91,826 research outputs found
R. Andrew Clark in a Junior Recial
This is the program for the junior organist recital of R. Andrew Clark, held on March 18, 1994, in the Recital Hall of Mabee Fine Arts Center
Clark family at work
Three members of the Clark family at work at the DelBay Building on Big Oak Road, in Seabrook Farms. Field manager Albert F. Clark is seated at desk. Standing behind him is Ralph Clark who worked in the Sales Department. Standing at left is 13-year-old Albert R. Clark who worked as a messenger
Panel Nine: Building Nations, Breaking Societies
Moderator: Thomas Kühne (Clark University) Luca Fenoglio (University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom)Resisting the \u27Final Solution\u27? The \u27Royal Inspectorate of Racial Police\u27 in Nice and the Onset of a Fascist (anti-) Jewish Policy, March - July 1943 download paper (login required) Andrew Kornbluth (University of California-Berkeley)Crowdsourcing Genocide: Comparing Jewish and Polish Experiences of Collaboration, 1939-1944 download paper (login required) Natalya Lazar (Clark University)The Aftermath of the Holocaust: Jewish Survivors and Soviet Policies in Postwar Chernivtsi, 1944-1946paper has been removed per author Raz Segal (Tel Aviv University, Israel)Instances of Bystanding: Jews and non-Jews Respond to Each Other’s Plight in Hungary’s Borderlands during World War II download paper (login required
The Karl J. R. Arndt Collection
Karl J. R. Arndt (1903-1991) was a Professor of German at Clark University from 1950 to 1991. He served as Chief of the Religious Affairs Division of the U.S. Military Government for Germany in Stuttgart from 1945 to 1949. During this time he collected his War, Political, Historical and Exile Literature Library of some 490 books and pamphlets. The collection provides an insight into how the Germans saw their time politically and historically during the years preceding Hitler, during the Third Reich and during the occupation years
Letter to Sallie Clark
Travel updatesMale and Female Seminary,
A. & R. Clark, Proprietors,
Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas
May 16, 1874.
My dear Sallie:
I would be glad to come home today if it were not for the apt. at Acton. I hope to get a letter from you this evening.
All are well here, and able to disperse of full share of rations. There is a pretty little place here that can be bought very reasonably on time. The house is small, but may be enlarged. There is a good well in the yard, some beautiful shade trees, splendid garden of 2 or 3 acres. I would be glad for you to come out and look at it, and if you are pleased with it we will buy it.
Get what ever you want in the way of something to eat; send to the market and get beef when you want it. Tell Jesse Lee has another new hat and wears it to school.
He calls his mamma ma – took it up himself, so they say; sits at the table in a big chair by his papa and wont eat in any plate but a big one with big knife and fork.
Tell the sweet boy that I am coming home to let him ride.
Tell mother father will not come home until I do. He has about traded for a nice little place. I hope you are by this time quite well; you were not when I was at home.
Love to all.
Affectionately,
A. Clark
MS070: R. Lee Clark Standing with Another Man
R. Lee Clark and another man. Property of Mrs. Stiles. See more at R. Lee Clark, MD Papers and its finding aid.https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/clark_papers/1003/thumbnail.jp
MS070: Photograph of R. Lee Clark as Wrestler
R. Lee Clark posing as a wrestler. See more at R. Lee Clark, MD Papers and its finding aid.https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/clark_papers/1000/thumbnail.jp
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