1,858 research outputs found

    Letter from Cyrus S. Avery to Patrick McAndrew, dated July 3, 1935

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    Letter from Cyrus S. Avery to Patrick McAndrew, dated July 3, 1935 thanking McAndrew for his congratulatory letterThe Cyrus S. Avery Collection chronicles the life and times of Cyrus Stevens Avery. Known as the 'Father of Route 66', Avery served in government positions and elected offices as well as in highway associations that led him to have an influential impact on the planning and development of the initial American highway system. Through Avery's involvement with the City of Tulsa, Oklahoma and his own agricultural interests, the collection also documents a growing city and its' rural life in the early twentieth century

    Letter from Patrick McAndrew to Cyrus Avery, dated June 30, 1935

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    Letter from Patrick McAndrew to Cyrus Avery, dated June 30, 1935 congratulating Avery on his appointment to the Works Progress AdministrationThe Cyrus S. Avery Collection chronicles the life and times of Cyrus Stevens Avery. Known as the 'Father of Route 66', Avery served in government positions and elected offices as well as in highway associations that led him to have an influential impact on the planning and development of the initial American highway system. Through Avery's involvement with the City of Tulsa, Oklahoma and his own agricultural interests, the collection also documents a growing city and its' rural life in the early twentieth century

    2022 IEEE Long Island Systems, Applications and Technology Conference (LISAT 2022)

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    Uma Balaji (with Patrick Evans, Ryan Avery, Maxwell Malcy, and Maverick Ruiz) is a contributing author, Multipurpose Solar Charging Station.https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/engineering-books/1079/thumbnail.jp

    Lines written on the death of Sarah M. Cornell.

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    1 sheet (1 unnumbered page) : illustrations ; 43 x 20 cm. On December 21, 1832, the body of Sarah M. Cornell was found hanging on a farm in Tiverton, Rhode Island. A Methodist minister, Ephraim K. Avery, was charged with her murder, leading to one of the most sensational trials of the 19th century. His acquital provoked popular outrage, as reflected in this broadside. http://morris.law.yale.edu/record=b120289

    Oral History Interview, Patrick Quinn (1933)

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    In this interview, Patrick Quinn discusses his active participation in the anti-Vietnam movement war on campus. To learn more about this oral history, download & review the index first (or transcript if available). It will help determine which audio file(s) to download & listen to.As part of the Class Reunion Project Avery Pilot interviewed Patrick Quinn, alumnus of UW Madison (class of 1964) about his active involvement in the on-campus anti war movement. Patrick discussed his activities in Madison, his position in the Madison Committee Against the War in Vietnam, leafleting for city-wide referendums on involvement in the war, notable marches and demonstrations on campus, and the impact of the Sterling Hall bombing as the anti war protests began to wind down. This story was collected in collaboration with UW-Madison’s oral history project

    Rev. Robert A. Wild, S.J., Avery Cardinal Dulles, S.J., and Dr. Patrick W. Carey, May 21, 2006

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    Marquette University President Rev. Robert A. Wild, S.J., Honorary Degree recipient Avery Cardinal Dulles, S.J., and Dr. Patrick W. Carey before the Marquette University Commencement Ceremony at the Bradley Center, May 21, 2006

    Why we need to radically join-up public services more than ever

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    UK public services are delivered in different and complex ways that create confusion for citizens and officials alike. Multiple delivery chains drive up costs, and in the current fiscal climate, they are a luxury good that we can no longer afford. Drawing on recent work for the 2020 Public Services Commission, Patrick Dunleavy and Avery Hancock untangle the mess and argue that more joined-up working, online ‘disintermediation’ of services and working with citizens are needed to carry the UK forward in the digital era

    Avery, Clarence G. - Accounting Professor

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    Accounting professor Dr. Clarence Avery, wearing a suit. He was co-author of Accounting Principles with donald F. Istvan. http://lccn.loc.gov/78050092https://stars.library.ucf.edu/univphotocollection/1231/thumbnail.jp

    Inversión. Análisis de temas de actualidad

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    Es una colección ecléctica de artículos del blog OECD Insights reúne las posturas personales de autores internos y externos a la Organización respecto de las tendencias y los retos que influyen en la inversión internacional actualmente. En el libro encontrará análisis y debates sobre el estado de la inversión en diferentes regiones del mundo, las dificultades para la inversión en sectores particulares, los marcos institucionales que rigen los flujos financieros internacionales y las opciones de política que permitirán que la inversión sostenga una vida mejor para todos. Autores: Ana Novik (chilena), Adrian Blundell-Wignall (australiano), Stephen Thomsen (británico), Pierre Poret (francés), Jennifer Schappert (americana), Roel Nieuwenkamp (holandés), Carly Avery (australiana), Patrick Love (británico), Michael Gestrin (canadiense), Sony Kapoor (británico), Angel Gurría Treviño (mexicano), Bernadette Ségol (francés), Richard Trumka (americano), Karel De Gucht (belga), Jan Wouters (belga), Adrian Blundell-Wignall (australiano), Geraldine Ang (frances), Maria Borga (italiana), Gabriela Ramos Patiño (mexicana

    Rebecca Avery letter, Memphis, 1846

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    Letter from Rebecca Avery and other members of her family at Memphis, Tennessee, to her daughter Amanda A. Avery, c/o Mrs. Holcolm, La Grange, Tennessee, written on November 13, 1846. The other family members include Amanda\u27s sister Cornelia Estelle, an unidentifiable author and cousin Bob. Rebecca Avery notes how tired she is with her six student lodgers and two day boarders. “I hope you will catch a smart beau, for I want you all married.” Estelle (Stella) complains of a cough and wonders if it is consumption. Says she is tired looking after the boarders also. The unidentifiable writer notes that “poverty is a most niggardly rascally tormenting pestiferous scamp of a thing – that sticks tighter and bites harder than a thousand musketoes in a Mississippi swamp could possibly do.” Amanda Avery (1828-1916) was the daughter of Nathan Avery (1792-1846), a physician born in Lebanon, New York, who practiced in Bolivar and Memphis, and Rebecca Jones Rivers (1793-1847), whom he married in Montgomery County, Tennessee, in 1818. Their children included: William Thomas (1819-1880), Elizabeth Edmunds (1824-1916, who married Minor Meriwether), and Cornelia Estelle (1830-1919). Amanda married Nathaniel Macon Trezevant (1829-1912), a lawyer, in 1848.https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/speccoll-mss-shelbycountytn2/1045/thumbnail.jp
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