92,001 research outputs found

    Bill S. Clark papers

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    This collection contains mostly correspondences from Billy S. Clark to his wife Juanita Williams Clark during his military service in World War II and after the close of the war

    Marriner S. Eccles, correspondence with Senators Howard W. Cannon, Dick Clark, and Joseph S. Clark

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    Correspondence of Marriner S. Eccles with Howard W. Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada; Dick Clark, U.S. Senator from Iowa; and Joseph S. Clark, U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania. A frequent topic was the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. Includes statements by several Senators in honor of former Senator Harold Hughes of Iowa, printed in the Congressional Record on 19 December 1974; and a speech by Senator Joe Clark in favor of the Manpower Act of 1960, delivered in the Senate on 16 May 1960

    Clark S. Hobbs papers

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    Clark S. Hobbs served as the chairman of the Baltimore Redevelopment Commission. The collection contains newspaper clippings, reports, photographs, and speeches. Topics include Baltimore City public schools, fund-raising for health and welfare services, and a commencement address for Baltimore Community College. The papers of Clark S. Hobbs are unprocessed, but a preliminary inventory is available

    Fordham Letter from Senator Joseph S. Clark

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    Letter from Joseph S. Clark to Jefferson B. Fordham

    Panel Nine: Building Nations, Breaking Societies

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    Moderator: Thomas Kühne (Clark University) Luca Fenoglio (University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom)Resisting the \u27Final Solution\u27? The \u27Royal Inspectorate of Racial Police\u27 in Nice and the Onset of a Fascist (anti-) Jewish Policy, March - July 1943 download paper (login required) Andrew Kornbluth (University of California-Berkeley)Crowdsourcing Genocide: Comparing Jewish and Polish Experiences of Collaboration, 1939-1944 download paper (login required) Natalya Lazar (Clark University)The Aftermath of the Holocaust: Jewish Survivors and Soviet Policies in Postwar Chernivtsi, 1944-1946paper has been removed per author Raz Segal (Tel Aviv University, Israel)Instances of Bystanding: Jews and non-Jews Respond to Each Other’s Plight in Hungary’s Borderlands during World War II download paper (login required

    (121) Psychological Department, Academic Year 1891-1892

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    In 1893, Clark University exhibited materials from the University at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. It is not known which photographs of this series were actually included in the exhibit. This photo shows Clark University\u27s Psychology Department for the 1892-1893 academic year. Front row (left to right): Thaddeus L. Bolton, William H. Burnham, Benjamin I. Gilman, G. Stanley Hall, Edward C. Sanford, Clifton F. Hodge, Alexander F. Chamberlain. Back row (left to right): John A. Bergstrom, R.C. Hollenbaugh, Arthur H. Daniels, Frank Drew, Edward W. Flagg, Fletcher B. Dresslar, unknown, unknown, James H. Leuba, Herbert A. Aikins, James S. Lemon, unknown.https://commons.clarku.edu/colexpophotos/1124/thumbnail.jp

    Incredible day-dream : Freud and Jung at Clark, 1909

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    This booklet collects The Fifth Annual Paul S. Clarkson lecture, about Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung\u27s historic 1909 visit to Clark University. As Blaine E. Taylor write in their preface: Professor Koelsch helps the reader put the visit in perspective, carefully correcting claims that it introduced Freud to America or that original research was presented for the first time in the lectures. He also traces the importance of the visit to Clark for Carl Jung and the interesting relationship between Freud and Jung....Here is a complete record, full of insight and interesting asides, of the events that led to \u27the most concise and lucid account in and out of Freud\u27s writings of the birth of psychoanalysis\u27 . This booklet also features photographs and an exhibition catalog for an accompanying display of original Clark University materials relating to Freud\u27s famous 1909 visit.https://commons.clarku.edu/clarkuhistory/1001/thumbnail.jp

    (24) Editorial Room

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    In 1893, Clark University exhibited materials from the University at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. It is not known which photographs of this series were actually included in the exhibit. This photo shows s apace referred to as the editorial room .https://commons.clarku.edu/colexpophotos/1019/thumbnail.jp

    (120) Psychological Department, Academic Year 1892-1893

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    In 1893, Clark University exhibited materials from the University at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. It is not known which photographs of this series were actually included in the exhibit. This photo shows Clark University\u27s Psychology Department for the 1892-1893 academic year. Front row (left to right): Thaddeus L. Bolton, William H. Burnham, Benjamin I. Gilman, G. Stanley Hall, Edward C. Sanford, Clifton F. Hodge, Alexander F. Chamberlain. Back row (left to right): John A. Bergstrom, R.C. Hollenbaugh, Arthur H. Daniels, Frank Drew, Edward W. Flagg, Fletcher B. Dresslar, unknown, unknown, James H. Leuba, Herbert A. Aikins, James S. Lemon, unknown. There is a supplemental file available containing the handwritten list of names on the back of this photograph.https://commons.clarku.edu/colexpophotos/1123/thumbnail.jp

    Grahame Clark and Scandinavia

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    The paper deals with Grahame Clark´s heavy commitments in Scandinavian archaeology all through his career. The rich Danish Mesolithic bog sítes opened his eyes for the possibility of finding Stone Age wetland sites also in Britain and of the archaeological potential of botany and other palaeo-environmental methods developed earlier in Scandinavia. Within short Clark blossomed out as the leading environmentalist of Stone Age research in north-western Europe. He did so thanks to his talent for both inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary work and by means of well planned fieldwork and publishing and through a stream of well-argued articles and books about almost eveery aspect of Stone age life in the area. The author also tries to characterize Clark as an archaeologist both against the background of his time and as a scholar in general.</p
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