4,845 research outputs found

    Thorpe, Raymond Gerald

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    Memorial Statement for Professor Raymond Gerald Thorpe who died in 2005. The memorial statements contained herein were prepared by the Office of the Dean of the University Faculty of Cornell University to honor its faculty for their service to the university

    Gerald F. Else, Aristotle's Poetics : the argument, 1957

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    Weil Raymond. Gerald F. Else, Aristotle's Poetics : the argument, 1957. In: Revue des Études Anciennes. Tome 61, 1959, n°1-2. pp. 174-175

    Gerald F. Else, Aristotle's Poetics : the argument, 1957

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    Weil Raymond. Gerald F. Else, Aristotle's Poetics : the argument, 1957. In: Revue des Études Anciennes. Tome 61, 1959, n°1-2. pp. 174-175

    Raymond Kipp, Gerald Rauenhorst, Rev. John P. Raynor, and William Jermain pose with a plaque, 1974

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    Raymond Kipp, Gerald Rauenhorst, Marquette University President Rev. John P. Raynor, S.J., and William Jermain pose with a plaque honoring Rauenhorst for the Distinguished Engineering Alumnus Award, 1974

    Gerald Gorman

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    Phorograph - Gerald Gorman in traditional Scottish clothing, (Edinburgh, Scotland). A note with the picture reads: "Hoot Mon", The Canadian Kid. Sincerely Yours, Gerald Gorma

    Gerald Nelson discusses article "Do roads cause deforestation?"

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    IFPRI Senior Researcher, Gerald Nelson, discusses the article, "Do roads cause deforestation." On July 25, 2011, Nelson and co-author, Daniel Hellerstein, were honored by the AAEA with the Publication of Enduring Quality Award for this innovative 1997 publication on techniques for turning satellite imagery into economic data

    Raymond Carr (1919–2015)

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    One of Britain’s greatest historians, the intellectual and literary heir to Richard Ford and Gerald Brenan, died on 19 April 2015. Sir Raymond Carr, born Albert Raymond Maillard Carr on 11 April 1919 in Bath, was the grandson of a blacksmith and the son of Reginald Carr, a village schoolmaster in Dorset, and of Ethel Graham, who worked in the village post office

    Portrait of President Gerald Ford.

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    Handwritten Inscription: \u27To Felton M. Johnston - best always, Gerald Ford\u27https://egrove.olemiss.edu/fmjohnston/1097/thumbnail.jp

    Raymond Carver's Sequential Vision in Cathedral

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    [[abstract]]Raymond Carver's Cathedral is not generally considered to be a short story sequence, yet its twelve stories' thematic preoccupation with communication-the success or failure of characters to produce meaningful dialogue and acts of collaboration-suggests an underlying sequential structure. The opening story "Feathers" introduces the volume's thematic core by establishing a potential for positive transformation through constructive communication. In some of the stories which follow (particularly "A Small, Good Thing," "Where I'm Calling From," and "Cathedral") this potential is realized: characters connect with each other, escape their isolation, and occasionally experience powerful moments of transcendence. In several of the volume's stories the picture is much bleaker with characters remaining alienated due to their inability, or unwillingness, to bridge the divides between them. "The Train," in its opaque, fragmentary narrative, presents this state of alienation in a starkly distilled way. Cathedral is, up until and including the final story which lends the volume its title, deeply ambiguous is its treatment of its core issue. Indeed, its design carefully builds ambiguity into the patterning of its stories, complicating our attempts to discover thematic unity, and ultimately producing a complex sequential vision. This sequential vision is herein examined in terms of critic J. Gerald Kennedy's characterization of the short story sequence as a genre as much dependent on discontinuity between stories as upon unifying characteristics
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