5,795 research outputs found
Review of Ralph Hertwig, Timothy J. Pleskac, and Thorsten Pachur's Taming Uncertainty [...]
Review of Ralph Hertwig, Timothy J. Pleskac, and Thorsten Pachur's Taming Uncertainty. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2019, xvii + 469 pp
Letter from Ralph H. Cameron to Carl Hayden
Letter from Ralph H. Cameron asking to speak to Carl Hayden concerning a matter relevant to the bill granting National Park status to the Grand Canyon
Letter from Carl Hayden to Ralph H. Cameron
Letter from Carl Hayden to Ralph H. Cameron responding favorably to a request to meet in regards to the bill granting National Park status to the Grand Canyon
Letter from Ralph H. Cameron to Carl Hayden
Letter from Ralph H. Cameron to Carl Hayden thanking him for forwarding Senate Bill No. 390 with the report of March 31st, 1918, and expressing interest in their upcoming meeting in Washington
Letter from Ralph H. Cameron to Carl Hayden
Letter from Ralph H. Cameron to Carl Hayden requesting a delay on the introduction of the Grand Canyon bill until he can meet with himself and Senator Ashurst in Washington
Ralph Ellison’s Three Days
Timothy Parrish’s “Ralph Ellison’s Three Days: The Aesthetics of Political Change” argues that in Three Days, Ellison transcends the novel form, becoming an epic poet through prose that resembled fiction, history, and myth simultaneously, creating what he calls Ellison’s Book of America. As a true modernist novelist, kin to Louis Armstrong and James Joyce, Ellison understood that the modern novel is never truly finished; like Robert Musil’s A Man Without Qualities, whose aesthetic premise depended on its not being finished, Three Days both rejects and creates history. Parrish terms Ellison “the great modernist redactor of African American experience.” In ways that Ellison could not recognize, he did not finish the second novel because it could not be finished. Like the Civil Rights movement from which it emerged, Three Days is an incomplete project, unable to end “until the story of America and its struggle to realize its Edenic promises ends too.”</p
Timothy Leary, Ralph Metzner, Richard Alpert. The Psychodelic Experience. A manual based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead
Bareau André. Timothy Leary, Ralph Metzner, Richard Alpert. The Psychodelic Experience. A manual based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead. In: Revue de l'histoire des religions, tome 169, n°1, 1966. p. 104
Native drama entitled The panting patriot of the pattern parliament, or The palmy parient of the peerless prodigies : in five acts / by the author.
Attributed to Ralph Delaney. Refer to Morris Miller's Australian literature 1795-1938, p. 377.; Electronic reproduction. Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, 2013.; ANL's copy lacks cover and is slightly damaged.Panting patriot of the pattern parliament.Palmy parient of the peerless prodigies
Oral history interview with Ralph Wilkerson, February 22, 2004
1 electronic record(s) and derivatives. 2 audio file (wav, mp3) 865470588 bytes. 01:21:25. 4 PDF documents (3 scans, jp2). 961 MB (1,007,966,659 bytes).Oral history interview with Ralph Wilkerson, February 22, 2004. Waycross (Ga.). Fieldworker: Timothy C. Prizer. Audio file digitized from cassette tape. Part of the South Georgia Folklife Project at Valdosta State University Archives and Special Collections.
Mr. Wilkerson speaks of his life working in the turpentine woods and stills of south Georgia. He worked from childhood to adulthood in the woods and then worked at the turpentine still in Hoboken, GA until 1982, when he left the turpentine industry for good. He now works at the sawmill at Varn Wood Products in Hoboken, GA
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