184,930 research outputs found
[Letter to J. J. Barnes from M. W. Stevenson #1]
Carbon copy of a letter from M. W. Stevenson, Deputy Chief of Police, to J. J. Barnes, the Chief of Police of Douglas, Georgia. The letter is responding to an inquiry by J. J. Barnes. Barnes asked whether Ingram G. Oswald could be related to Lee Harvey Oswald. The Deputy Chief of Police responds that to his knowledge there is no relation
[Letter to J. J. Barnes from M. W. Stevenson #2]
Carbon copy of a letter from M. W. Stevenson, Deputy Chief of Police, to J. J. Barnes, the Chief of Police of Douglas, Georgia. The letter is responding to an inquiry by J. J. Barnes, who asked whether Ingram G. Oswald could be related to Lee Harvey Oswald. The Deputy Chief of Police responds that to his knowledge there is no relation
[Letter to J. J. Barnes from M. W. Stevenson #3]
Carbon copy of a letter from M. W. Stevenson, Deputy Chief of Police, to J. J. Barnes, the Chief of Police of Douglas, Georgia. The letter is responding to an inquiry by J. J. Barnes, who asked whether Ingram G. Oswald could be related to Lee Harvey Oswald. The Deputy Chief of Police responds that to his knowledge there is no relation
[Letter to J. J. Barnes from M. W. Stevenson #4]
Carbon copy of a letter from M. W. Stevenson, Deputy Chief of Police, to J. J. Barnes, the Chief of Police of Douglas, Georgia. The letter is responding to an inquiry by J. J. Barnes, who asked whether Ingram G. Oswald could be related to Lee Harvey Oswald. The Deputy Chief of Police responds that to his knowledge there is no relation
[Letter from M. W. Stevenson to J. J. Barnes, December 6, 1963, #1]
Letter from M. W. Stevenson responding to Chief of Police in Douglas, Georgia J. J. Barnes. Stevenson states that no information implying relation between Ingram G. Oswald and Lee Harvey Oswald had been uncovered
[Letter from M. W. Stevenson to J. J. Barnes, December 6, 1963, #2]
Two copies of a letter from M. W. Stevenson responding to Chief of Police in Douglas, Georgia J. J. Barnes. Stevenson states that no information implying relation between Ingram G. Oswald and Lee Harvey Oswald had been uncovered
Food additives and children's behaviour: evidence based policy at the margins of certainty
The possible effects of food additives (specifically artificial colours) have been debated for over 30 years. The evidence accumulated suggests that for some children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) food colours exacerbate their condition. Two studies
undertaken by a research group at the University of Southampton have extended these findings to the effects on hyperactivity in children from the general population who do not show ADHD. This article reviews the response from policy-makers to these findings and concludes that the failure to impose a mandatory ban on the six food colours in the Southampton study is inadequate and that such a ban would be an appropriate application of the precautionary principle when the evidence is considered to be at the margins of certaint
It looks like a lamplit vicious fairy land behind me: Robert Louis Stevenson and Scotland
This thesis concerns a man and his home country, exploring the physical, the emotional and the imaginative bonding of the two. The man is Robert Louis Stevenson. A frail, consumptive novelist, poet and Scot, who transcended his infirmities to create romantic heroes of magnificent adventures, and transcended his self-imposed exile by setting them amidst the heather. The country is Scotland, a country which nurtured and debilitated, inspired and repelled Stevenson. It was also one in which he was ultimately unable to survive. Stevenson was not solely a Scottish writer, just as he is not solely a children's writer. His work does reflect his peripatetic life, but the purpose of this thesis is to focus upon his Scottish fiction. It will argue that it was in these works that his imagination and his artistic skills fused best. Scotland’s influence upon Stevenson will be seen as twofold. Firstly, the geographical and historical impressions which were made upon him, and secondly, the traditions of superstion which so characterised its people. A study of Stevenson's non-fictional portrait of Edinburgh will be made to elucidate his continued impulse to write about Scotland and what it meant to be Scottish. Stevenson’s Scottish fiction will be shown as far more than the laments of a homesick ex-pat. In recognising the viciousness of his fairyland, perceiving the skull beneath the skin, Stevenson gave to his fiction and his Scotland a richness and vitality which might not have been possible had he been a comfortable resident of a comfortable Edinburgh house
Home of Superintendent C. H. Stevenson in Kenilworth with the mining company in the background; Clarence Henry Stevenson, Elizabeth West Stevenson, Cornelia Grosvenor Stevenson, and Clarence Stevenson Jr. on the porch, photo taken 1898-1900
Black and white photograph of the home of Superintendent C. H. Stevenson in Kenilworth with the mining company in the background. on the porch are the following: Clarence Henry Stevenson, Elizabeth West Stevenson, Cornelia Grosvenor Stevenson, and Clarence Stevenson Jr. on the porch, taken 1898-1900
Pioneer personal history, Mr Charles T. Stevenson
Typescript of a brief biography of Charles T. Stevenson, from an interview. Stevenson was a miner at Bingham County and Park City. Typed by Harry Taylor, August 22, 193
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