177 research outputs found
Justice Byron White and the Brethren
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.In 1979, Bob Woodward and Scott Armstrong caused quite a stir in the legal world with the publication of The Brethren: Inside the Supreme Court. Over the years, the authors have maintained that five sitting Justices assisted them with material for the book, and the authors have identified Justices Potter Stewart, Lewis F. Powell, Jr., and Harry Blackmun as three of the five who provided assistance. Based on a conversation with Bob Woodward in May 2011, the author of this article suggests that the other two Justices who provided assistance were Byron White and William Rehnquist. The article relates the information obtained from Woodward, examines the history regarding Justice White and The Brethren, and discusses the “evidence” that Justices White and Rehnquist assisted Woodward and Armstrong while calling upon the authors to reveal more information to the public now that all of these Justices are deceased
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NBC News Scripts
Script from the WBAP-TV/NBC station in Fort Worth, Texas, relating a news story about the indictment of convicted murderer J. Lloyd Parker Jr., who murdered his socialite father. Judge Byron Matthews told WBAP news reporters that he would not credit the six years Parker spent in a mental ward
University of Nebraska College of Medicine Class of 1948
John Hesla Aga, Marion Edward Alberts, Frederic Ray Allen, Charles Granville Beede, George Franklin Canady, Charles Iams Cerney, Paul Ronald Crellin, Roger Ackard Cutshall, Joseph David, Jr., Byron Howard Demorest, Louis Boyce Edelman, Gordon Noble Farmer, Harold Allen Fenner, Jr., William Melvin Fitch, Shaun Dennis Gunderson, Henry Shields Haerle, Louis Everett Hanisch, Jr., Charles Leroy Hedberg, Clarence Raymond Heidenreich, Billy Jay Hill, John Riale Hornberger, Seward Keith Imes, Robert Warren Jerner, Robert Bruce Johnson, Robert Walter Johnson, Robert Bruce Kalmansohn, Betty Hall Kane, Alvin Katsman, Kenneth Francis Kimball, George Wilbert Kleinschmidt, Robert Ray Kopecky, John Montgomery Kroyer, James Florenz Lage, William H. Leask, John Franklin Leeds, Holton Charles Letson, Arthur Fulton Lincoln, Ward Alexander McClanahan, Raymond Howard McCoy, Robert Harry McIntire, Russell Junior McIntire, Philip Doty McIntosh, Robert Allyn McShane, William Dave Maixner, Frederick Ernest Marsh, Jr., Norman Barnard Metcalf, Murray Franklin Minthorn, Byron Leon Nestor, Clitus Wilbur Olson, Robert William Pollock, Floyd Orval Ring, Arnold Edgar Robison, Gordon Eli Sawyers, George Lester Scholnick, Ralph Ernest Shambaugh, Willard Blake Skrdla, Jules Albert Slunicko, Barton Taylor Smith, Robert Cole Smith, Winifred Ruch Smith, Frank Eardley Stander, Virginia Mae Stuermer, Eric Malcom Swanson, Charles John Tupper, Vincent Joseph Vaughn, William Holmes Weingarten, Dudley Edsel Wilkinsonhttps://digitalcommons.unmc.edu/comclass/1028/thumbnail.jp
Social theory and race relations, II An analysis of the race relations theories of Edward Byron Reuter, 1948
A Critical Study of the Dramas of Four Major Romantic Poets
Since little critical attention has been given to the dramas of this period, it would seem that further examination of them would be of value. The purpose of this study, therefore, is to investigate the dramas of the major Romantic poets in order to provide a new critical perspective on their plays specifically and Romantic drama generally. From this it is hoped useful conclusions can be drawn. The study will be limited to the plays of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Percy Bysshe Shelley, William Wordsworth, and George Gordon, Lord Byron. John Keats has been omitted from this group because his only drama was written in conjunction with Armitage Brown, a minor writer. The dramas chosen for this investigation are those which either have been produced on the stage or ware submitted for production. If the author submitted more than one play, the play which the critics consider marks the summit of dramatic achievement of the author has been selected. Included in this study are The Borderers by Wordsworth, Remorse by Coleridge, The Cenci by Shelley, and Cain by Byron. The dramas are presented for discussion according to the chronological order in which they were written.
The study will include an examination of the background against which the tragedies were written - the state of the contemporary drama, the stage, the plays and the audiences. Those factors which may have affected the work - the author\u27s thoughts, the facts of composition, and elements of Romanticism - will also be considered. In addition, both contemporary and modern criticism will be included. (The criticism beginning with that of George Bernard Shaw in 1886 will be classified as modern.) These criticisms will form the bases for evaluations of the plays
University of Nebraska College of Medicine Class of 1954
Allen J. Alderman, Philip Daniel Anderson, Charles Robert Beber, Alyce L. Bezman, Edward Allen Brewer, William Henry Bunstock, Robert Campbell Chase, Donald Wilterdink, William John Chleborad, Ruth Ellen Christensen, Edgar Milton Cleaver, Elwin Kerr Conner, Donn Howard Crilly, Harold Dean Dahlheim, David Rodney Davis, Earl Joy Dean, Carl George DeBelly, Keith Frederick Deubler, Howard Arthur Dinsdale, James William Dinsmore, Jasper Lee Dyer, Howard Lyle Fencl, John William Foft, John Franklin Gentry, Frank Chandler Giddings, Leslie Irl Grace, Jr., Max Eugene Harris, Carl Masamitsu Hasegawa, Clifford James Haskin, Jr., James Edward Hazelrigg, Thomas Frederick Hegert, Robert Louis Heins, Lawrence Layton Hyde, James Stanley Jeffrey, Oscar Guy Johnson, Jr., Thomas Errol Johnston, Phillip Henry Jones, Frank Kamm, Edward Arthur Kantor, Max Crawford Karrer, Roy Jackson Kelly, Edward B. Kiolbasa, Alton Andrew Knosp, Arnold Norman Krause, John LeRoy Lang, Donald Joseph LaPorte, Ernest John Larson, Jr., Donald Edward Lee, Kenneth Ordell Leonard, George Everie Lewis, Jr., James Spencer Long, Thomas Lucas, Isaiah Kimberly Lukens, Richard Thomas McDonald, Bernard Magid, Reynold Robert Maixner, Ralph Justin Malott, Jr., John Bishop Maxwell, James Robert Scott Miller, Edson Bridges Moody, Mayer Moskovitz, Allan Elias Nachman, Charles Harold Newell, George Lee Newkirk, Tom Stanley Ochsner, Clyde Eugene Penner, Byron Eugene Peterson, John Wesley Porter, Leslie Carroll Potts, Thomas Theodore Powell, Harold Eugene Resinger, Steward Frank Richardson, Paul H. Richter, Jacob David Samler, Charles Joseph Saults, Allen Fred Scheuneman, Bryce George Shopp, Herman Shyken, Gene Slichter, Kayo Smith, Robert Charles Speckhals, Wesley Franklin Springer, Harlow Don Standage, Clarence Hilding Swanson, Jr., John Andrew Swenson, Otto Saeger Troester, Ronald Edgar Waggener, Hiram Robert Walker, Vernon Graves Ward, Victor Robert Watson, Jack Daryl Welsh, Gerald Devereaux Young, Jr.https://digitalcommons.unmc.edu/comclass/1034/thumbnail.jp
Comentario sobre la sección colonial del Códice Telleriano-Remensis.. Anales del Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. Num. 51 Tomo III (1970-1971) Séptima Época (1967-1976)
Arreola, José Ma. 1922 Jeroglíficos de Apellidos Españoles, México.Bancroft, Herbert Howe. 1883 History of Mexico, Vol II, San Francisco.Bancroft, Herbert Howe. 1883 History of Central America, Vol II (1530-1800), San Francisco.Barlow, Robert H. 1948 Les Caciques de Tlatelolco, Memorias de la Academia de Historia, Vol V, Núm 4, México.Barlow, Robert H. 1948 Anales de Tlatelolco. Unos anales históricos de la nación mexicana y Códice de Tlatelolco, editado por Salvador Toscano. México.Barlow, Robert H y McAffe, Byron. 1947 La Segunda Parte del Códice Aubin, en Memorias de la Academia de la Historia, Vol VI, Núm 2, MéxicoBarlow, Robert H y McAffe, Byron. 1948 Unos anales coloniales de Tlatelolco, 1519-1633, Memorias de la Academia de la Historia, Vol VII, Núm 2. México.Beuchat, H. 1918 Manual de Arqueología Americana. MadridBurland, C A. 1948 Art and L¡fe in Ancient Mexico, OxfordCaso, Alfonso. 1939 La correlación de los años azteca y cristiano, en Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropológicos, T III, Núm 4, México.Caso, Alfonso. 1967 Los calendarios prehispánicos. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas. México.Chimalpain, Domingo Francisco. 1889 Anales sixiême et septiême relations publiées et traduite par Remi Simeon, en Bibliothèque Linguistique Américain, Vol 12, París.Codex Telleriano-Remensis. 1899 Published by the Duke of Loubat, Commentary by Dr E T Hamy. París.Codex Vaticano A (Vaticanus 3738) (Ríos). 1830 Un Códice postcolombiano que se encuentra en la biblioteca del Vaticano, en Roma. Publicado por el duque de Loubat, en Roma, 1896. Ver Kingsborough, Antiquities of Mexico, Vol III, Placa L. p 1-149.Cuevas, Mariano F. 1946 Historia de la Iglesia en México, Vol II, México.Dibble, Charles E. 1942 Códice en Cruz, Vol 1, texto, Vol II, Historia del códice. México.Dibble, Charles E. 1946 Encyclopaedia Britannica, Vol 12, lnquisition.García Granados, Rafael. 1939 Estudio Comparativo de los signos cronográficos en los códices prehispánicos de Méjico, reimpresión de las actas de la primera sesión del XXVII Congreso Internacional de Americanistas.Garibay, Angel María. 1948 Relación breve de las fiestas de los dioses, por fray Bernardino de Sahagún, en Tlalocan. Vol II, Núm 4. Atzcapotzalco, D FGuzmán, Eulalia. 1938 Un manuscrito de la Colección Boturini que trata de los antiguos señores de Teotihuacan, en Ethnos, Vol III, Núm 4-5, julio-septiembre. Estocolmo, Suecia.Guzmán, Eulalia. 1949 Manuscrito original del Códice de 1576, en Tlalocan, Vol III, Núm 1. Atzcapotzalco, D. F.Jiménez Moreno, Wigberto. 1949 Historia Antigua de México. Notas tomadas en la cátedra del profesor Wigberto Jiménez Moreno por Leticia Peniche; mimeografiadas en la Escuela Nacional de Antropología e Historia. México.Kirkpatrick, F A. 1934 The Spanish Conquistadores. Londres.Magner, James A. 1943 Men of Mexico. Milwaukee.Mariol, Yolanda de Ibáñez. 1945 La Inquisición en México durante el siglo XVI. México.Mendieta, Fray Gerónimo de. 1870 Historia Eclesiástica indiana. México.Paso y Troncoso, Francisco del. 1905 Papeles de la Nueva España, Segunda Serie (Relaciones de Oaxaca). Madrid.Pomar, Juan Bautista, y Zurita, Alonso de. 1941 Relación de Texcoco- Breve relación de los señores de la Nueva España. Varias relaciones antiguas. México.Prescott, William. H. 1898 Mexico and the Life of the Conqueror Fernando Cortés, Vol I y II. Nueva York.Priestley, Herbert Ingram. 1935 The Mexican Nation. A History. New YorkRadin, Paul. 1920 The Sources and Authenticity of the History of the Ancient Mexicans, en American Archaeology and Ethnology, Vol 17, Núm 1. Berkeley, junio 29.Spinden, Herbert J. 1949 Ancient Civilizations of Mexico and Central America. Nueva York.Tezozómoc, Fernando Alvarado. 1949 Crónica Mexicáyotl. Traducción por Adrián León. México, 1949.Thompson, Eric J. 1950 The Prototype of the Mexican Codices Tellerian-Remensis and Vaticanus A, en Notes on Middle American Archaeology and Ethnology. Carnegie Institution of Washington, Vol I, Núm 6.Toscano, Salvador. 1944 Arte pre-colombino de México y de la América Central. México.Vaillant, George C. 1944 Aztecs of Mexico. Garden City, Nueva York.Veytia, Mariano. 1907 Los calendarios mexicanos. México
Emily Brontë : the mind of a visionary
Bibliography: leaves 216-226.This dissertation is an investigation of the visionary and philosophical aspects of Emily Brontë's works. The first five chapters deal with the visionary process such as visions, spirit guides, dreams, imagination, encounters with the darker side of the self and a union with the divine. There is considerable evidence of these mystical avenues in both her poetry and in Wuthering Heights which have been explored. It is shown how Emily Brontë's mysticism is a direct result of personal experiences which augment her reputation as one of the leading mystics in the world of literature. There are however tensions in her works, such as the cynicism of her own intellect in accepting the visionary experiences as authentic and periods of suffering when her faith is tested. These tensions have been considered within the context of her mystical encounters and philosophy. The remaining four chapters deal with the philosophy of Emily Brontë per se. Her beliefs in respect of heaven and hell, mercy and justice, power and survival, and pantheism are considered in depth. It is argued that she is an unorthodox thinker who does not believe in an eternal hell and that she has drawn inspiration for this idea from Frederick Maurice and Ralph Waldo Emerson. It is also shown how issues of power have been of interest to her from a young age and how this needs to be integrated within her philosophy. To the writer power needs to be tempered by compassion if it is to be of use to society or the individual. Her pantheistic spirit is also investigated and related to the mystical ideas
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