNINGS PERRY .................. : ................................................. Nashville TEXAS DR. HOMER P. RAINEY ................................................................ Austin UTAH MRs. BuHTON W. MUSSER.................... ........................ Salt Lake City ARTHUR GAETH .......................................... ................... Salt Lake City VERMONT DOROTHY CANFIELD FISHER .................................................. Arlington VIRGINIA MRS. J . B. CALKINS .......................................... ..................... Arlington REV. DR. J. W. BILL MARSHALL .......................................... Richmond WASHINGTON BENJAMIN H. KIZER ................................................................. Spokane DR. J ESSE STEINER ....................................................................... Seattle WASHINGTON; D. C. DR. WILL w. ALEXANDER MONROE SWEETLAND RAYMOND GRAM SWING MR. AND MRS. CHARLES P. TAFT Site Name N/A Object ID 1987.1.2 Collection Moore, David Object Name Letter Title Letter to David Moore by the JACL Creator Japanese American Citizens League Date 9/9/1944 Description A letter sent to David Moore regarding an inquiry David Moore had about the requirements of becoming a JACL member Dimension Details 11 x 8.5 x .03 in Provenance Collected by David Moore. Number of Pages

    Enchanting David Bowie

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    A longstanding, successful and frequently controversial career spanning more than four decades establishes David Bowie as charged with contemporary cultural relevance. That David Bowie has influenced many lives is undeniable to his fans. He requisitions and challenges his audiences, through frequently indirect lyrics and images, to critically question sanity, identity and essentially what it means to be 'us' and why we are here. Enchanting David Bowie explores David Bowie as an anti-temporal figure and argues that we need to understand him across the many media platforms and art spaces he intersects with including theatre, film, television, the web, exhibition, installation, music, lyrics, video, and fashion. This exciting collection is organized according to the key themes of space, time, body, and memory - themes that literally and metaphorically address the key questions and intensities of his output

    Effects of high-intensity training on MCT1, MCT4, and NBC expressions in rat skeletal muscles: influence of chronic metabolic alkalosis

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    This study investigated the effects of high-intensity training, with or without induced metabolic alkalosis, on lactate transporter (MCT1 and MCT4) and sodium bicarbonate cotransporter (NBC) content in rat skeletal muscles. Male Wistar rats performed high-intensity training on a treadmill 5 times/wk for 5 wk, receiving either sodium bicarbonate (ALK-T) or a placebo (PLA-T) prior to each training session, and were compared with a group of control rats (CON). MCT1, MCT4, and NBC content was measured by Western blotting in soleus and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) skeletal muscles. Citrate synthase (CS) and phosphofructokinase (PFK) activities and muscle buffer capacity (betam) were also evaluated. Following training, CS and PFK activities were significantly higher in the soleus only (P < 0.05), whereas betam was significantly higher in both soleus and EDL (P < 0.05). MCT1 (PLA-T: 30\%; ALK-T: 23\%) and NBC contents (PLA-T: 85\%; ALK-T: 60\%) increased significantly only in the soleus following training (P < 0.01). MCT4 content in the soleus was significantly greater in ALK-T (115\%) but not PLA-T compared with CON. There was no significant change in protein content in the EDL. Finally, NBC content was related only to MCT1 content in soleus (r = 0.50, P < 0.01). In conclusion, these results suggest that MCT1, MCT4, and NBC undergo fiber-specific adaptive changes in response to high-intensity training and that induced alkalosis has a positive effect on training-induced changes in MCT4 content. The correlation between MCT1 and NBC expression suggests that lactate transport may be facilitated by NBC in oxidative skeletal muscle, which may in turn favor better muscle pH regulation

    E-book : Industrial Transformation In The Developing World (author: Michael T. Rock & David P. Angel)

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    Arsip Kuliah Online 2010: E-book : Industrial Transformation In The Developing World (author: Michael T. Rock & David P. Angel

    E-book : &#34;industrial Transformations In The Developing World (author: Michael T. Rock & David. P Angel)

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    Arsip Kuliah Online 2010: E-book : &#34;industrial Transformations In The Developing World (author: Michael T. Rock & David. P Angel

    Controlled Neutralization Of Anions In Cryogenic Matrices By Near-threshold Photodetachment

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    "Using matrix isolation FTIR, we have observed the formation of anionic copper carbonyl complexes [Cu(CO)n_{n}]^{-} (n=1-3) following co-deposition of Cu^{-} and counter-cations (Ar+^{+} or Kr+^{+}) into argon matrices doped with CO.\footnote{Ryan M. Ludwig and David T. Moore, J. Chem. Phys. 139, 244202 (2013).} The infrared bands have been previously assigned in argon matrix studies employing laser ablation, however they were quite weak compared to the bands for the corresponding neutral species.\footnote{Zhou, M.; Andrews, L., J. Chem. Phys. 111, 4548 (1999).} In the current study, when the deposition is carried out in fully darkened conditions at 10 K with high CO concentrations (1-2\%), only the bands for the anionic complexes are observed initially via FTIR. However, upon mild irradiation with broadband visible light, the anionic bands are rapidly depleted, with concomitant appearance of bands corresponding to neutral copper carbonyl complexes. This photo-triggered neutralization is attributed to photodetachment of electrons from the anions, which then ""flow"" through the solid argon matrix to recombine in the matrix with non-adjacent trapping sites. This mechanism is supported by the appearance of a new band near 1515 \wn, assigned to the (CO)2_{2}^{-} species in argon.\footnote{Thompson, W.E.; Jacox, M.E.; J. Chem. Phys. 91, 735 (1991).} The wavelength dependence of the photodetachment will be discussed in detail, although preliminary indications are that the thresholds for the copper carbonyls, which are normally in the infrared,\footnote{Stanzel, J. et al.; Collect. Czech. Chem. Comm. 72, 1 (2007).} are shifted into the visible region of the spectrum in argon matrices. This likely occurs because the conduction band of solid argon is known to lie about 1 eV above the vacuum level,\footnote{Harbich, W. et al.; Phys. Rev. B. 76, 104306 (2007).} and thus the electron must have at least this much energy in order to escape into the matrix and find a trapping site."Made available in DSpace on 2014-09-17T16:56:23Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 3 license.txt: 4922 bytes, checksum: 910b249b4beec47e7ab768910c8f966f (MD5) 631.pdf: 20397 bytes, checksum: 5612a56d5956945575ebe0a3c25c149f (MD5) abstract.txt: 2238 bytes, checksum: 88af88265dc813aff41dff5324f70535 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2014-06-18Made available in DSpace on 2015-04-14T18:38:30Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 4 license.txt: 4922 bytes, checksum: 910b249b4beec47e7ab768910c8f966f (MD5) WG07_Presentation.pptx: 677639 bytes, checksum: 51ccc01a419f021e98368902c2cfd141 (MD5) WG07_Abstract.pdf: 20397 bytes, checksum: 5612a56d5956945575ebe0a3c25c149f (MD5) WG07_Abstract.txt: 2238 bytes, checksum: 88af88265dc813aff41dff5324f70535 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2014-06-1

    Moore, David H. (Death, 1874-03-28)

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    Address: 33 Wesley Ave.Age at death: 2 hrsPg 79/1874/443/M W S/Ohio/J. Epply/Athens Ohio/Dr. T. ReamyOriginal record filed in drawer labeled &#039;MOLENY-MOORE, JR&#039;

    'Resting' and 'Fremantle Terzinas' Poems by author Hersri Setiawan (Translation into English by David T. Hill)

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    In late February 1993, Indonesian author Hersri Setiawan arrived for a brief visit to Australia to participate in the Perth Writers' Festival at the Fremantle Arts Centre. A former political prisoner held for nine years in detention without trial, he managed to leave Indonesia several years ago and now lives in the Netherlands as a political exile. These poems have been translated by David T. Hill

    Nisbett, David T.

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    Early Ardmore history written by former Daily Ardmoreite employee, Feb. 24, 1917. 2 page letter; 4 page story, carbon copies; gift-Mrs. Fred ChiIdress, West Point, Mississippi (daughter of the author
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