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GENERAL PHOTOGRAPHS File Subject Index
GENERAL PHOTOGRAPHS File Subject Index A (General) Abeokuta: the Alake of Abram, Morris B.: see A (General) Abruzzi: Duke of Absher, Franklin Roosevelt: see A (General) Adams, C.E.: see A (General) Adams, Charles, Dr. D.F., C.E., Laura Franklin Delano, Gladys, Dorothy Adams, Fred: see A (General) Adams, Frederick B. and Mrs. (Eilen W. Delano) Adams, Frederick B., Jr. Adams, William Adult Education Program Advertisements, Sears: see A (General) Advertising: Exhibits re: bill (1944) against false advertising Advertising: Seagram Distilleries Corporation Agresta, Fred Jr.: see A (General) Agriculture Agriculture: Cotton Production: Mexican Cotton Pickers Agriculture: Department of (photos by) Agriculture: Department of: Weather Bureau Agriculture: Dutchess County Agriculture: Farm Training Program Agriculture: Guayule Cultivation Agriculture: Holmes Foundry Company- Farm Plan, 1933 Agriculture: Land Sale Agriculture: Pig Slaughter Agriculture: Soil Conservation Agriculture: Surplus Commodities (Consumers' Guide) Aircraft (2) Aircraft, 1907- 1914 (2) Aircraft: Presidential Aircraft: World War II: see World War II: Aircraft Airmail Akihito, Crown Prince of Japan: Visit to Hyde Park, NY Akin, David Akiyama, Kunia: see A (General) Alabama Alaska Alaska, Matanuska Valley Albemarle Island Albert, Medora: see A (General) Albright, Catherine Isabelle: see A (General) Albright, Edward (Minister to Finland) Albright, Ethel Marie: see A (General) Albright, Joe Emma: see A (General) Alcantara, Heitormelo: see A (General) Alderson, Wrae: see A (General) Aldine, Charles: see A (General) Aldrich, Richard and Mrs. Margaret Chanler Alexander (son of Charles and Belva Alexander): see A (General) Alexander, John H. Alexitch, Vladimir Joseph Alford, Bradford: see A (General) Allen, Mrs. Idella: see A (General) 2 Allen, Mrs. Mary E.: see A (General) Allen, R.C. -
How Hitler Brohe Through in the West Captain B
MISSION. The MILITARY REVIEW dissemi nates modern military thought and · EDI:roRIN ClIlEF current Army doctrine concerning LT COL Wn.r.IAM ·6. McDoWELL, INF command and staff procedures of MANAGING EDITOR the division arid higher echelons LT COL; RODGER R. BANKSON, INF and provides a forum for articles which stimulate military thinking, SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITOR Authors, civilian and military alike, LT COL ROBERT M. WALKER, ARTY are encouraged to submit articles SPANISH-AMERICAN EDITION which will assist in the fulfillment Editor of this mission. MAl GILBERTO GONzALEZ-JULIA, INF Assistant Editors MAl TOMAS H. GUFFAlN, INF CAPT ORLANDO ORTIZ MORENO, INF POLICY. BRAZILIAN EDITION. Unless otherwise indicated, the Editor LT COL HERMANN BERGQVIST, ARTY views expressed in the original ar ticles in this magazine are those Assistant Editor LT COL TACITO T. G. DE OLIVEIRA, INF of the individual authors and not necessarily precisely those of the Administrative OfJicer Department of the Army or the MAJ LINO BONUCCI, QMC U. S. Army Command and General Staff College. Production Officer Editor. MAS JAMES A. TUNT, IN!' MILITARY REVIEW VOLUME XXXVI MARCH 1957 NUMBER 11 CONTENTS Vigilance-Yes; Fear-N0 !................ ;................................................................ 3 Doctor C. Langdon White Divisional Command in 1960-70....................................................................... 17 Colonel Frank W. Norris, General Staff ~ Could It Happen? ............................................................................................... -
Fuel Oil Boland
W'- ' V ‘ F A C B U X n cX V mSDNI NOVEMBER 21 ATcraae Daily Net Preoa Run Far the wimk BaM 1 Tilt WesUisr ffianrbfBbr Sttraino B^ralii Nov. 17, 1988 FtMoaat of U. S. Waathor iN r iw Children of the South- School * 'OsHer toalght, ehaaee fit light either • mechimical or electric presented a Thanksgiving program Air Tedhiucal 12,402 ■ M W late tonight. Low, 96 to 25. AboulTown yekterday for their parents. The No HeTald , irectars Set Public Hearing electronics ^Jndam•ntaI• opixte. Upon completion of thin tutnie MARLOW'S Member of the Audit Sntnrdny, odd, Hght nnow during ' ' ' ' 1 alnglng of many thanksgiving Biaireen ef CIrenletiee O m ccn of Temple Chepter, No. songs, in which the audience took Tomorrow Study J^l^ged tlon, the individual will Jceoeive fur- PINE STORES moiwing. High near 89. SS, OBS, are reminded to call their ‘ On MHS Transportation their achooliiig in^ m e of 20 dif lUancheMter— A City o f VilloMO Charm ' 1 part, was directed by Mrs. Gwend ' Uat of 'membera ahodt the baaaar olen Hurl. Shirley Hah-lsbn read New Marines ferent courses designated for spe O p M N i « k » T M 9 The Manchester Evening ■ ' '\ cific training liv^arlou..' technical on Nov. 29 at the Uaaonlc Temple. the lOO'th Psalm. The story of the The Board of Directors ,1 a a t,ia scheduling a hearing eh the ap- Dinner reaervatlona muat be made 8rst Thanksgiving was> told by Herald will not ptibli.ah to Hartford, •Nov. 21—“For the fielos such M ^ t and reciprocating A n d A N M o n d a y VOL. -
The Bureau of Naval Personnel Career Publication
**Ail HANDS* THE BUREAU OF NAVAL PERSONNEL CAREER PUBLICATION J A N U A R Y 1968 Nav-Pers-0 1968 JANUARY NUMBER 612 VICE ADMIRAL BENEDICT J. SEMMES, Jr., USN TheChief of Naval Personnel REAR ADMIRALBERNARD M. STREAN, USN TheDeputy Chief of NavalPersonnel CAPTAIN JAMES G. ANDREWS, USN AssistantChief for Morale Services TABLE OF CONTENTS Features Home From the Sea-A Big Welcome .................................................. 2 Tomea Cougar,and Join the Jet Set .................................................... 6 Meetthe FourHundred-They Keep Those Jets Flying ........................ 8 Floating Lab: USS Mizar .......................................................................... 10 GallupHas Jet-Up-and-Go Too .............................................................. 11 The Champs: They Made It With Es ...................................................... 12 Want Good Food? The Neys Have It ...................................................... 14 JunkPatrol .............................................................................................. 17 JunglePatrol ............................................................................................ 18 AnInterview WithMCPON: Master ChiefBlack .................................... 20 A Report on Judo: Black BeltNavy ........................................................ 22 TheHabitability Team ............................................................................ 35 CenterspreadFeature YourIdeas Are Worth Money! ............................................................... -
Harvard's Interaction with the Military
Harvard University & the US Military – an introspection INTRODUCTION Since the middle of the 20th century, Harvard has unjustifiably been labeled as a bastion of left wing, anti- military elitists in the forefront of the myopic “Blame America first” radicals. However, the predominate opinion of faculties & undergraduates at most universities have tended to skew to the left since the Baby Boomers revolted in the late 1960’s against the values and traditions of their “greatest generation” parents who won World War II. For several recent decades, the decline in patriotism and service to country among many young Americans has been compounded by narcissistic lack of responsibility, the pleasure principle driving promiscuous sex and the growing use of illegal drugs, revisionist history, the breakdown of the traditional family and biased multi-media communications. In reality, Harvard alumni reflect a bell curve of opinions and many have demonstrated courage, integrity and commitment by serving in the US military from the American War for Independence to the current World War against Islamic Fundamentalist terrorism. The prime purpose of this introspection is to proudly promulgate the untold story of the long Crimson line of Harvard warriors as a role model for current and future undergraduates at Harvard and elsewhere. A secondary objective of this paper is to review the positive Harvard policies of the past that have helped to nurture and develop many Harvard heroic veterans and identify what needs to be done for Harvard to again have a preeminent patriotic role in educating and developing future military leaders. Harvard’s interaction with the military Harvard College is the oldest university in the United States which was established by the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1636. -
Press Release
PRESS RELEASE The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum The Home of Franklin D. Roosevelt National Historic Site Hyde Park, New York (800) 337-8474 (845) 229-9115 MAY 11, 2010 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Cliff Laube, FDR Presidential Library, (845) 486-7745 or Franceska Macsali Urbin, National Park Service, at (845) 229-6214 THE FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND THE NATIONAL PARK SERVICE OFFER MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND EVENTS WITH SPECIAL GUESTS CONGRESSMAN SCOTT MURPHY, U.S. REPRESENTATIVE, 20TH DISTRICT NEW YORK AND COMMANDER ROBERT B. CHADWICK II, USN COMMANDING OFFICER, USS ROOSEVELT (DDG 80) HYDE PARK, NY - The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum and the Home of Franklin D. Roosevelt National Historical Site will host a series of public events over Memorial Day Weekend beginning Friday, May 28 through Monday, May 31, 2010. Special guests of the weekend are Congressman Scott Murphy, U.S. Representative, 20th District of New York and Commander Robert B. Chadwick II, USN Commander of the USS Roosevelt. Commander Chadwick the will deliver a multimedia presentation on Sunday, May 30, 2010 at 3:00 p.m. in the Henry A. Wallace Center. Congressman Murphy and Commander Chadwick will speak at the Rose Garden Memorial Service at 2:00 p.m. on Memorial Day, May 31, 2010. Prior to the Service in the Rose Garden they will be marching in the Memorial Day Parade in Hyde Park. • USO SHOW On Friday, May 28, at 7:00 p.m. in the Wallace Center, the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum will present its 7th annual USO Show. -
Cinematic Representations of Eleanor Roosevelt
Skidmore College Creative Matter MALS Final Projects, 1995-2019 MALS 5-16-2015 Suffering Saint, Asexual Victorian Woman, Or Queer Icon? Cinematic Representations of Eleanor Roosevelt Angela Beauchamp Skidmore College Follow this and additional works at: https://creativematter.skidmore.edu/mals_stu_schol Part of the American Film Studies Commons, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Commons, and the Film and Media Studies Commons Recommended Citation Beauchamp, Angela, "Suffering Saint, Asexual Victorian Woman, Or Queer Icon? Cinematic Representations of Eleanor Roosevelt" (2015). MALS Final Projects, 1995-2019. 98. https://creativematter.skidmore.edu/mals_stu_schol/98 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the MALS at Creative Matter. It has been accepted for inclusion in MALS Final Projects, 1995-2019 by an authorized administrator of Creative Matter. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Suffering Saint, Asexual Victorian Woman, Or Queer Icon? Cinematic Representations of Eleanor Roosevelt By Angela Beauchamp FINAL PROJECT SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL STUDIES SKIDMORE COLLEGE April 2015 Advisors: Thomas Lewis and Nina Fonoroff Suffering Saint, Asexual Victorian Woman, or Queer Icon? Cinematic Representations of Eleanor Roosevelt Skidmore College MALS Thesis Angela Beauchamp 4-13-2015 2 Contents lntroduction .................................................................................................................................................. -
European Journal of American Studies, 12-1 | 2017 “And with All She Lived with Casual Unawareness of Her Value to Civilization”
European journal of American studies 12-1 | 2017 Spring 2017: Special Issue - Eleanor Roosevelt and Diplomacy in the Public Interest “And with all she lived with casual unawareness of her value to civilization”: Close-reading Eleanor Roosevelt’s Autofabrication Sara Polak Electronic version URL: https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/11926 DOI: 10.4000/ejas.11926 ISSN: 1991-9336 Publisher European Association for American Studies Electronic reference Sara Polak, ““And with all she lived with casual unawareness of her value to civilization”: Close-reading Eleanor Roosevelt’s Autofabrication”, European journal of American studies [Online], 12-1 | 2017, document 7, Online since 12 March 2017, connection on 08 July 2021. URL: http:// journals.openedition.org/ejas/11926 ; DOI: https://doi.org/10.4000/ejas.11926 This text was automatically generated on 8 July 2021. Creative Commons License “And with all she lived with casual unawareness of her value to civilization”... 1 “And with all she lived with casual unawareness of her value to civilization”: Close-reading Eleanor Roosevelt’s Autofabrication Sara Polak 1 It is by now a commonplace to say that Eleanor Roosevelt was a curious feminist.i One of the most powerful women in American history, and yet someone who determinedly played the part of the “wife of,” Eleanor Roosevelt organized her own press conferences to which only female reporters were allowed access, yet she also responded to a young woman’s wish to temporarily prioritize her job over having children: “Since you married him, I should think a baby was something you would both want.”ii Thus, she regularly said and wrote things expressive of a traditional, even Victorian, perspective. -
USN Ship Designations
USN Ship Designations By Guy Derdall and Tony DiGiulian Updated 17 September 2010 Nomenclature History Warships in the United States Navy were first designated and numbered in system originating in 1895. Under this system, ships were designated as "Battleship X", "Cruiser X", "Destroyer X", "Torpedo Boat X" and so forth where X was the series hull number as authorized by the US Congress. These designations were usually abbreviated as "B-1", "C-1", "D-1", "TB-1," etc. This system became cumbersome by 1920, as many new ship types had been developed during World War I that needed new categories assigned, especially in the Auxiliary ship area. On 17 July 1920, Acting Secretary of the Navy Robert E. Coontz approved a standardized system of alpha-numeric symbols to identify ship types such that all ships were now designated with a two letter code and a hull number, with the first letter being the ship type and the second letter being the sub-type. For example, the destroyer tender USS Melville, first commissioned as "Destroyer Tender No. 2" in 1915, was now re-designated as "AD-2" with the "A" standing for Auxiliary, the "D" for Destroyer (Tender) and the "2" meaning the second ship in that series. Ship types that did not have a subclassification simply repeated the first letter. So, Battleships became "BB-X" and Destroyers became "DD-X" with X being the same number as previously assigned. Ships that changed classifications were given new hull numbers within their new designation series. The designation "USS" standing for "United States Ship" was adopted in 1907. -
Navy DDG-1000 Destroyer Program: Background, Oversight Issues, and Options for Congress
Order Code RL32109 Navy DDG-1000 Destroyer Program: Background, Oversight Issues, and Options for Congress Updated February 27, 2008 Ronald O’Rourke Specialist in National Defense Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division Navy DDG-1000 Destroyer Program: Background, Oversight Issues, and Options for Congress Summary The Navy is procuring a new kind of destroyer called the DDG-1000 (formerly the DD(X)). Navy plans call for procuring a total of seven DDG-1000s. The first two DDG-1000s were procured in FY2007 using split funding (i.e., incremental funding) across FY2007 and FY2008. The Navy estimates their combined procurement cost at $6,325 million. The Navy wants to procure the third DDG-1000 in FY2009; the Navy estimates its procurement cost at $2,653 million. The ship received $150 million in advance procurement funding in FY2008, and the Navy’s proposed FY2009 budget requests the remaining $2,503 million. The Navy’s proposed FY2009 budget also requests $51 million in advance procurement funding for the fourth DDG-51, which the Navy wants to procure in FY2010. The DDG-1000 program raises several potential oversight issues for Congress, including the accuracy of Navy cost estimates for the program, technical risk and system integration, the acquisition strategy for the third and subsequent ships in the program, the shared-production arrangement for the program, and the program’s potential implications for the shipbuilding industrial base. Potential options for Congress for the DDG-1000 program include supporting the Navy’s proposed plans, using a block-buy arrangement for procuring several DDG-1000s, and curtailing procurement of DDG-1000s, perhaps to help fund the procurement of other Navy ships. -
To Hold Folk Dance Festival at Clifton
Cedarville University DigitalCommons@Cedarville The eC darville Herald The eC darville Herald 5-27-1949 The edC arville Herald, May 27, 1949 Cedarville University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/cedarville_herald Part of the Civic and Community Engagement Commons, Family, Life Course, and Society Commons, Journalism Studies Commons, and the Mass Communication Commons Recommended Citation Cedarville University, "The eC darville Herald, May 27, 1949" (1949). The Cedarville Herald. 2383. https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/cedarville_herald/2383 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@Cedarville, a service of the Centennial Library. It has been accepted for inclusion in The eC darville Herald by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@Cedarville. For more information, please contact [email protected]. C E D A E V I L Ir'E ’ S PE R Y E A R _____ .... $1.56 OLDEST INSTITUTION Herald PER COPY Published in the Interest of Cedaryille and Bur rounding Community Volumu LXXIII Cedarville, Ohio, Friday, May 27, 1949 Number 25 r Jackets in 15 Church Services CHURCH OF GOD Inning Tie: Elwood C. Palmer, minister. iglOll Sunday school 10:00 a. m. Mrs. Beat Quakers David Strobridge, supt. M - i V - Morning worship 11:00. Ser Memorial Day Cedarville College and the Uni ^ 1' V ' • mon topic, “The Memorial That' * versity of Dayton played fifteen Plans have been completed for V Endures.” the Memorial Day services. Rev. innings to a 2-2 tie on the Cedar Children’s service at 6:30. Elwood Palmer will be the speak ville diamond Monday afternoon Evening service 7:45. -
TITLE EDRS PRICE ABSTRACT Heitzmann, William Ray Minicourses
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 133 821 EA 009 058 AUTHOR Heitzmann, William Ray TITLE Minicourses: Developments in Classroom Instruction. INSTITUTION National Education Association, Washington, D.C. PUB DATE 77 NOTE 116p- AVAILABLE FROM National Education Association, 1201 16th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 (Stock No. 1805-2-00, $3.75 paper; Stock No. 1806-0-00, $6.15 cloth) EDRS PRICE MF-$0.83 Plus Postage. HC Not Available from EDRS. DESCRIPTORS Bibliographies; Course Content; *Course Descriptions; *Courses; *Curriculum Development; Curriculum Planning; *Guidelines; *Models; Secondary Education ABSTRACT This monograph offers a realistic discussion of the minicourse movement, as well as practical step-by-step guidancefor teachers in the planning and implementation of minicourse curricula. Two minicourse models are presented (America's Maritime Heritage and Sports Literature), which include complete teacherresource lists and detailed instructions for setting up the minicourses. The author shows teachers how to develop course objectives, organize students in various groupings, allocate time and space, balance observation and study activities, and evaluate the effectiveness of thecourse. He also shows how minicourses can be developed for interdisciplinary studies, discusses the use of print and nonprint media, providesa selected bibliography of readings on minicourses, and presents lists of minicourses offered by schools in various parts of the United States. (Author/JG) *********************************************************************** Documents acquired by ERIC include many informal unpublished * materials not available from other sources. ERIC makesevery effort * * to obtain the best copy available. Nevertheless, items of marginal * * reproducibility are often encountered and this affects the quality * * of the microfiche and hardcopy reproductions ERIC makes available * via the ERIC Document Reproduction Service (EDRS).