5,279 research outputs found
Leo V. Ryan
Marquette University alumnus Leo V. Ryan '49, who received the Distinguished Alumnus Award from Marquette's College of Business Administration in 1974
Leo J. Ryan to President Carter
Letter from United States Representative Leo J. Ryan, Chairman of the Environment, Energy, and Natural Resources Committee to The President [Jimmy Carter], January 22, 1978https://lawcommons.lclark.edu/iwc_correspondence_1-6/1000/thumbnail.jp
Leo Levine papers, undated, 1920s-2010 (with gaps)
Leo Levine was born Leizers Levins in Riga, Latvia, on September 30, 1907. He worked as a European war correspondent until the outbreak of World War II. After immigrating to Dorchester circa 1941, Levine wrote freelance newspaper columns about the war, including several that were published in St. John’s, Newfoundland’s The Telegram. Levine was also an artist. Leo Levine died in November 1980.The addendum (P-646A) contains materials about Leo Levine’s wife, Sylvia Shlifer Levine, and their daughter, Helena Levine Ryan. Sylvia immigrated from Russia in 1913 with her family to escape the pograms. A graduate of Radcliffe College, she wrote short stories and poems, many of which are included in this collection. Their daughter, Helena Levine Ryan, is a poet and piano teacher. Her work, as well as photographs of the Levine family and various published and unpublished memoirs, are included in this collection.Please note that this collection is located at the American Jewish Historical Society located in Boston, MA.The original collection was donated by Helena Levine Ryan inThe addendum collection was donated by Helena Levine RyanFinding Aid available in Reading Room and on Internet
Letter from Simeon Leo to his father
Letter from Simeon Leo, Esq. to his father on paper torn from a notebook. Written in broken English.Digital imag
C-2166: 300 South State Street, Richmond, Utah, Leo G. Ryan residence. Sec 35 T14N R 1E. 1958
C-2166: 300 South State Street, Richmond, Utah, Leo G. Ryan residence. Sec 35 T14N R 1E. 195
Le premier « International Lonergan Congress » (St. Leo, Floride, 31 mars - 3 avril 1970)
Ryan W. F. J. Le premier « International Lonergan Congress » (St. Leo, Floride, 31 mars - 3 avril 1970). In: Revue Philosophique de Louvain. Troisième série, tome 68, n°98, 1970. pp. 260-262
Le premier « International Lonergan Congress » (St. Leo, Floride, 31 mars - 3 avril 1970)
Ryan W. F. J. Le premier « International Lonergan Congress » (St. Leo, Floride, 31 mars - 3 avril 1970). In: Revue Philosophique de Louvain. Troisième série, tome 68, n°98, 1970. pp. 260-262
Portrait of Hans Sahl
Three quarter profile portrait of the German writer Hans Sahl.Digital imageEstate of the artist.The German Jewish author and poet Hans Sahl was born in 1902 in Dresden. He fled Nazi Germany for France and then immigrated to the United States, where he gained success as a translator of American authors. Sahl returned to Tübingen in 1990, where he died in 1993.Leo Glueckselig was born in Vienna in 1914. He studied architecture and worked as an interior designer. He left Austria with his family in 1938 and immigrated to New York, where he worked as a graphic designer and illustrator. He was part of the Oskar-Maria-Graf Stammitsch. Since 1999 his artwork has been exhibited in Vienna, Salzburg, New York, Washington, and Graz. Leo Glueckselig died in New York in 2003. His brother was the poet Friedrich Bergammer (Fritz Glueckselig)
Ktētōr and Synthesis: Epigrams, Miniatures, and Authorship in the Leo Bible
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2014The Leo Bible (Rome, Vat. Reg. Gr. 1) is an illuminated Old Testament produced in Byzantium during the mid-tenth century. Presented as a gift to a monastery of St. Nicholas by Leo Sakellarios, a court eunuch and palace treasurer, the Bible is the only surviving manuscript of its kind from Byzantium. Known for its luxurious epigrams and miniatures, the Leo Bible's classicizing miniatures are frequently cited as exemplars of tenth-century Byzantine art, although the manuscript is rarely considered as whole. This study takes a new approach to the Leo Bible, focusing on the manuscript as a work of visual and poetic exegesis, in which word and image work together to frame the Old Testament in a Christian context. Beyond its exegetical nature, the Leo Bible also demonstrates a marked interest in the theme of authorship. By considering Byzantine notions of authorship in conjunction with the Bible's visual and epigrammatic program, this study offers new insights into the concept of patronage in Byzantium and the means by which patrons constructed their image and legacy through their commissions. In the case of the Leo Bible, this study will address how Leo Sakellarios is understood to be the author of the manuscript and its exegetical commentary, and how this act of authorship is reflected in the Bible's visual and poetic programs
Leo Katz as an author of children’s books. A failed attempt?
Das Ziel dieses Beitrags ist es, Leo Katz als Kinderbuchautor zu betrachten und darüber
nachzudenken, welche Rolle seine Jugendbücher in seinem gesamten Werk und in der
Geschichte der deutschsprachigen Kinder- und Jugendliteratur spielen. Es werden nicht
nur seine veröffentlichten Kinderbücher betrachtet, sondern auch andere
unveröffentlichte Jugendromane, die unbekannt bzw. unpubliziert geblieben sind.
Um den Autor aus der Vergessenheit zu holen, werden unter anderem die nicht
bekannten Werke des Autors für Jugendliche vorgestellt und es wird überlegt, weshalb
sie damals nicht veröffentlicht wurden.Stadt Wien KulturDepto. de Filología Alemana y Filología EslavaFac. de Comercio y TurismoTRUEpu
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