4,373 research outputs found

    Ralph S. Hendricks Oral History

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    Audio interview with Ralph S. Hendricks, Simpsonville philanthropist, former mayor, and Furman trustee emeritus. Mr. Hendricks started the Ralph and Virginia Hendricks Foundation to provide scholarships for Hillcrest High and Woodmont High students, and Furman awarded Mr. Hendricks with an honorary Doctor of Humanities degree in 2000. Mr. Hendricks begins the inteview with a brief overview of his life and how he came to upstate South Carolina, as well as his life in business. He talks of becoming a Furman trustee in 1988, and his early experiences on the Board, and the split between Furman and the South Carolina Baptist Convention. Mr. Hendricks speaks of President Johns and President Shi, details how the trustees work, and gives his thoughts on Furman football. He discusses the construction of the Younts building and moving Cherrydale. Mr. Hendricks concludes the interview talking about the history of his foundation.https://scholarexchange.furman.edu/oral-histories/1038/thumbnail.jp

    Correspondence, John S. Allen and W.G. Hendricks, University Seal, October 1959 to January 1960

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    A series of correspondence between University of South Florida President John S. Allen and Board of Control of Florida Business Manager W.G. Hendricks regarding the use and copyright of the university\u27s official seal.https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/usf_archive_other/1082/thumbnail.jp

    Letter from Eliza S. Hendricks to John Muir, 1894 Mar 1.

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    [4]for the advanced chapters in the Century. I very much enjoyed a series of letters you once wrote for the San [Yo?] Examiner upon Alaska. Do you remember a Mrs. Wells and her husband whom you met the evening we spent at Mrs. Graydon\u27s You will be sorry to hear that she lost her husband last summer. She is very sad. She was much pleased to meet you, and was much interested in your talk that evening. I think your book will do her good.The kind remarks you penned in your last letter regarding our home, were very gratifying to all. My brother, and his wife send kindest regards. When are you coming again? I have written you a long letter. I hope I have not wearied you.Very sincerely your friendEliza S. Hendricks.611 N. Meridian St.[1]Indianapolis March 1, 94My Dear Mr. Muir:Many thanks for the prompt and most friendly reply to my letter; and many very many for the book. I was very much pleased to receive it. I had read it, although I did not own it. Mrs. Graydon had two copies--one a Xmas gift--and she very kindly sent me one of them for me to read; and when I had read it I felt that I must have a copy of my own. Is there not a peculiar atmosphere--a flavor--about a book received at the hand of the author, which is not quite there01789https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/26732/thumbnail.jp

    Letter from Mrs. W. S. Hendricks to John Muir, 1914 Jun 18.

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    June 18 \u2714Camp Lost Arrow Yosemite Valley[These?] wonderful and beautiful water falls - the immense and seemingly insurmountable mountains that you climbed & described so interestedly - The books help us to enjoy my daughter and I are enjoying every moment - . the weather fine.[our trip - SincerelyMrs. W.S. Hendricks]Mr John Muir-MartinezCal.05779https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/34411/thumbnail.jp

    Oral History Interview, Richard Hendricks (1123)

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    Throughout Richard Hendricks 2011 interview he reflects on his past. He tracks how he became a medical doctor through Notre Dame, the Air Force, East Madison Clinic, and finally St. Mary’s hospital. To learn more about this oral history, download & review the index first (or transcript if available). It will help determine which audio file(s) to download & listen to.In his April 2011 interview with Anne Peckham, Richard Hendricks chronicles his development as a medical doctor and administrator from his early years, through Notre Dame and the Air Force, and then with East Madison Clinic and St. Mary’s hospital. He emphasizes a number of key Madison community figures and tells a number of anecdotes about his medical career. This interview was conducted for inclusion into the UW-Madison Oral History Program

    Lambert, Hendricks & Ross: American ventriloquism

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    It has been fifty-one years since the last Lambert, Hendricks & Ross studio recording. Since then Dave Lambert was tragically killed on the Connecticut Turnpike, Jon Hendricks has become a University of Toledo professor, and Annie Ross is still performing frequently worldwide. Few jazz vocalists are accepted into the scholastic canon. Fewer are filed in the annals of music history. But, if any vocalists should be regarded important to the story of jazz music it is LHR. Their impact on the art of vocalese has yet to be fully felt. In exploring the motivation behind the group’s dense, meticulous, trailblazing recordings, this study attempts to be a supplement for what was too much for liner notes in the late 50’s and 60’s, while simultaneously giving a brief encompassing historical outline. By examining the social and musical impact of Lambert Hendricks & Ross, this study attempts to further legitimate the art of jazz vocals and vocalese.M.A.Includes bibliographical referencesIncludes vitaby Bilal Salaa

    Hendricks, Josiah S., 1843-1932 (SC 60)

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    Finding aid and scan (Click on additional files below) for Manuscripts Small Collection 60. Union Army discharge, 1865, and pension certificate of Josiah S. Hendricks, Simpson County, Kentucky, 1899-1930. Also biographical notes as related by his daughter, Miss Alma Hendricks, 1959

    Thomas A. Hendricks

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    He served in the Indiana House of Representatives and the U. S. House. He was a United States senator during the latter years of the Civil War and the first years of Reconstruction. Hendricks became governor of the state in 1872. He was the vice-presidential candidate in 1876 with Samuel J. Tilden of New York running for president. They won the popular vote but lost in a dispute over electoral votes. In 1884 he ran as vice-president with Grover Cleveland and they were elected. Hendricks died after serving eight months as vice-president.Hendricks is seated in a chair holding an Indianapolis newspaper. He is wearing a dark suit and bow tie

    Beyond cost savings: The value of OER and open pedagogy for student learning

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    This workshop was delivered by Dr. Christina Hendricks, from the University of British Columbia, for the 2018 Open Education Week Celebration at Mount Royal. The presentation outline approaches to open education - including OER, open pedagogy, and open educational practices

    Letter from E [liza ] S. Hendricks to John Muir, 1880 Mar 22.

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    [3]with great pleasure my first meeting with you in the “foot hills” & the good your did me then; and your kind care for me during my sickness in Yosemite. I have a young nephew — 15 yrs. old who [illegible] scientific [illegible] & I often wish he could come under your influence. He is now engaged in “mounds” & “mound Builders”. If you known of any work particularly helpful and entertaining on that subject I would be glad to hear of it. I would be glad to hear from you some time when you have leasure for letter-writing! I am afraid such seasons are few & far between. I received a letter from brother Thom’s wife last week giving a glowing account of your visit to Chico. She says — “He is if possible more entertaining than before. He is the same guileless, simple hearted man as when we first knew him; & it was such a pleasure to have him with us. Surely there is[1][in margin: no one like him in all the world. You have no truer friend and admirer than my quiet little undemonstrative sister Mame. But what a long letter I am drawing out. I hope you have time to read it. Yours with kindest regards E.S. Hendricks.]296 N. Meridian St.Indianapolis March 22 — ‘80Dear Mr. Muir – I enclose a card which was handed to me a year & a half, or two years ago. The one who have it to me, is a dear friend, & wife of a former pastor; and the name upon the card is that of her sister. The latter I have never met, but her sister — Mrs. Mason says that she is an enthusiastic botanist, and she thinks it would be such a great pleasure for her sister to know & converse with so enthusiastic a scientist as you are – that she is anxious for her to meet you. Mrs. Mason, hearing me speak of your long geological tramps and of the happy accident by which I met you, hoped that some of your rambles might take you into her Miss Campbell’s neighborhood; and that if you had her name, & were so requestedhttps://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/36240/thumbnail.jp
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