36,451 research outputs found

    Letter from Upton Sinclair to Melville L. Kress - June 6, 1945

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    A brief letter from Upton Sinclair to Melville Kress, dated June 6th, 1945, in which Sinclair shares an answer from 'Dr. Brady' and sends the first chapter of his new book

    Letter from Upton Sinclair to Melville L. Kress - November 16, 1936

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    A letter from Upton Sinclair to Melville Kress, dated November 16, 1936, in which Sinclair admits ""it is quite possible that I have made a mistake about [Dr. Albert] Abrams."" Sinclair was an enthusiastic supporter and staunch defender of Abrams, whose first invention was a diagnosing machine called the ""dynomizer."" Abrams claimed he could diagnose and cure almost any disease. The American Medical Association and Scientific American deemed the machine and its creator fraudulent

    [Letter from John G. Sinclair to Meyer Bodansky - August 1938]

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    Letter from John G. Sinclair to Dr. Meyer Bodansky enclosed with a list of problems Dr. Sinclair has been approaching for publication

    Dr. Joseph T. Sinclair, 1915-1970

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    Joseph T. Sinclair died in the Spring of 1970. He had been at Eastern Michigan University since 1958, and his was not the ordinary, stereo-typed professional career. As an undergraduate Bud Sinclair trained in both Geography and Geology at the University of Michigan. As an undergraduate he participated at Geology field camps but developed his great love for geography w hile traveling in the Orient with Professor Robert Hall

    Sinclair Lewis Society Newsletter, Vol 29, No. 2

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    “‘She Was a Worker in the Theater’: Backstage Industry and the Stage-Struck Girl in Sinclair Lewis’s Bethel Merriday,” by Maya Cantu, Bennington College “Dr. Arrowsmith Hangs Out His Shingle,” by Dennis Morgan, MD “He Was an Atheist; Oh Yes, He Really Was,” by Dennis Dalman “Sister Mara Helped Shaped Book on Sinclair Lewis,” by Dennis Dalman “Marcella Powers: Life after Sinclair Lewis,” by Sally E. Parry, Illinois State Universityhttps://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/slsn/1095/thumbnail.jp

    Sinclair Lewis Society Newsletter, Vol 30, No. 1

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    “The Life and Loves of Sinclair Lewis Celebrates the Life of Sinclair Lewis 100 Years after the Publication of Main Street“ “Minnesota Historical Society Features Exhibit on Sinclair Lewis” “A Complex Year for a Celebration: A Review of Isabel Marín Gómez’s ‘Sinclair Lewis and Main Street in Spain: The Contribution of the Literature of Social Change on Contemporary History,” La Razón Histórica 49, 2020, by Ralph Goldstein “Helen Hayes and Vaccination,” by Susan O’Brien “Calliing Dr. de Kruif: A Review of A Constant State of Emergency: Paul de Kruif: Microbe Hunter and Health Activist, by Jan Peter Verhave,” by Frederick Betz, Southern Illinois University-Carbondale “What Were They Reading Then?: “It,” by Elinor Glyn, 1927,” by Sally E. Parry, Illinois State University “Red’s Visit to Riotous Vienna: The July Revolt of 1927,” by Bernhard Wenzl “A Tribute to John-Paul Sinclair Lewis”https://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/slsn/1091/thumbnail.jp

    Letter from Melville L. Kress to Upton Sinclair - February 1, 1948

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    A brief letter from Melville Kress to Upton Sinclair, dated February 1, 1948, in which Kress asks for a copy of Sinclair's article, 'About Jack London"", and on a 'telepathy test' he sent some time ago. He also asks for an enclosed letter to 'Dr. Brady' be sent by Sinclair

    Sinclair Lewis Society Newsletter, Vol 33, No. 2

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    Sinclair Lewis Conference in Sauk Centre to Celebrate Arrowsmith Impressions of Sinclair Lewis: Interview with Andrea B. Nardi, Italian Translator of Main Street, by Anthony Di Renzo Mr. Babbitt Goes to Washington \u27You meet such interesting people on the road\u27: Humor in Sinclair Lewis\u27s Early Travel Writing, by Sally E. Parry \u27Adventures in Autobumming\u27 and Hell on Wheels, by Sally E. Parry Meet the 2025 Lewis Conference Keynote Speaker: Dr. Michael T. Osterholm, by Shaun F. Richardshttps://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/slsn/1099/thumbnail.jp

    The Americans

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    Gift of Dr. Mary Jane Esplen.Piano [instrumentation]B flat [key]Piano [tempo]Gordon Sinclair (photograph) [illustration]Monologue ; music traditional [form/genre]No publisher's advertisement [note]Written and broadcast by Gordon Sinclair on CFRB, Toronto - Canada June 5th 1973 [note]A monologue inside music sheet [note

    Sinclair Lewis Society Newsletter, Vol. 25, No. 1

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    “Anthony Di Renzo to Be Keynote Speaker at Sinclair Lewis Conference 2017” “Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s Adaptation of It Can’t Happen Here,” by Ralph Goldstein, California State University-Los Angeles “The Low-Down on Lewis,” by Frederick Betz, Southern Illinois University-Carbondale “Is Sinclair Lewis ‘Not Much Read’ Anymore?,” by Ralph Goldstein, California State University-Los Angeles “Lewis and Roth on American Dictators” “Translation and Culture: Main Street Goes to China,” by Sally E. Parry, Illinois State University “It Can’t Happen Here Staged Readings Sweep the Nation” “The Runestone of Alexandria and Sinclair Lewis” “What Were They Reading Then?: Calling Dr. Nietzsche: A Review of Man with Red Hair by Hugh Walpole, 1925,” by Sally E. Parry, Illinois State Universityhttps://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/slsn/1013/thumbnail.jp
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