107,238 research outputs found

    Rutherford B. Hayes correspondence with John T. Wilder, 1881 September 2

    No full text
    Letter from President Rutherford B. Hayes declining John T. Wilder's invitation to join him in Chattanooga, Tennessee for a Civil War reunion organized by the Society of the Army of the Cumberland

    Rutherford B. Hayes correspondence with John T. Wilder, 1881 September 2

    No full text
    Letter from President Rutherford B. Hayes declining John T. Wilder's invitation to join him in Chattanooga, Tennessee for a Civil War reunion organized by the Society of the Army of the Cumberland

    Aboard the HMS Majestic-L to R- Tobe Rutherford, "Skee" Turner, and Philo T. Farnsworth-late 1934

    No full text
    Black and white photograph of Tobe Rutherford, "Skee" Turner, and Philo T. Farnsworth aboard H.M.S. Majestic in 1934, sailing for England to meet John Logie Baird

    “Why a fish pond?” : fiction at the heart of documentation

    No full text
    Interview conducted by Laleen Jayamane and Anne Rutherford in June 1990, when Trinh T. Minh-ha was a guest at the Sydney and Melbourne International Film Festivals, where her film Surname Viet Given Name Nam was screened

    Accounting Hall of Fame 2000 induction: Ross M. Skinner

    No full text
    For the induction of Robert M. Skinner: Remarks by Robert T. Rutherford, The Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants; Citation prepared by Daniel L. Jensen, The Ohio State University, Read by Robert T. Rutherford; Response by Ross M. Skinner, Clarkson Gordo

    Letter, [Author unclear] to Paulina T. Merritt

    No full text
    Handwritten letter to Paulina Merritt from an unknown author, October 1, 1876.

    Photography as an act of collaboration

    No full text
    The camera is usually considered to be a passive tool under the control of the operator. This definition implicitly constrains how we use the medium, as well as how we look at – and what we see in – its interpretations of scenes, objects, events and ‘moments’. This text will suggest another way of thinking about – and using – the photographic medium. Based on the evidence of photographic practice (mine and others’), I will suggest that, as a result of the ways in which the medium interprets, juxtaposes and renders the elements in front of the lens, the camera is capable of depicting scenes, events and moments that did not exist and could not have existed until brought into being by the act of photographing them. Accordingly, I will propose that the affective power of many photographs is inseparable from their ‘photographicness’ – and that the photographic medium should therefore be considered as an active collaborator in the creation of uniquely photographic images

    The Impacts of Contract Type on Broker Performance: Submarket Effects

    No full text
    Rutherford et al. (2001) develop and empirically test a model that analyzes the effect the type of listing contract, either exclusive agency (EA) or exclusive right to sell (ERTS), has on the performance of the agent/broker. This paper extends the work of Rutherford et al. (2001) and looks at differences between housing submarkets delineated by price. The results show a selling price discount associated with both broker-effected and owner-effected sales for lower-priced houses with EA contracts. For higher-priced houses, there is no price advantage to an EA-listing if the broker achieves the sale, but if the owner sells the house, there is a modest price premium associated with the sale. The primary implication of the results is that owners of lower-priced houses should be wary of alternative listing arrangements, namely exclusive agency contracts.

    Don't Frac This up: Denton's Frac Ban and the appropriate State Legislative Response

    No full text
    In Don’t Frac This Up: Denton’s Frac Ban and the Appropriate State Legislative Response, Jake Rutherford examines the legal and political implications of Denton, Texas’s 2014 municipal ban on hydraulic fracturing. The article explores the tension between local autonomy and state authority over oil and gas regulation in Texas. Rutherford maintains that while local governments possess legitimate interests in protecting public health and the environment, the state maintains a strong interest in ensuring uniform regulation of natural resources. He analyzes the Texas Legislature’s response—House Bill 40—which effectively preempted local bans on fracking. Ultimately, Rutherford concludes that a balanced legislative framework should preserve limited local control while maintaining the state’s regulatory primacy over energy development

    Rutherford, Mary (Death, 1891-02-13)

    No full text
    Address: 220 Betts St.Age at death: 25 yrs.248/Pg.18/1891/F N S/Ky./Dr. T. E. Finn/Porter/Union BaptistOriginal record filed in drawer labeled 'Runk-Ryan'
    corecore