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Walloomsack Reviewvolume5.Indd
Reviewspring2011.indd, Spread 14 of 28 - Pages (14, 43) 4/28/2011 10:04 AM deceased’s soul from the material world, or the world as we know it, to the spiritual realms of heaven.26 In this sense, the imagery works beautifully with the inscription Fifty years ago, the first Democrat directly below it, describing Dewey’s own transition from his worldly profession to in a century was elected statewide; “the Sublime Employment of Immortality”: today the Green Mountains are solid blue In Memory of the Revd. Mr, JEDIDIAH DEWEY, First Pastor of the Tyler Resch Church in Bennington; Who after a Laborious Life in the Gospel he election of 1958, more than fifty years ago now, signaled the start of Ministry Resign’d his Office in TVermont’s nearly 180-degree political transformation. Vermont was a solid God’s Temple for the Sublime one-party Republican state for more than a century, and today is the bluest of the Employment of Immortality. blue, with arguably the most progressive delegation in Washington, composed of two liberal Democrats and an Independent socialist. And no Republican. Other carved elements that make up the stone’s complex iconographic program The election of 2010 gave Vermont a Democratic governor, Peter Shumlin, and include a decorative vine-like border, curling leafage centered by a heart, two trees, that party held onto solid control of both the House and Senate. and a pair of birds flanking a butterfly. Standard design elements such as these were Back in 1936 Vermont’s reputation for Republicanism was enhanced when it often imbued with symbolic meanings by their original audience, which are lost on was one of only two states that stood with Alf Landon while the rest of the nation us today. -
Missouri Historical Review
Historiostl ZR,evie*w BOYS and GIRLS! Tlbu can helpyour Uncle Sam Win the War Save jyour Quarters Buy War Savings Stamps The State Historical Society of Missouri COLUMBIA, MISSOURI HgisiSllill^ The front cover illustration is one of artist-author M James Montgomery Flagg's World War I patriotic posters, g] Flagg, born in 1877, studied at the Art Students League M in New York and at Herkomer's Art School in Bushey, M England; he later studied with Victor Marec of Paris. An illustrator for various magazines including St. Nicholas Magazine, Judge and Life, Flagg's portrait paintings were exhibited at the Paris Salon and the National Academy of Design. He prepared patriotic posters during both World Wars. His writings include the books: Yankee Girls Abroad, Why They Married, City People and the autobiographical H Roses and Buckshot. Flagg died on May 27, 1960. || Flagg's poster is one of many varied items in the So- M ciety's latest gallery and corridor exhibition entitled, "Con- [§] flict: Men, Events and Artists." Among the artists and || lithographers included in the exhibition are: George Caleb jS Bingham, Thomas Hart Benton, Daniel R. Fitzpatrick, S. J. H Ray, George Wilhelm Fasel, Louis Kurz, Alexander Allison, g| Gladys Wheat and William Knox. Paintings, lithographs, B posters and drawings are some of the items constituting SI the exhibit. "Conflict: Men, Events and Artists" can be n viewed Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. M m MISSOURI HISTORICAL REVIEW Published Quarterly by THE STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF MISSOURI COLUMBIA, MISSOURI RICHARD S. -
October 14, 1976 I Yol.Xll, No
-v who liked our music a lot and some who new album (and other alternative didn't tike it at ¿ll) and after struggling a.lbums). Their letters tell incredible life with the question of oubeach vs. slories, sharing their eicitement, their compromise among ourselves, we fear, their discoveries, their risks. Being decided to do ourthird album on Red- a small company, they figured I might wood, once again. I am telieved that I'm gettheirletters. And I dol There is the not having to deal with the pressure of joy that must match the disappointment the industry but I'm sad when I think of in nof reaching all the women who don't all the people who don't have (oreven have access to an FM radio or altetnative October 14, 1976 I Yol.Xll, No. 34 know about) any optigns. So they watch concerts or womens' records etc. Alice Coopei whip a woman in one of his Right now Redwood Records is only on shocking displays recently performed on the distributing arm for the records and 4. Continental Walk Converges certainly bad news the Billboard Rock Music Awards. songbooks produced to date. We are not Washington / Crace Hedemann for the Portuguese Undet current conditions "energizing- working class, since it means, atbest, capital" can only be accomplishedby How are we going to get options to going to do any new things fot a while. and Murray Rosenblith But we hope that you will continue to the maintenance of the status quo. How- speedups, cutting real'rvages and people? Some people ate working within 6. -
Humanities 1
Humanities 1 Humanities HUM 1100. Philosophy: Good Questions for Life. 2 Units. HUM 1100A. Studies in Humanities: The Classical Word. 2-3 Unit. HUM 1110. Literature: Reading Cultures. 2 Units. HUM 1110A. Studies in the Humanities: Renaissance To Enlightenment. 2-3 Unit. HUM 1120. Art History: Visual Literacy. 2 Units. HUM 1120A. Studies in the Humanities: Contemporary Voices. 2-3 Unit. HUM 1510. Independent Study: Humanities. 1-5 Unit. HUM 2500. Prior Learning: Humanities. 1-5 Unit. HUM 3030. Twenty-First Century Latin American Social Movements. 3-4 Unit. HUM 3040. Birds in the Field & Human Imagination. 3-4 Unit. The purpose of this course is to engage a tradition that spans millennia and every culture: a human fascination with birds. Taking a multidisciplinary approach, we will explore birds through many lens and avenues. As naturalists, we will seek out birds in the wild, experimenting with different approaches to observation. We will consider common themes in the life circumstances of birds, as well as explore the impact of human civilization on the ecology of natural habitats. Further, we will explore birds as symbols of the human imagination as expressed. HUM 3070. Borderlands: Exploring Identities & Borders. 3-4 Unit. HUM 3090. Queer Perspectives: Applications in Contemporary Soc. 3-4 Unit. This course critically addresses the term ?queer,? its changing definition, and the particular ways in which it has described, marginalized and excluded people, communities and modes of thought. Using both academic and empirical examples, students will explore and uncover how queer thought has influenced such diverse human endeavors as civil rights, athletics, literature, pop culture, and science. -
OFFICIAL RETURN of VOTES Democratic Party Race Candidate
PRIMARY ELECTIONS AUGUST 26, 2014 Pursuant to the Primary Election Warning recorded in the Town Records, Book 20, page 339, the Polls were declared open at 7:00 A.M. by the Town Clerk in the three polling districts. The three polling districts are stated in the Warning. At 6:55 P.M. the Town Clerk warned that the polls would close in 5 minutes. At 7:00 P.M. the polls were declared closed. After declaring the polls closed a printout from the Accu-Vote ballot tabulator containing the results was run. The “unofficial” returns were then distributed at the polling places. Ballot summaries were compiled by the Town Clerk and evening election workers. Upon completion of the count, all voted ballots were sealed in boxes. All unvoted ballots, tabulators with sealed memory packs, printouts, tally sheets and district supply boxes were returned to the Town Clerk’s office. The following persons were declared elected in their respective primary races. OFFICIAL RETURN OF VOTES Democratic Party Race Candidate Write-In Dist 1 Dist 2 Dist 3 Total Representative to Peter Welch 263 311 362 936 Congress The following individuals received 1 vote each: Pat McPike, Mark Donka, Paige Martin, Donald Russell, Pat Lapan, Evan Chadwick, and Matthew Andrews. Governor H. Br ooke Paige 27 28 35 90 Peter Shumlin 229 281 335 845 Scott Milne 0 4 3 7 Emily Peyton 3 2 0 5 Doug Racine 2 0 2 4 The following individuals received 1 vote each: Matt Dunne, William Wilmot, Steve Berry, Doug Cox, Bernie Sanders, Barbara Holliday, and Bruce Lisman. -
The Counterculture of the 1960S in the United States: an ”Alternative Consciousness”? Mélisa Kidari
The Counterculture of the 1960s in the United States: An ”Alternative Consciousness”? Mélisa Kidari To cite this version: Mélisa Kidari. The Counterculture of the 1960s in the United States: An ”Alternative Conscious- ness”?. Literature. 2012. dumas-00930240 HAL Id: dumas-00930240 https://dumas.ccsd.cnrs.fr/dumas-00930240 Submitted on 14 Jan 2014 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. The Counterculture of the 1960s in the United States: An "Alternative Consciousness"? Nom : KIDARI Prénom : Mélisa UFR ETUDES ANGLOPHONES Mémoire de master 1 professionnel - 12 crédits Spécialité ou Parcours : parcours PLC Sous la direction de Andrew CORNELL Année universitaire 2011-2012 The Counterculture of the 1960s in the United States: An "Alternative Consciousness"? Nom : KIDARI Prénom : Mélisa UFR ETUDES ANGLOPHONES Mémoire de master 1 professionnel - 12 crédits Spécialité ou Parcours : parcours PLC Sous la direction de Andrew CORNELL Année universitaire 2011-2012 Acknowledgements I would like to thank Mr. Andrew Cornell for his precious advice and his -
For All the People
Praise for For All the People John Curl has been around the block when it comes to knowing work- ers’ cooperatives. He has been a worker owner. He has argued theory and practice, inside the firms where his labor counts for something more than token control and within the determined, but still small uni- verse where labor rents capital, using it as it sees fit and profitable. So his book, For All the People: The Hidden History of Cooperation, Cooperative Movements, and Communalism in America, reached expectant hands, and an open mind when it arrived in Asheville, NC. Am I disappointed? No, not in the least. Curl blends the three strands of his historical narrative with aplomb, he has, after all, been researching, writing, revising, and editing the text for a spell. Further, I am certain he has been responding to editors and publishers asking this or that. He may have tired, but he did not give up, much inspired, I am certain, by the determination of the women and men he brings to life. Each of his subtitles could have been a book, and has been written about by authors with as many points of ideological view as their titles. Curl sticks pretty close to the narrative line written by worker own- ers, no matter if they came to work every day with a socialist, laborist, anti-Marxist grudge or not. Often in the past, as with today’s worker owners, their firm fails, a dream to manage capital kaput. Yet today, as yesterday, the democratic ideals of hundreds of worker owners support vibrantly profitable businesses. -
"That [Zinn] Was Considered Radical Says Way More About This Society Than It Does About Him." (Herbert 2010)
-~(~~- REMEMBERING ZINN: CONFESSIONS OF A RADICAL HISTORIAN MICHAEL SNODGRASS "That [Zinn] was considered radical says way more about this society than it does about him." (Herbert 2010) In the mid-1990s, at the University of Texas, I and my fellow traveling graduate students organized a Radical History Reading Group. As scholarship, "radical history" implied two things for us: a critical rendering of the past from a leftist perspective, and a scholarship that examines history "from the roots," not only recovering the silenced perspectives of ordinary people but also foregrounding their grassroots and progressive movements that challenged entrenched systems of power and injustice. Our reading group was a modest attempt to engage with what we considered to be cutting-edge scholarship, to share and discuss our own research papers, and to then retreat to the hole-in the-wall bars along Austin's Guadalupe Street. Our own interests as radical historians ranged widely: Cuban slave rebels, the American Indian Movement, Argentine anarchists, southern abolitionists, bandits in the US-Mexican borderlands. But we all embraced the idea that the past should be analyzed and narrated from the perspective of the oppressed, and of those who struggled on behalf of the underdogs. So upon receiving funding from our history department to host our first guest speaker we instinctively invited Howard Zinn, a self-confessed radical, a historian - a Radical Historian like us. Professor Zinn accepted our offer. It was 1995. The first revised edition of A People's History of the United States was newly released. His sweeping 600-page survey of U.S. -
Howard Zinn on Dissent, Democracy, and Education
REVITALIZING POLITICS NOW AND THEN: HOWARD ZINN ON DISSENT, DEMOCRACY, AND EDUCATION Aaron Cooley This paper presents a discussion of Howard Zinn's intellectual and political ideas. Through the analysis of selections from his immense body of work, several interrelated themes emerge. Drawing more attention to these notions of dissent and democracy is crucial to revi talizing education at all levels and vital to advancing the public dis course towards progressive goals. Howard's remarkable life and work are summarized best in his own words. His primary concern, he explained, was "the countless small actions of unknown people" that lie at the roots of "those great moments" that enter the historical record-a record that will be pro foundly misleading, and seriously disempowering, if it is tom from these roots as it passes through the filters of doctrine and dogma. His life was always closely intertwined with his writings and innu merable talks and interviews. It was devoted, selflessly, to empow erment of the unknown people who brought about great moments. (Chomsky 2010,2) Introduction In life, Howard Zinn was controversial. Upon his passing in 2010, even some of his obituaries were unable to avoid controversy. The prime and sorry example was a brief story on National Public Radio that discussed his work and its context: Professor, author and political activist Howard Zinn died yesterday. Considered the people's historian, Zinn's book, A People's History of the United States, was unabashedly leftist. It celebrated the historical contribution of feminists, workers and people of color when other books did not. -
March 31, 1931, Special Election) 2 Warren R
1923 (November 6, 1923, Special Election) 1 Porter H. Dale [Republican] 30,388 65.7% Park H. Pollard [Democratic] 15,580 33.7% Marshall J. Hapgood [Conservation] 248 0.5% Scattering 70 0.2% Total votes cast 46,286 100.0% 1 William Dillingham died July 12, 1923; election held to fill vacancy. 1926 Porter H. Dale [Republican] 50,364 70.8% Porter H. Dale [Prohibition] 1,922 2.7% James E. Kennedy [Democratic] 18,878 26.5% James E. Kennedy [Republican] 12 0.0% Total votes cast 71,176 100.0% 1928 Frank L. Greene [Republican] 93,136 71.6% Fred C. Martin [Democratic] 37,030 28.4% Total votes cast 130,166 100.0% 1931 (March 31, 1931, Special Election) 2 Warren R. Austin [Republican] 27,661 64.0% Stephen M. Driscoll [Democratic] 15,360 35.6% Scattering 183 0.4% Total votes cast 43,204 100.0% 2 Frank L. Greene died December 17, 1930; Frank C. Partridge was appointed December 23, 1930, and served until the special election was held. 1932 Porter H. Dale [Republican] 74,319 55.1% Fred C. Martin [Democratic] 60,455 44.9% Total votes cast 134,774 100.0% 1934 (January 16, 1934, Special Election) 3 Ernest W. Gibson, Sr. [Republican] 28,436 58.2% Harry W. Witters [Democratic] 20,382 41.7% Scattering 12 0.0% Total votes cast 48,830 100.0% 3 Porter H. Dale died October 6, 1933; Gibson was appointed November 21, 1933, pending a special election. General Election Results: U. S. Senator, p. 2 of 8 1934 Warren R. -
Joseph Hansen Papers
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf78700585 No online items Register of the Joseph Hansen papers Finding aid prepared by Joseph Hansen Hoover Institution Archives 434 Galvez Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA, 94305-6003 (650) 723-3563 [email protected] © 1998, 2006, 2012 Register of the Joseph Hansen 92035 1 papers Title: Joseph Hansen papers Date (inclusive): 1887-1980 Collection Number: 92035 Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Archives Language of Material: English Physical Description: 109 manuscript boxes, 1 oversize box, 3 envelopes, 1 audio cassette(46.2 linear feet) Abstract: Speeches and writings, correspondence, notes, minutes, reports, internal bulletins, resolutions, theses, printed matter, sound recording, and photographs relating to Leon Trotsky, activities of the Socialist Workers Party in the United States, and activities of the Fourth International in Latin America, Western Europe and elsewhere. Physical Location: Hoover Institution Archives Creator: Hansen, Joseph, Access The collection is open for research; materials must be requested at least two business days in advance of intended use. Publication Rights For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Archives. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Joseph Hansen papers, [Box no., Folder no. or title], Hoover Institution Archives. Acquisition Information Acquired by the Hoover Institution Archives in 1992. Accruals Materials may have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared. To determine if this has occurred, find the collection in Stanford University's online catalog at http://searchworks.stanford.edu . Materials have been added to the collection if the number of boxes listed in the online catalog is larger than the number of boxes listed in this finding aid. -
Extensions of Remarks
December 1, 1975 EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS 38023 Whitaker, William Drake Wilson, Robert Lawrence Young, Stephen Grant White, Donald Clark Wlltamuth, Richard Ernest Zmorzenski, Frank Peter Whitely, John Epes, Jr. Winn, Robert Monte Zolman, Richard Ward Whftley, Wllliam Robert Wishart, Thomas Tinker The following named women officers of the Whitney, Richard MerrUl, Jr. Wolfe, James Bryant U.S. Navy, for permanen·t promotion to the Wicklund, Robert Montgomery Woltersdorf, Leonard Oscar grade of commander in the line subject to Wigfall, George H., Jr. Womack, Thomas Folts qualification therefor as provided by law: Wilcox, Mack Rudolph Wood, James Erastus, III Botzum, Diane Wilcox, Wayland Edward Woodard, John Sanford Coye, Beth Frances Wilder, Wallace Gene Woodford, Duval Sterling Delarot, Anna Marie Wileen, Gordon Charles Worthington, George Rhodes Derrough, Lois Albertine Wllgenbusch, Ronald Charles Worthington, James T., II Hazard, Roberta Louise Wilkes, Gilbert Vanburen, III Wright, George Frederick Hurlbut, Bonny Aloha Wilkinson, Robert Bailey, Jr. Wright, Hendon 0. James, Mary Catherine Willenbucher, Marshall R. Wright, Lindell Wayne Lee, Linda Marie Williams, David Arthur Wyckoff, Roger David Nyce, Barbara Regina Williams, Douglas Allan Wynn, Hugh John Richardson, Linda Pond WUliams, Hugh Thomas Wyttenbach, Richard Harring Underwood, Shirley Joa.n Williams, Windell Vance Yakubek, Paul Marsik Weber, Joyce Ann Williamson, Mark Humphrey Yarborough, Jerry Olin W1111ams, Barbara Mary Willimon, Henry Jack, Jr. Yeske, Lanny Alan Willoz, Clifford Paul, Jr. Yeutter. Phillip Eugene Executive nomination received by the Willsey, John Michael York, Milton Ward Senate on December 1, 1975: Wilmot, Frederick Eugene Wilson, Ashley Vannorden York, Thomas Andrew, Jr. SUPREME COURT OF THE UNrrED STATES Wilson, James Alexander, Jr.