103,034 research outputs found
[Letter from Lois Wiggins to T. N. Carswell - March 19, 1968]
A letter written to Mr. Carswell from Lois Wiggins, Longview, Texas, dated March 19, 1968. Wiggins apologizes for the inconvenience to Carswell but asks for the amount of interest paid the previous year noting her intention to pay off her loan during 1968. She thanks Carswell for all his past kindnesses praying God's richest blessings be with him
Marriage record of Mercer, Silas T. and Wiggins, Zell
Marriage license for Silas T. Mercer and Zell Wiggins. W. Webb was the officiant
Marriage record of Brown, T. S. and Wiggins, Mignon
Marriage license for T. S. Brown and Mignon Wiggins. Thomas W. Hartley was the Justice of the Peace
Portrait of Bishop Milton Wright
Portrait of Bishop Milton Wright. This image is attributed to S. T. Wiggins, Cedar Rapids.https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/special_ms1_photographs/2641/thumbnail.jp
Portrait of Katharine Wright as a child
Katharine Wright about 5 years old. This image is attributed to S. T. Wiggins, Cedar Rapids.https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/special_ms1_photographs/2656/thumbnail.jp
Food abuse : Mealtimes, helplines and 'troubled' eating
Feeding children can be one of the most challenging and frustrating aspects of raising a family. This is often exacerbated by conflicting guidelines over what the ‘correct’ amount of food and ‘proper’ eating actually entails. The issue becomes muddier still when parents are accused of mistreating their children by not feeding them properly, or when eating becomes troubled in some way. Yet how are parents to ‘know’ how much food is enough and when their child is ‘full’? How is food negotiated on a daily level? In this chapter, we show how discursive psychology can provide a way of understanding these issues that goes beyond guidelines and measurements. It enables us to examine the practices within which food is negotiated and used to hold others accountable. Like the other chapters in this section of the book, eating practices can also be situations in which an asymmetry of competence is produced; where one party is treated as being a less-than-valid person (in the case of family practices, this is often the child). As we shall see later, the asymmetry can also be reversed, where one person (adult or child) can claim to have greater ‘access’ to concepts such as ‘appetite’ and ‘hunger’. Not only does this help us to understand the complexity of eating practices; it also highlights features of the parent/child relationshipi and the institutionality of families
Portrait of Orville Wright at about 10 years old
Portrait of Orville Wright at about 10 years old. Note on verso, 10 yrs. This cabinet card is attributed to S. T. Wiggins, Cedar Rapids. This photograph was taken circa 1881.https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/special_ms1_photographs/3216/thumbnail.jp
Portrait of Wilbur Wright at about 13 years old
Portrait of Wilbur Wright at about 13 years old. Note on verso about 13. This cabinet card is attributed to S. T. Wiggins, Cedar Rapids.https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/special_ms1_photographs/3217/thumbnail.jp
Le capitaine Wiggins et la navigation sibérienne
Zimmermann Maurice. Le capitaine Wiggins et la navigation sibérienne. In: Annales de Géographie, t. 5, n°20, 1896. p. 253
Marriage record of Wiggins, J. T. and Merrion, Jennie
Marriage license for J.T. Wiggins and Jennie Merrion. N.E. Norwood was the officiant
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