1,732,965 research outputs found
Ralston
Ralston label for Ralston Purina Companyhttps://digitalmaine.com/arc_trademarks/1133/thumbnail.jp
Memo from Judge Jackson H. Ralston to Ernest Besig, Director, American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, August 9, 1943
Memo from Jackson H. Ralston to Ernest Besig regarding a bill from Supreme Court clerk for the cost in the Gordon Hirabayashi case. Ralston writes "to save time am forwarding my check." Hirabayashi is misspelled "Hirabayaski." Memo from Besig to Ralston on verso: "My dear Judge Ralston, Please excuse the delay in returning the money you advanced in the Hirabayashi case. I did not abscond with the A.C.L.U. fortune and then change my mind; I was merely on a vacation. I'm sorry you weren't at the last meeting. We really could have used your wisdom, because the problem was a tough one. Lacking your help, we did the best we could and hope you'll approve. I'll look forward to seeing you at the next meeting."The ACLU-Northern California case file records contain legal documents and correspondence pertaining to the case Ex parte Mitsuye Endo (1944), in which the United States Supreme court unanimously ruled that the federal government could not indefinitely detain United States citizens who were loyal to the government. Files include documents related to the Gordon Hirabayashi Supreme Court case Hirabayashi v. United States
Swede Ralston oral history recording
An audio recording of an oral history of Swede Ralston. Recording contains a lot of background noise
Ralston General Store in Mendham, NJ
Built by John Ralston in 1785, this one-room building was the center of the Ralston Community. It served as a general store from 1785-1893, and was the local post office from 1893-1941. It was acquired by the Ralston Historical Association in 1945 and opened as a museum in 1964. Over the years, the museum collection has been expanded to include a variety of local artifacts including antiques, photographs, maps and manuscripts from the 18th and 19th centuryOriginal file name Recents - 1 of 1 (18).jp
Sam Ralston poetry manuscript (song)
3 page manuscript of verse entitled: “Written for the celebration of the 4th of July 1836 at Plymouth, Mississippi.” First stanza begins: “The hour has come, when Texians brave – Must choose bright glory, or the Grave;” Accompanying note explains “Ralston most likely went with Quitman to fight for Texas independence.”https://digitalcommons.wofford.edu/littlejohnmss/1009/thumbnail.jp
Book of Ralston life : being the third step of general membership in the Ralston Health Club.
Mode of access: Internet.VIVA Repository Copy 2014.
Ralston, James R. - An inaugural dissertation on inflammation
Handwritten inaugural dissertation on inflammation by James Reid Ralston, of Tennessee.Inaugural dissertation; no. 324
From the time Pennsylvania photographer Peter Ralston first visited longtime fri
From the time Pennsylvania photographer Peter Ralston first visited longtime friends Andrew and Betsy Wyeth on Southern Island in the late 1970s, he documented his travels along the coast and Maine\u27s islands with a hand-held Nikon. Ralston, also a founder of the Rockland-based Island Institute, has compiled many of his photographs in a new book, Sightings. In 1980, Betsy Wyeth bought Allen Island off Port Clyde, and Ralston, along with Philip Conklin, then a consulting field naturalist with Hurricane Island Outward Bound School, set about to reclaim the island and restore part of it to its former status as a saltwater farmstead and fishing base. Through that experience, Ralston\u27s interest in Maine deepened, and he began to photograph the place and its people in a new way
Bill Ralston and Robert House Interview, circa 1978
Bill Ralston and Robert House recount their time attending Baker Creek School in the Bitterroot Valley, Montana, during the mid-20th century. House notes that both his mother and father taught at the school while he attended. He also recalls the ambitious Christmas program his mother put on. Ralston recounts his experiences with his teachers and discusses how he admired House’s parents because they taught him about important literature in addition to practical life skills. Both House and Ralston describe the many games they played during their lunch hour, such as fox and hound, bows and arrows, and softball and beanbag tournaments. They talk about the practical joking that went on and also touch on the nature of the relationship between the Native American children and the other schoolchildren.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/bitterrootvalley_oralhistory/1012/thumbnail.jp
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