1938-02-00 Index
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Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1891-1957, Record Group 85 New Orleans, Louisiana Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans, LA, 1910-1945
Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1891-1957, Record Group 85 New Orleans, Louisiana Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans, LA, 1910-1945. T939. 311 rolls. (~A complete list of rolls has been added.) Roll Volumes Dates 1 1-3 January-June, 1910 2 4-5 July-October, 1910 3 6-7 November, 1910-February, 1911 4 8-9 March-June, 1911 5 10-11 July-October, 1911 6 12-13 November, 1911-February, 1912 7 14-15 March-June, 1912 8 16-17 July-October, 1912 9 18-19 November, 1912-February, 1913 10 20-21 March-June, 1913 11 22-23 July-October, 1913 12 24-25 November, 1913-February, 1914 13 26 March-April, 1914 14 27 May-June, 1914 15 28-29 July-October, 1914 16 30-31 November, 1914-February, 1915 17 32 March-April, 1915 18 33 May-June, 1915 19 34-35 July-October, 1915 20 36-37 November, 1915-February, 1916 21 38-39 March-June, 1916 22 40-41 July-October, 1916 23 42-43 November, 1916-February, 1917 24 44 March-April, 1917 25 45 May-June, 1917 26 46 July-August, 1917 27 47 September-October, 1917 28 48 November-December, 1917 29 49-50 Jan. 1-Mar. 15, 1918 30 51-53 Mar. 16-Apr. 30, 1918 31 56-59 June 1-Aug. 15, 1918 32 60-64 Aug. 16-0ct. 31, 1918 33 65-69 Nov. 1', 1918-Jan. 15, 1919 34 70-73 Jan. 16-Mar. 31, 1919 35 74-77 April-May, 1919 36 78-79 June-July, 1919 37 80-81 August-September, 1919 38 82-83 October-November, 1919 39 84-85 December, 1919-January, 1920 40 86-87 February-March, 1920 41 88-89 April-May, 1920 42 90 June, 1920 43 91 July, 1920 44 92 August, 1920 45 93 September, 1920 46 94 October, 1920 47 95-96 November, 1920 48 97-98 December, 1920 49 99-100 Jan. -
University Archives Inventory
University Archives Inventory Record Group Number: UR001.03 Title: Burney Lynch Parkinson Presidential Records Date: 1926-1969 Bulk Date: 1932-1952 Extent: 42 boxes Creator: Burney Lynch Parkinson Administrative/Biographical Notes: Burney Lynch Parkinson (1887-1972) was an educator from Lincoln, Tennessee. He received his B.S. from Erskine College in 1909, and rose up the administrative ranks from English teacher in Laurens, South Carolina public schools. He received his M.A. from Peabody College in 1920, and Ph.D. from Peabody in 1926, after which he became president of Presbyterian College in Clinton, SC in 1927. He was employed as Director of Teacher Training, Certification, and Elementary Education at the Alabama Dept. of Education just before coming to MSCW to become president in 1932. In December 1932, the university was re-accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, ending the crisis brought on the purge of faculty under Governor Theodore Bilbo, but appropriations to the university were cut by 54 percent, and faculty and staff were reduced by 33 percent, as enrollment had declined from 1410 in 1929 to 804 in 1932. Parkinson authorized a study of MSCW by Peabody college, ultimately pursuing its recommendations to focus on liberal arts at the cost of its traditional role in industrial, vocational, and technical education. Building projects were kept to a minimum during the Parkinson years. Old Main was restored and named for Mary Calloway in 1938. Franklin Hall was converted to a dorm, and the Whitfield Gymnasium into a student center with the Golden Goose Tearoom inside. Parkinson Hall was constructed in 1951 and named for Dr. -
No 7, 3 February 1938
149 THE NEW ZEALAND G.AZETTE WELLINGTON, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1938. Proclaiming N alive Land to have become Crown Land. SCHEDULE. Area: Block. A, R, P. Survey District, [L.s.] GALWAY, Governor-General. Orakei 4A 2B 2 2 0 . Ran~itoto. By his Deputy, 4A4 9 3 38 MICHAEL MYERS. Given under the hand of His Excellency the Governor A PROCLAMATION. General of the Dominion of New Zealand, and issued under the Seal of that Dominion, this 28th day of P UR~UANT to section four hundred and fifty-four of the January, 1938. Native Land Act, 1931, I, George Vere Arnndell, FRANK LANGSTONE, Viscount Galway, Governor-General of the Dominion of New For the Native Minister. Zealand, being satisfied that the purchase of the Native land described in the Schedule hereto has been duly completed Gon SAVE THE Krno ! by or on behalf of the Crown under the authority of the said Act, do hereby proclaim that the said land has become Crown land. Land proclaimed as Road in Block IV, M otueka Survey District, W aimea County. SCHEDULE. [L.S.] GALWAY, Governor-General. 0HUANOA North 3A 1 Block, Pihanga Survey District: Area, By his Deputy, 90 acres. MICHAEL MYERS. Given under the hand of His Excellency the Governor A PROCLAMATION. General of the Dominion of New Zealand, and issued N pursuance and exercise of the powers conferred by sec under the Seal of that Dominion, this 25th day of I tion twelve of the Land Act, 1924, I, George Vere January, 1938. Arundell, Viscount Galway, Governor-General of the Do FRANK LANGSTONE, minion of New Zealand, do hereby proclaim as road the land For the Native Minister. -
The Anschluss Movement and British Policy
THE ANSCHLUSS MOVEMENT AND BRITISH POLICY: MAY 1937 - MARCH 1938 by Elizabeth A. Tarte, A.B. A 'l11esis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School, Marquette University, in Part ial Fulfillment of the Re quirements f or the Degree of Master of Arts Milwaukee, Wisconsin May, 1967 i1 PREFACE For many centuri.es Austria. bad been closely eom'lect E!d \'lieh the German states. 111 language and eulture. Austri.a and Germany had always looked to each other. AS late as the t~tentieth century. Austria .st111 clung to her traditional leadership in Germany . In the perlod following the First World War, Austria continued to lo(!)k to Germany for leadership. Aus tria, beset by numerous economic and social problems. made many pleas for uni on with her German neighbor. From 1919 to 1933 all ;novas on the part of Austria and Germany for union, -v.71\ether political oreeon01;n1c. were th"larted by the signatories of the pea.ce treaties. Wl ,th the entrance of Adolf Hitler onto the European political stage, the movement fQr the Anschluss .. - the union of Germany and Austria .- t ook on a different light. Austrians no longer sought \.Ulion with a Germany v.ilich was dominated by Hitler. The net"l National $Gclalist Gertna,n Reich aimed at: the early acq'U1Si ,tiQn of Austria. The latter "(vas i mportant to the lteich fGr its agricultural and Batural reSources and would i mprove its geopolitical and military position in Europe. In 1934 the National Soci aU.sts assaSSinated Dr .. U.:. £tlto1bot''t Pollfuas, the Aust~i ..\n Cbaneellot'l in ,an 8.'ttcmp't to tillkltl c:ronet:Ql or his: eountry. -
Inventory Dep.288 BBC Scottish
Inventory Dep.288 BBC Scottish National Library of Scotland Manuscripts Division George IV Bridge Edinburgh EH1 1EW Tel: 0131-466 2812 Fax: 0131-466 2811 E-mail: [email protected] © Trustees of the National Library of Scotland Typescript records of programmes, 1935-54, broadcast by the BBC Scottish Region (later Scottish Home Service). 1. February-March, 1935. 2. May-August, 1935. 3. September-December, 1935. 4. January-April, 1936. 5. May-August, 1936. 6. September-December, 1936. 7. January-February, 1937. 8. March-April, 1937. 9. May-June, 1937. 10. July-August, 1937. 11. September-October, 1937. 12. November-December, 1937. 13. January-February, 1938. 14. March-April, 1938. 15. May-June, 1938. 16. July-August, 1938. 17. September-October, 1938. 18. November-December, 1938. 19. January, 1939. 20. February, 1939. 21. March, 1939. 22. April, 1939. 23. May, 1939. 24. June, 1939. 25. July, 1939. 26. August, 1939. 27. January, 1940. 28. February, 1940. 29. March, 1940. 30. April, 1940. 31. May, 1940. 32. June, 1940. 33. July, 1940. 34. August, 1940. 35. September, 1940. 36. October, 1940. 37. November, 1940. 38. December, 1940. 39. January, 1941. 40. February, 1941. 41. March, 1941. 42. April, 1941. 43. May, 1941. 44. June, 1941. 45. July, 1941. 46. August, 1941. 47. September, 1941. 48. October, 1941. 49. November, 1941. 50. December, 1941. 51. January, 1942. 52. February, 1942. 53. March, 1942. 54. April, 1942. 55. May, 1942. 56. June, 1942. 57. July, 1942. 58. August, 1942. 59. September, 1942. 60. October, 1942. 61. November, 1942. 62. December, 1942. 63. January, 1943. -
Escape to Shanghai: 1938-1940
Flight to Shanghai, 1938-1940: The Larger Setting Avraham Altman and Irene Eber Between November 1938 and August 1939, approximately 20,000 Central European refugees, most of them Jews, landed in Shanghai. They had sailed on German, Italian, and Japanese ships and, in the short span of eight months, constituted a massive exodus. What, however, is the background to this phenomenon, and, moreover, why did it rapidly diminish after August 1939?1 In order to answer these questions, we must look at the larger setting within which this process took place—something that, until now, has not been investigated. The Background In 1933, when Hitler came to power, there were around 500,000 Jews in Germany and 185,000 in Austria.2 In contrast to the gradual pressure over several years that had been exerted on the Jews in Germany to leave the country, when Austria came under German rule in March 1938, the Jews were immediately and ruthlessly persecuted. By launching an organized terror campaign against them—confiscating their property, depriving them of all means of livelihood, and incarcerating Jewish men in concentration camps—the Nazis forced the Austrian Jews to 1This paper is part of a larger project on the Jewish communities in modern China under Japanese occupation. The authors wish to thank the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and its Truman Research Institute for their partial support of this research. Irene Eber thanks the J.K. Fairbank Research Center, Harvard University, where additional research was carried out in 1996-1997, and the Andover Newton Theological School where she was Visiting Judson Professor. -
Scrapbook Inventory
E COLLECTION, H. L. MENCKEN COLLECTION, ENOCH PRATT FREE LIBRARY Scrapbooks of Clipping Service Start and End Dates for Each Volume Volume 1 [sealed, must be consulted on microfilm] Volume 2 [sealed, must be consulted on microfilm] Volume 3 August 1919-November 1920 Volume 4 December 1920-November 1921 Volume 5 December 1921-June-1922 Volume 6 May 1922-January 1923 Volume 7 January 1923-August 1923 Volume 8 August 1923-February 1924 Volume 9 March 1924-November 1924 Volume 10 November 1924-April 1925 Volume 11 April 1925-September 1925 Volume 12 September 1925-December 1925 Volume 13 December 1925-February 1926 Volume 14 February 1926-September 1926 Volume 15 1926 various dates Volume 16 July 1926-October 1926 Volume 17 October 1926-December 1926 Volume 18 December 1926-February 1927 Volume 19 February 1927-March 1927 Volume 20 April 1927-June 1927 Volume 21 June 1927-August 1927 Volume 22 September 1927-October 1927 Volume 23 October 1927-November 1927 Volume 24 November 1927-February 1928 Volume 25 February 1928-April 1928 Volume 26 May 1928-July 1928 Volume 27 July 1928-December 1928 Volume 28 January 1929-April 1929 Volume 29 May 1929-November 1929 Volume 30 November 1929-February 1930 Volume 31 March 1930-April 1930 Volume 32 May 1930-August 1930 Volume 33 August 1930-August 1930. Volume 34 August 1930-August 1930 Volume 35 August 1930-August 1930 Volume 36 August 1930-August 1930 Volume 37 August 1930-September 1930 Volume 38 August 1930-September 1930 Volume 39 August 1930-September 1930 Volume 40 September 1930-October 1930 Volume -
Wanted Washington, Friday, February 11, 1938
VOLUME 3 NUMBER 30 Wanted Washington, Friday, February 11, 1938 PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. plemented by Supplements Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 4 and Revised Truck Mine Price Schedule No. 1, and havihg determined E x e c u t iv e O rder that the provisions of sub-sections (a) and (b) of Part H AMENDMENT OF REGULATION VUI OF REGULATIONS GOVERNING of Section 4 of the Act and the purposes thereof will be APPOINTMENT OF UNCLASSIFIED LABORERS carried out more effectively by supplementing the aforesaid schedules and supplements by a further supplement as here By virtue of and pursuant to the authority vested in me inafter provided: by section 1753 of the Revised Statutes of the United States Now, therefore, pursuant to Act of Congress entitled “ An (U. S. C., title 5, sec. 631), it is hereby ordered that the first Act to regulate interstate commerce in bituminous coal, paragraph of Regulation v m of the civil service regulations and for other purposes” (Public, No. 48, 75th Cong., 1st governing the appointment of unclassified laborers be, and sess.), known as the Bituminous Coal Act of 1937, the Na it is hereby, amended to read as follows: tional Bituminous Coal Commission hereby orders: “A person having an unclassified competitive status, or 1. That the minimum prices of coals of code members eligibility for such status through competitive examination, produced within District No. 1, established in “Price Sched at the time he is separated without delinquency or miscon ule No. 1—District No. 1”, as supplemented by Supplements duct from an unclassified laborer position in the Federal Nos. -
Printed Materials
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT LIBRARY HYDE PARK, NEW YORK PRINTED MATERIALS Container 1 Agriculture, Department of Circulars Consumers= Guide, v. 1, nos. 1-13, Sept. 14, 1933 - Mar 12, 1934 Consumers= Guide, v. 1, nos. 14-26, Mar 26, 1934 - Sept 17, 1934 Consumers= Guide, v. 2, nos. 1-13, Oct 15, 1934 - Apr 22, 1935 Consumers= Guide, v. 2, nos. 14-26, May 6, 1935 - Oct 28, 1935 Consumers= Guide, v. 3, nos. 1-13, Dec 2, 1935 - July 13, 1936 Container 2 Agriculture, Department of Consumers= Guide, v. 3, nos. 14-26, July 27, 1936 - Feb 22, 1937 Consumers= Guide, v. 4, nos. 1-26, Mar 8, 1937 - Mar 28, 1938, index Consumers= Guide, v. 5, nos. 1-20, Apr 11, 1938 - Mar 27, 1939, index Consumers= Guide, v. 6, nos. 1-20, Apr 15, 1939 - Sept 1940, index Consumers= Guide, v. 7, nos. 1-20, Oct 1, 1940-Oct 15, 1941, index Consumers= Guide, v. 8, nos. 1-20, Nov 1, 1941 - Nov 1942 Consumers= Guide, v. 9, nos. 1-12, Nov 1942 - Nov 1943 Container 3 Agriculture, Department of Consumers= Guide, v. 10, nos. 1-13, Dec 1943 - Dec 1944 Consumers= Guide, v. 11, nos. 1-12, Jan 1945 - Dec 1945 Consumers= Guide, v. 12, nos. 1- 6, Jan 1946 - June 1946 Laws Applicable to the United States Department of Agriculture, 1935 Laws Relating to Agriculture, 1938 Letters from the Secretary of Agriculture, 1928, 1937 Library Miscellaneous Miscellaneous Publications, 48-97 Container 4 Agriculture, Department of Miscellaneous Publications, 155-182 Miscellaneous Publications, 202-298 Miscellaneous Publications, 301-343 Miscellaneous Publications, 345-370 1 Container 5 Agriculture, Department -
Aftermath of Munich Strategic Priorities in British Rearmament October 1938
AFTERMATH OF MUNICH STRATEGIC PRIORITIES IN BRITISH REARMAMENT OCTOBER 1938 - AUGUST 1939. IAN RODERICK GRIMVOOD M. P h il. VAR STUDIES. 1 UMI Number: U615185 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Dissertation Publishing UMI U615185 Published by ProQuest LLC 2014. Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 7 k - b l + - ABSTRACT, Slessor, Douglas, Spaight etal justified the Munich Agreement as providing a 'breathing space' to accelerate British rearmament. Whilst Chamberlain realised Britain's military weakness, feared a German 'knock-out blow', and underestimated the Czech Army^ His prime motive was to prevent, not postpone, a war which he abhorred. Nevertheless he realised the need to accelerate defensive measures such as fighter aircraft, anti-aircraft guns and civil defence. A n x ie tie s th a t Germany would invade Holland, s e iz in g strategic airfields and the Channel Parts, over ruled the policy of 'limited Liability'. French pressure, and Lord Halifax's support enabled Hore-Belisha to raise equipment for an enlarged field force. Chamberlain opposed conscription for fear of alienating the trade unions; whilst he believed a Ministry of Supply would lose industrialists' co-operation with rearmament and undermine economic recovery. -
School Yearbooks Schenectady City, County, and Outside of Schenectady County
Grems-Doolittle Library Schenectady County Historical Society 32 Washington Ave., Schenectady, NY 12305 (518) 374-0263 [email protected] School Yearbooks Schenectady City, County, and Outside of Schenectady County Schenectady City Elementary and Intermediate/Middle Schools Central Park School – Scrip; Class Night June 1924 (3 c.) June 1930 (3 c.) June 1934 (3 c.) January 1925 (3 c.) January 1931 (3 c.) January 1935 (3 c.) January 1926 June 1931 June 1935 (3 c.) January 1928 June 1932 January 1936 June 1928 January 1933 (2 c.) January 1937 June 1929 (2 c.) June 1933 (3 c.) June 1939 January 1930 January 1934 (3 c.) June 1940 McKinley Intermediate School June 1928 January 1929 June 1929 Mont Pleasant Middle School 1995 2002 Oneida School – The Arrow June 1929 1968 1971-1972 January 1938 1970-1971 Steinmetz School 1983-1984 (2 c.) Schenectady City – Elementary and Intermediate/Middle Schools, cont. Van Corlaer Middle School June 1950 Washington Irving School – The Sketch Book January 1939 June 1942 1945 June 1939 June 1943 (2 c.) 1946 January 1942 June 1944 1952 Schenectady City – High Schools Excelsior High School – The Annual 1919 1923 (2 c.) 1924 Linton High School – Lintonaire 1958 1969 1974 1959 (2 c.) 1970 1976 1960 (2 c.) 1971 1979 1963 1972 1980 Mont Pleasant High School – The Mephis; The Watchtower; Montaneer 1933 1951 1970 January 1934 1952 1976 June 1934 1953 1977 January/June 1935 1954 (2 c.) 1978 1936 (3 c.) 1955 (2 c.) 1979 1937 (3 c.) 1957 1980 1938 (3 c.) 1958 1981 January 1941 1961 (2 c.) 1983 June 1943/Jan. -
1938 Annual Report
ANNUAL REPORT OF THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED JUNE 30 1938 UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON: 1938 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, Washington, D. C, - - - - - - Price 15 cent. FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION GARLAND S. FERGUSON Chairman 1 CHARLES H. MARCH EWIN L. DAVIS WILLIAM A. AYRES ROBERT E. FREER, OTIS B. JOHNSON, Secretary FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSIONERS--1915-41 Name State from which appointed Period of service Joseph E. Davies Wisconsin Mar.16, 1915-Mar. 18, 1918. Edward N. Hurley Illinois Mar.16, 1915-Jan. 31, 1917. William J. Harris Georgia Mar.16, 1915-May 31, 1918. Will H. Parry Washington Mar.16, 1915-A p r. 21, 1917. George Rublee New Hampshire Mar.16, 1915-May 14, 1916. William B. Colver Minnesota Mar.16, 1917-Sept. 25, 1920. John Franklin Fort New Jersey Mar. 16, 1917-Nov. 30,1919. Victor Murdock Kansas Sept. 4, 1917-Jan. 31, 1924. Huston Thompson Colorado Jan. 17, 1919-Sept. 25, 1926. Nelson B. Gaskill New Jersey Feb. l. 1921-Feb. 24, 1925. John Garland Pollard Virginia Mar. 6, 1920-Sept. 25, 1921. John F. Nugent Idaho Jan.15, 1921-Sept. 25, 1927. Vernon W. Van Fleet Indiana June 26, 1922-July 31, 1926. Charles W. Hunt Iowa June 16, 1924-Sept. 25,1932. William E. Humphrey Washington Feb.25, 1925-Oct. 7, 1933. Abram F. Myers Iowa Aug. 2, 1925-Jan. 15, 1929. Edgar A. McCulloch Arkansas Feb.11, 1927-Jan. 23, 1933. Garland S. Ferguson North Carolina Nov.14, 1927, Charles H. March Minnesota Feb. 1, 1929.