1,270 research outputs found

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    A listing of members of the Erosophic Literary Society, a student organization at Arkansas College during the 1931 academic year and images of the Society's presidents, including Hugh Murphy, W.D. Murphy, John Person, and Noel Landreth

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    Image of the 1930 Arkansas College track team and a description of its season, including mention of Samuel Jasper Patterson, Eugene Poindexter, George Heard, W.D. Murphy, Herman Lyda, and Red Kennedy

    Report of change of status and address, W.D., A.G.O. form no. 641, Minoru Frank Saito

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    A copy of a "report of change of status and address, W.D., A.G.O. form" submitted to War Department by Minoru Frank Saito. He added his sister Joyce Teruko Saito as his dependent. Due to lack of her birth certificate, he was not able to include her as his dependent when he applied for it

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    Images of students at Arkansas College during the 1931 academic year, including Russell Bentley, Dorothy Mann, Thomas Hale, Ella Myrl Dobson, Norman Faust, Paul Gray, Wilma Stanley, Jack Evans, Virginia Rose Davidson, and W.D. Murphy

    Application for dependency benefits (servicemen's dependents allowance act of 1942), W.D., A.G.O. Form no. 625., Minoru Frank Saito

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    An applicant's copy of an "application for dependency benefits (servicemen's dependents allowance act of 1942), W.D., A.G.O. Form no. 625" form submitted to War Department by Minoru Frank Saito. His mother, Kiku Saito, who has been incarcerated in the Granada camp, is listed as his dependent

    America's other Muslims: Imam W.D. Mohammed, Islamic reform, and the making of American Islam Black diasporic worlds./ Muhammad Fraser-Rahim.

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    Includes bibliographical references (pages 111-125) and index.Fraser-Rahim spotlights the emergence of an American school of Islamic thought, which was created and established by the son of the former Nation of Islam leader. W.D. Mohammed rejected his father's teachings and embraced normative Islam on his own terms while balancing classical Islam and his lived experience of Islam in the diaspora.Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Preface -- Introduction -- 1. African American Islam in context -- 2. Taffakur ("to think, ponder, reflect"): Islam in West Africa and Islamic revivalism -- 3. Africanizing Dixie: the enslaved African Muslim experience and the Black American Islamic continuum -- 4. Imam W.D. Mohammed, the patron saint of American Islam: personality, intellectual teachings, and reformation -- 5. Walking with Brother Imam: the community of W.D. Mohammed as a counterweight to extremism -- Conclusion -- Glossary of terms -- Bibliography -- Index -- About the author.1 online resource (148 pages
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