9,995 research outputs found
Sam Taylor, Poetry Reading
April 5, 2012, Ablah Library, Wichita State UniversityWichita State faculty member Sam Taylor reads his poetry.Department of English, University Librarie
June Brown & Sam Taylor discussion, 1999
June Brown and Sam Taylor discussion, CSWA, 1999 July 20
Letter from Paul A. Taylor to Hayao (Sam) Chuman
A letter from Paul A. Taylor, Project Director at Jerome incarceration camp, to Hayao (Sam) Chuman informing him that he would be moved from Jerome to the Rohwer incarceration camp.The Chuman (Hayao "Sam" and Toshiko) Papers documents the World War II experiences of Hayao "Sam" and Toshiko Chuman, who were Kibei Nisei born in the United States but grew up and completed school in Japan, and then returned to the U.S. prior to the war. It chronicles the Chumans's incarceration from the Santa Anita Assembly Center, through Jerome, Rohwer, Tule Lake camps, and the Santa Fe and Crystal City internment camps as well as their struggle for restoring their U.S. citizenships in the 1960s. The digital collection consists of mostly textual material, including correspondence, affidavits, incarceration camp records, lease agreements, financial documents, receipts, pamphlets, and booklets
Taylor University Echo: May 8, 1923
Have You Read This? — A Week of Prayer at Taylor — Rev. P. P. Bellew Wings First Prize in the Bishop Taylor Contest — Local Echoes — Babe Swallows Pin — Ten Week’s Summer School At Taylor — Commencement At Taylor University — A French Landscape-In Retrospect — The Pennsylvania Auxiliary — Address Delivered At Taylor University By Hon. Sumner Haynes May 2, 1923 — Senior Day Address By Dr. John Paul April 25, 1923 — A Start for Jesus and The Heavenly Country — The Real Need in China — Mother Mine — Love For One’s School — The Monk of Clairvaux — Chronicles — Alumni and Former Students — Eulogonians — Mnanka — Soangetaha — Eureka — Volunteer Band — Cosmopolitan Club — Holiness League — Tarry Until Prayer Band — Athletic Report — My Earthly Angel Mother — Has He Protected His Mother — Jokes — A Message From Sam the Methodist — The Measure of A Manhttps://pillars.taylor.edu/echo-1922-1923/1013/thumbnail.jp
Taylor University Echo: November 25, 1919
Thanksgiving — Revival at Taylor — Sam the Methodist Speaks — New Facilities Proposed for the Boys’ Dormitories — Armistice Day — Eurekans Have Wiener and Marshmallow Roast — Bachelor Club Banquet — Heard in Latin Class — Local Notes — Taylor To Have Representative in Nat’l Contest — Alumni Notes — Reasons for Coming to Taylor — Thanksgiving Long Ago — Work — Daily Chronicle — Heard in English Class — Thankfulness — Unnoticed Opportunities — Physical Benefits of Basketball — Commercial Department Crushed by Echo Staff — Immediate Assistance Needed — Eurekas Beat Eulogonians — A Thanksgiving Mishap — College Social Life — Thanksgiving Time — Taylor Song — The Preciousness — The Washerwoman’s Song — Eureka Debating Club — Volunteer Band — Soangetaha Debating Club — Philo Society — Thalo Society — Holiness League — Prayer Band — Does Education Pay?https://pillars.taylor.edu/echo-1919-1920/1010/thumbnail.jp
Business Class with Dr Taylor Klett
Dr. Taylor Klett instructing a class in the Roger Lawrence Banking Center in the Smith-Hutson Business Building at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas. Behind the instructor is a stock quote ticker with real-time financial market data displayed. Publicity images for the Texas State University System
Sam and his wife Francesca prepare to put the Gigi in the oven, Sydney, 2006 [picture] /
Title from reproduction in Qui e lì = Here and there : a photo essay on the life and hometowns of Italian Australians. Sydney : Red Egg Publishing, 2006, p. [97].; Inscriptions: "Sam and his wife Francesca prepare to put the Gigi in the oven. JB Taylor 07"--In pencil on back of photograph.; Part of the collection: Qui e lì photograph collection, Australia, 2005-2006.; Also available in electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3993244-s5
Taylor University Echo: December 9, 1919
I. P. A. Number — Revival Ends — Hot Shots From “Sam” — The Past Thanksgiving — Don’t Read This — Local Notes — Alumni — A Month’s Trip Into the Interior of Africa — Missionary Letter — The Character of Benjamin Franklin — Prohibition Today — A Thanksgiving Mishap — The Great Castle in the Forest — “Bah!” — The Home of Joan of Arc — Daily Chronicle — Prayer Band Report — Soangetaha Debating Club — Thots That Inspire — I. P. A. Report — Simplicimus — Some Figures on University Enrollment — What a Former Student Thinks of Taylor Universityhttps://pillars.taylor.edu/echo-1919-1920/1011/thumbnail.jp
Letter from Hayao (Sam) Chuman to the American Friends Service Committee
A letter from Hayao (Sam) Chuman to the American Friends Service Committee, donating a portion of his redress check from the U.S. government to the Committee.The Chuman (Hayao "Sam" and Toshiko) Papers documents the World War II experiences of Hayao "Sam" and Toshiko Chuman, who were Kibei Nisei born in the United States but grew up and completed school in Japan, and then returned to the U.S. prior to the war. It chronicles the Chuman's incarceration from the Santa Anita Assembly Center, through Jerome, Rohwer, Tule Lake camps, and the Santa Fe and Crystal City internment camps as well as their struggle for restoring their U.S. citizenships in the 1960s. The digital collection consists of mostly textual material, including correspondence, affidavits, incarceration camp records, lease agreements, financial documents, receipts, pamphlets, and booklets
Letter from Hayao (Sam) Chuman to Earl Warren and "Attorney General Clark"
A letter from Hayao (Sam) Chuman to Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Earl Warren and "Attorney General Clark". The letter is a request to regain his citizenship after renouncing his U.S. citizenship and requesting repatriation to Japan during his time incarcerated in World War II.The Chuman (Hayao "Sam" and Toshiko) Papers documents the World War II experiences of Hayao "Sam" and Toshiko Chuman, who were Kibei Nisei born in the United States but grew up and completed school in Japan, and then returned to the U.S. prior to the war. It chronicles the Chuman's incarceration from the Santa Anita Assembly Center, through Jerome, Rohwer, Tule Lake camps, and the Santa Fe and Crystal City internment camps as well as their struggle for restoring their U.S. citizenships in the 1960s. The digital collection consists of mostly textual material, including correspondence, affidavits, incarceration camp records, lease agreements, financial documents, receipts, pamphlets, and booklets
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