1,264 research outputs found

    Letter from Upton Sinclair to Melville L. Kress - December 22, 1938

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    A letter from Upton Sinclair to Melville Kress, dated December 22, 1938, in which Sinclair reflects on relationships and interactions he had as a young author

    Letter from Upton Sinclair to Melville L. Kress - June 29, 1933

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    A brief letter from Upton Sinclair to Melville Kress, dated June 29, 1933, in which Sinclair mentions the author [Thomas] Hardy, calling his books 'pretentious and boring.

    Letter from Upton Sinclair to Melville L. Kress - August 5, 1940

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    A letter from Upton Sinclair to Melville Kress, dated August 5, 1940, in which Sinclair thanks him for his notes on the manuscript, but will not be using some of his suggestions. Sinclair also states that he has been busy writing and getting material from his friend, Martin Birnbaum. Martin Birnbaum, a longtime friend and classmate of Sinclair, was an international art dealer, critic and author, and was the inspiration for the character Lanny Budd, the hero of the World's End series

    Sinclair – Gipson 1931-1932 Correspondence

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    {"value":"1931 January 12 from P.J. Sinclair (Moshi) to Lawrence H. Gipson (Lehigh Univ.) (Typed letter indicating that Sinclair has received letters from Gipson and Professor Tomlinson who took a trip with Sinclair on the Serengetti Plains. Sinclair says he will send a manuscript to Gipson regarding Beamish which may be of interest to Gipson regarding matters of the British empire.) Scanned 1931 May 29 from P.J. Sinclair (Moshi) to Gipson (Lehigh Univ.) (three page typed letter relates Sinclair\u27s point of view regarding the troubles in East Africa and acknowledge Gipson\u27s interest in the crisis. Sinclair describes life in Tanganyika hunting on the veldt, and planting pineapples in the Hawaiian manner through paper.) Scanned 1931 October 27 from P.J. Sinclair (Moshi) to Gipson (typed letter acknowledges letter of September 15 remarking on the situation in England exceeding expectations referring to Beamish\u27s forecasting a crash. East Africa\u27s affairs are in the background but the efforts made seem to have good effect. Sinclair reports that Adm. Beamish is retiring and hope is that H.H. Beamish be nominated to replace him. Sinclair refers to "the old Manuscript" and its author – most of what Sinclair knows about it is from his grandmother.) Scanned 1932 April 11 from P.J. Sinclair (Moshi) to Gipson (handwritten letter "In view of events in England I did not send the papers relating to Beamish and De la Mothe as I first intended and I hope for some culminative event to round them off, when you would then have had a full perspective view point which would have enabled you to judge of the matter as a whole. However the papers I now send will hold some interest for you I think as they are by no means dry in themselves but hold the interest in a way which is only possible when dealing with the personal element. Your "Studies in Colonial Connecticut Taxation," is intensely interesting and somewhat parallels our case in degree, and I could not stop until I had read every word of it. Thank you very much for sending it I greatly appreciate it.\u27) Scanned (Unrelated handwritten jottings but dates mentioned are interesting "Excise 1785-1786, Phila. 1786 on brown folded paper possibly in Gipson\u27s handwriting) 1932 April 11 from P.J. Sinclair to Gipson (handwritten letter "The paper herein For a mosaic of actual history being the minor facts which make up the Tapestry and the threads of which are rarely seen. As I mentioned before it would be dangerous and not right to expose them to publicity at present, but I understand well your interest as a scholar and historian in the true facts and therefore I leave them to you with confidence.") Scanned","attr0":"description"

    Sinclair Lewis Society Newsletter, Vol. 28, No. 2

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    “Lewis and Thompson and the Writers’ War Board,” by Robert L. McLaughlin, Illinois State University “The Filming of Free Air” “An Interview with Ken Cuthbertson, Author of Inside: The Biography of John Gunther,” by Susan O’Brien “Sinclair Lewis as Seen through the Eyes of Ernest Hemingway’s Biographers,” by Sally E. Parry, Illinois State University “Sinclair Lewis, Dante, and the Jews,” a discussion by Mark Bernheim, Sally E. Parry, and Ralph Goldstein “Sinclair Lewis,” by George Simmers from Great War Fiction Plushttps://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/slsn/1022/thumbnail.jp

    Sinclair Lewis Society Newsletter, Vol 32, No. 1

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    “New Play Based on Novel and Film of Sinclair Lewis’s Free Air,” by John Loch, Rosemount Area Arts Council “The Filming of the Silent Movie of Sinclair Lewis’s Free Air,” by John Loch, Rosemount Area Arts Council “George Macy’s Readers Club (1941-1943) and Sinclair Lewis,” by Shaun F. Richards, Finger Lakes Community College “Lost Boundaries“ “Making Her Way in the Big City: Carrie Meeber in Sister Carrie and Una Golden in The Job,” by Sally E. Parry, Illinois State University “Favorite Books by Our Members” “Literary Legends: Poll of Minnesotans Reveals Sinclair Lewis as the State’s Favorite Author of All Time” “The (Self-) Importance of Being American: A Lesser-Known Lewis Essay on the American Expatriate Artists in 1920s Paris,” by Shaun F. Richards Finger Lakes Community College In Memoriam: Benjamin R. Beede and Robert Gottliebhttps://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/slsn/1093/thumbnail.jp

    The Trichoscopy Derived Sinclair Scale: Enhancing visual assessment through quantitative trichoscopy

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    INTRODUCTION: The Sinclair Scale of hair midline density is commonly used in clinical dermatology practice as a tool to evaluate the severity of female pattern hair loss (synonym androgenetic alopecia, AGA) and to monitor patient response to treatment. The Sinclair Scale involves a visual evaluation of central hair parting line width, that is performed quickly and with no optical instrumentation. Another approach used to score severity of hair loss is quantitative trichoscopy. While quantitative trichoscopy is more accurate in terms of reproducibility and objectivity, it is more time-consuming. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Patients with different stages of AGA were evaluated using both the Sinclair Scale and quantitative trichoscopy. A correlation analysis was performed between the Sinclair Scale and different parameters derived from statistical analysis of trichoscopy images. A novel parameter, cumulative hair thickness density was introduced. RESULTS: Very good correlation was observed between Sinclair Scale and the cumulative hair thickness density. The quality of correlation is sufficient to estimate Sinclair Scale from cumulative hair thickness density. A formula to calculate the 'Trichoscopy Derived Sinclair Scale' from trichoscopy statistics was derived. DISCUSSION: We propose the term 'Trichoscopy Derived Sinclair Scale' to describe the hair midline density as derived from trichoscopy and to differentiate this assessment of midline hair density from the traditional one based on visual inspection alone

    Sinclair Lewis Society Newsletter, Vol. 26, No. 1

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    “It Happened Here: Sinclair Lewis, White Nationalism, and the 2016 Presidential Election,” by Anthony Di Renzo, Ithaca College “Sinclair Lewis in Business and Politics: A Great Success,” by Alexis Foran and Taneka Newman, Illinois State University “Gideon Planish as Part of Lewis’s Critique of Language,” by George Killough, College of St. Scholastica “German Author Weighs in on It Can’t Happen Here,” by Frederick Betz, Southern Illinois University-Carbondale “Mary Astor, Edith Cortright, and Dodsworth,” Two Reviews of Mary Astor’s Purple Diary: The Great American Sex Scandal of 1936, by Edward Sorelhttps://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/slsn/1015/thumbnail.jp

    The Sinclair Lewis Society Newsletter, Vol. 11, No. 2

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    “Interview with Richard Lingeman,” by Sally E. Parry, Illinois State University “Lewis Catches Flivver Fever: Author Enjoyed the Early Motoring Days,” by Dave Simpkins, Sauk Centre Herald “Arrowsmith in Japanese,” by Rusty Allred “Lewis, London-and Hemingway?,” by Robert E. Fleming, University of New Mexico “Edith Wharton in Sinclair Lewis,” by Martin Bucco, Colorado State University “The Art of the Literary Feud,” rev. of Literary Feuds: A Century of Celebrated Quarrels-From Mark Twain to Tom Wolfe by Anthony Arthur; by Sally E. Parry, Illinois State University “Hemingway Read Some Lewis,” by Hilary Justice, Illinois State University “Enlightened on Lewis,” by Dave Simpkins, Sauk Centre Heraldhttps://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/slsn/1045/thumbnail.jp
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