21,847 research outputs found
George M! program
Director, Jane Gray [Smith] Stewart. Music and lyrics by George M. Cohan; lyrics and music revisions by Mary Cohan. Based on the book by Michael Stewart, John Pascal, and Fran Pascal. George M! tells the life story of George M. Cohan from his childhood i
George M! program cover
Director, Jane Gray [Smith] Stewart. Music and lyrics by George M. Cohan; lyrics and music revisions by Mary Cohan. Based on the book by Michael Stewart, John Pascal, and Fran Pascal. George M! tells the life story of George M. Cohan from his childhood i
George M! (1976)
Director, Jane Gray [Smith] Stewart. Music and lyrics by George M. Cohan; lyrics and music revisions by Mary Cohan. Based on the book by Michael Stewart, John Pascal, and Fran Pascal. George M! tells the life story of George M. Cohan from his childhood in vaudeville through his towering success on Broadway
Annual John M. Perkins Lecture
John Perkins returns to the SPU campus for the seventh annual John M. Perkins Lecture. One of the leading evangelical voices to come out of the American civil rights movement, Perkins is an internationally known author, speaker, and teacher. He has received honorary doctorates from several U.S. universities, including Seattle Pacific University
Samuel Beckett and the Writers of Port-Royal
It has been observed that ‘the literary influences on Beckett have been far more important than has been acknowledged, and more important indeed, than the philosophical influences’ (Smith 2002: 3). The truth of this statement is evidenced by the description that scholars have given of Samuel Beckett’s relationship to seventeenth century French classicism. To date, critical interest has been limited for the most part to the figure of the philosopher René Descartes on the (fragile) grounds that Beckett was exclusively concerned with the Cartesian imperative of clarity and order, the fundamental dualism between body and mind, and Nominalism.
Together with the assumption that Beckett’s vision was essentially Cartesian, his literary filiation with Pascal was suggested by critics, but only in terms of Beckett’s formal approach to the theatre. In his short article on En attendant Godot in 1953, the playwright Jean Anouilh was among the first reviewers to suggest that Beckett’s drama synthesizes the encounter between ‘classicism’ and a ‘modern’ form of art. It is well known that Beckett retained a lifelong admiration for Pascal – indeed, Pascal was one of his ‘old chestnuts’ (Knowlson 1997: 653). Little attention has been paid, however, to the originality of Pascal’s thought, the specific nature of his prose, and the impact these might have had upon Beckett’s mature work, especially the trilogy and the subsequent short prose. Yet, in the literary and philosophical context of post-war France, Beckett’s filiation with Pascal, their corresponding preoccupations, were evident to his contemporaries, who identified Pascal as an underlying presence in his works
Letter from Rev. John M. Yamazaki, March 27, 1945
Correspondence from Reverend John M. Yamazaki to "friends" regarding "resettlement" to the west coast.The Japanese American Archival Collection documents the people, places, and daily life of Japanese Americans, primarily those who lived in the once thriving community of pre-war Florin in the Sacramento region, as well as the conditions in American incarceration camps during World War II. The approximately 7,000 original items include personal and official letters, photographs, diaries, arts and crafts, newsletters, textiles, camps artifacts, yearbooks and other publications
NPS-PASCAL: a Pascal implementation for microprocessor-based computer systems.
NPS-PASCAL is a Naval Postgraduate School research project
whose goal is the implementation of the PASCAL programming
language on a microprocessor-based system. The NPS-PASCAL
compiler consists of two software subsystems, the first analyzes
the source program and produces a machine-independent intermediate
form, while the second produces target machine code.
The system is designed to satisfy the constraints of Standard Pascal, as defined by the British Standards Institute/ International
Standards Organization Working Draft of Standard
Pascal. The analysis subsystem, defined herein, accomplishes the
lexical, syntactic, and semantic analysis of a PASCAL program.
It has been implemented on an Intel 8080 microcomputer,
running under the CP/M operating system.Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited.Lieutenant, United States Navyhttp://archive.org/details/npspascalpascali109451881
John M. Perkins Center Twelfth Annual Lecture
Each year our university has the privilege of hearing Dr. John Perkins speak in chapel as part of the John Perkins Lecture series. Dr. Perkins helped launch the John Perkins Center at SPU, is distinguished visiting professor at SPU, and is the co-founder of the Christian Community Development Association. He is the recipient of numerous honorary doctorates and awards, and the author of several books including his most recent work, Dream With Me
John M. Perkins Center Ninth Annual Lecture
John Perkins, one of the leading evangelical voices to come out of the American civil rights movement, returns to SPU for his annual lecture. An internationally known author, speaker, and teacher, he is the co-founder of SPU\u27s John Perkins Center
There and Back piece recounting author John McDonald\u27s first trip to Lewiston-
There and Back piece recounting author John McDonald\u27s first trip to Lewiston-Auburn. Driving a 1953 two-tone Chevy Powerglide, McDonald and his cousin visited the twin cities to hear John F. Kennedy speak as part of his 1960 presidential campaign against Richard M. Nixon
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