9,302 research outputs found
[Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author #1]
Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author. The report contains a list of officers who gave depositions to the United States Attorney
[Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author #2]
Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author. The report contains a list of officers who gave depositions to the United States Attorney
[Report to Chief J. E. Curry by E. R. Baggett #1]
Carbon copy of a report to J. E. Curry, Chief of Police, by Patrolman E. R. Baggett. The patrolman witnessed the arrest of the shooting suspect
[Report to Chief J. E. Curry by E. R. Baggett #2]
Carbon copy of a report to J. E. Curry, Chief of Police, by Patrolman E. R. Baggett. The patrolman witnessed the arrest of the shooting suspect
[Report to Chief J. E. Curry by R. C. Wagner, regarding officer's assignments #1]
Report to Chief J. E. Curry by R. C. Wagner regarding officer's assignments and the murder of Lee Harvey Oswald. Wagner describes his duties, actions, and observations during the transfer of Oswald from City Hall to the County Jail
Curry
Marketplace icons are often markers of transnational transactions engendered by commercialization and dominance of the West. Curry as a marketplace icon helps to identify these constituents of iconicity. This article briefly examines the historical roots of curry or spicy Indian food and its implication in the project of colonialism. Curry as a signifier of Indian food was invented in British colonial narratives and shaped by commercial interests and racial prejudices. Because of the way forces of colonization and commercialization create international circulation of goods and ideas through globalization, curry as a marketplace icon signifies hegemony and global hierarchies that shape ideas of consumption and markets
[Report to J. E. Curry by W. R. Westbrook, December 1, 1963 #1]
Signed carbon copy of a report addressed to Chief J. E. Curry of the Dallas Police Department. The report, which was submitted by Captain of Police W. R. Westbrook, presents a list of personnel on duty in or near the basement at the time that Lee Harvey Oswald was shot
[Report to J. E. Curry by W. R. Westbrook, December 1, 1963 #2]
Signed carbon copy of a report addressed to Chief J. E. Curry of the Dallas Police Department. The report, which was submitted by Captain of Police W. R. Westbrook, presents a list of personnel on duty in or near the basement at the time that Lee Harvey Oswald was shot
Whitney R Curry
Former Bradenton mayor Whitney R. Curry. He drove his father's new car off the boat and onto the dock in 1903, making it the first car in Bradenton. He was a hometown sports hero in baseball and auto racing, around 1911, when he and his brother Edison Curry won "on the sands at Daytona". He was mayor from 1926-1927. In 1925 he subdivided his father's estate on Curry's Point, creating Point Pleasant as it was during most of the later 20th Century
[Report from R. L. Lowery to Chief J. E. Curry, November 24, 1963 #2]
Handwritten report from R. L. Lowery to Chief J. E. Curry, regarding officer's assignments, the shooting of Lee Harvey Oswald, and familiarity with Jack Ruby
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