15,264 research outputs found

    IC084: Interview with Robert A. Shepherd

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    Mr. Robert A. Shepherd. interviewed by Don Macon. Mr. Shepherd, long time attorney with Vinson & Elkins, joined the board of Methodist Hospital in 1943, and served as their legal counsel for many years. Mr. Shepherd discussed his personal family history as residents of Huntsville and later Colorado City, Texas where he was acquainted with the Gus Bertner family and a friend of Bill Bertner. See more at Texas Medical Center Historical Resources Project Records and its finding aid

    [Letter from Charles C. Shepherd to W. C. Schulle, February 8, 1961]

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    Letter from Charles C. Shepherd to W. C. Schulle answering his request for information on the store tax collection by Revenue Examiner R. B. Long. Mr. Shepherd leaves a detailed account by Mr. Long of a conversation he [Mr. Long] had with Wally Akin about the store tax collection from the Plaza Skate-Bowl

    [Mr. Virgil Henry Shepherd and Mr. Gene Autry shaking hands]

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    Photograph of "Mr. Virgil Henry Shepherd and Mr. Gene Autry" as written on the back of the photograph in pencil. Mr. Autry is dressed in a knit western suit with boots and spurs and a felt hat. He has a riding crop in his left hand. Mr. Shepherd is wearing a pin stripe suit and felt hat. He has his left hand on a horse's halter and is shaking hands with Autry with his right hand. Gene Autry's horse has a saddle with intricate leather tooling and ornate silver trim. The two men and horse are in an indoor arena

    Funkhouser sisters with Mr. Shepherd standing

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    A picture postcard of Mr. & Mrs. Shepherd with Mrs. Shepherd's sister, Cornelia Funkhouser

    Mr. Bush [Account with] Miller & Shepherd

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/239316Purchase & receipt of 118 loads of stones.129632 Sub-Item: [1980.0075.04333] "Mr. Bush [Account with] Miller & Shepherd

    William S. Shepherd, 1918.

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    William S. Shepherd, 1918. Mr. Shepherd was proprietor of Winston Steam Laundry.Source: Booklet, "Winston-Salem, City of Industry," 1918

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from Thomas L. James to Baker, Botts, Andrews & Shepherd discussing a sent letter about Mr. Zinnecker and the reason for its delay

    The Shepherd of Hermas

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    There is no danger that anyone will overlook the importance of Mr. Bonner's article on the Michigan Papyrus of the Shepherd of Hermas in the number of this Review for April, 1925. The publication of a manuscript of the Shepherd of Hermas dating from the third century will be a real event in the history of the interpretation of early Christian literature. But there is one point in his statement which, though it will appeal at once to those who have worked on the Shepherd, is likely to escape the notice of others unless attention be drawn to it.</jats:p

    Mr. Melvin J. Collier, RWWL AUC, June 2011

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    This video is a conversation with Mr. Melvin J. Collier. Mr. Collier talks about his book, "From Mississippi to Africa: A Journey of Discovery". Daniel Le, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer

    Interview Excerpt of Mr. Donald M. Crawford, Sr.

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    (1948-2018) Donald Mitchell Crawford, Sr. (“DC”), musician, author, and educator, was born on May 24, 1948, and was a lifelong resident of Birmingham, AL. His father and mother owned and operated “C & S Charter Tours Bus Company,” the first black-owned bus company in the state of Alabama. Crawford was a 1966 graduate of Western Olin High School in Birmingham, AL. Crawford was an outstanding drum major, playing first chair alto saxophone under the tutelage of the late Amos F. Gordon, Sr. After high school, he received a music scholarship to Alabama State University (ASU) where he earned both his Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees in Music Education and was later inducted into the “School of Music Hall of Fame” at ASU. He was the youngest ever inducted into the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army and performed with the 291 st and 283rd Army Band in Fort Bennett, GA. DC was Band Director at Jackson Olin High School and taught in the Birmingham School System for over thirty-five years. His love for music and performing lead him after his retirement to serve as Band Director for Miles College. Crawford is the author of “The Wheels of the Birmingham Civil Rights Movement.” This book chronicles the lives of his late father and mother, Worcy and Christine Pride Crawford, and the role he and the company played in the Birmingham Civil Rights Movement
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