REGISTER 1940-1941 Er Ter with ANNOUNCEMENTS for 1941-1942
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Appreciations of Richard Harding Davis
1 APPRECIATIONS Gouverneur Morris Booth Tarkington Charles Dana Gibson E. L. Burlingame Augustus Thomas Theodore Roosevelt Irvin S. Cobb 2 John Fox, Jr Finley Peter Dunne Winston Churchill Leonard Wood John T. McCutcheon R. H. D. BY GOUVERNEUR MORRIS "And they rise to their feet as He passes by, gentlemen unafraid." He was almost too good to be true. In addition, the gods loved him, and so he had to die young. Some people think that a man of fifty-two is middle-aged. But if R. H. D. had lived to be a hundred, he would never have grown old. It is not generally known that the name of his other brother was Peter Pan. Within the year we have played at pirates together, at the taking of sperm whales; and we have ransacked the Westchester Hills for gunsites against the Mexican invasion. And we have made lists of guns, and medicines, and tinned things, in case we should ever happen to go elephant-shooting in Africa. But we weren't going to hurt the elephants. Once R. H. D. shot a hippopotamus and he was always ashamed and sorry. I think he never killed anything else. He wasn't that kind of a sportsman. Of hunting, as of many other things, he has said the last word. Do you remember the Happy Hunting Ground in "The Bar Sinister"?--"where nobody hunts us, and there is nothing to hunt." Experienced persons tell us that a manhunt is the most exciting of all sports. R. H. D. hunted men in Cuba. -
Architecture, Race, and American Literature (New York: New York University Press, 2011)
Excerpted from William A. Gleason, Sites Unseen: Architecture, Race, and American Literature (New York: New York University Press, 2011). Published with the permission of New York University Press (http://nyupress.org/). ! Imperial Bungalow Structures of Empire in Richard Harding Davis and Olga Beatriz Torres What the map cuts up, the story cuts across. —Michel de Certeau, !e Practice of Everyday Life (!"#$) At $:%& in the morning on '# June !"!$, thirteen-year-old Olga Bea- triz Torres boarded the (rst of four trains that would take her from her home outside Mexico City to the militarized Gulf port of Veracruz, nearly %&& miles away. Amid patrolling U.S. Marines, who had seized the port on Presi- dent Woodrow Wilson’s orders only two and a half months earlier, Torres and her family—refugees from the escalating chaos of the Mexican Revolu- tion—waited for a ship to take them north to Texas, where they would seek a new home in exile. Several days later, a crude cargo vessel re(tted for passen- ger use (nally arrived. A)er four queasy days at sea—and another twenty- four exasperating hours under medical quarantine in the Galveston harbor— Torres (nally stepped onto American soil. It was *:&& in the a)ernoon on a blisteringly hot eighth of July, and what greeted Torres, as she recorded in a letter to an aunt who had remained behind in Mexico, greatly disillusioned her: Imagine a wooden shack with interior divisions which make it into a home and store at the same time. +e doors were covered with screens to keep the ,ies and mosquitos out. -
2017-18 Big Ten Records Book
2017-18 BIG TEN RECORDS BOOK Big Life. Big Stage. Big Ten. BIG TEN CONFERENCE RECORDS BOOK 2017-18 70th Edition FALL SPORTS Men’s Cross Country Women’s Cross Country Field Hockey Football* Men’s Soccer Women’s Soccer Volleyball WINTER SPORTS SPRING SPORTS Men's Basketball* Baseball Women's Basketball* Men’s Golf Men’s Gymnastics Women’s Golf Women’s Gymnastics Men's Lacrosse Men's Ice Hockey* Women's Lacrosse Men’s Swimming and Diving Rowing Women’s Swimming and Diving Softball Men’s Indoor Track and Field Men’s Tennis Women’s Indoor Track and Field Women’s Tennis Wrestling Men’s Outdoor Track and Field Women’s Outdoor Track and Field * Records appear in separate publication 4 CONFERENCE PERSONNEL HISTORY UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS Faculty Representatives Basketball Coaches - Men’s 1997-2004 Ron Turner 1896-1989 Henry H. Everett 1906 Elwood Brown 2005-2011 Ron Zook 1898-1899 Jacob K. Shell 1907 F.L. Pinckney 2012-2016 Tim Beckman 1899-1906 Herbert J. Barton 1908 Fletcher Lane 2017- Lovie Smith 1906-1929 George A. Goodenough 1909-1910 H.V. Juul 1929-1936 Alfred C. Callen 1911-1912 T.E. Thompson Golf Coaches - Men’s 1936-1949 Frank E. Richart 1913-1920 Ralph R. Jones 1922-1923 George Davis 1950-1959 Robert B. Browne 1921-1922 Frank J. Winters 1924 Ernest E. Bearg 1959-1968 Leslie A. Bryan 1923-1936 J. Craig Ruby 1925-1928 D.L. Swank 1968-1976 Henry S. Stilwell 1937-1947 Douglas R. Mills 1929-1932 J.H. Utley 1976-1981 William A. -
2013-14 Men's Basketball Records Book
Award Winners Division I Consensus All-America Selections .................................................... 2 Division I Academic All-Americans By School ..................................................... 8 Division I Player of the Year ..................... 10 Divisions II and III Players of the Year ................................................... 12 Divisions II and III First-Team All-Americans by School ....................... 13 Divisions II and III Academic All-Americans by School ....................... 15 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners by School................................... 17 2 2013-14 NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL RECORDS - DIVISION I CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS Division I Consensus All-America Selections 1917 1930 By Season Clyde Alwood, Illinois; Cyril Haas, Princeton; George Charley Hyatt, Pittsburgh; Branch McCracken, Indiana; Hjelte, California; Orson Kinney, Yale; Harold Olsen, Charles Murphy, Purdue; John Thompson, Montana 1905 Wisconsin; F.I. Reynolds, Kansas St.; Francis Stadsvold, St.; Frank Ward, Montana St.; John Wooden, Purdue. Oliver deGray Vanderbilt, Princeton; Harry Fisher, Minnesota; Charles Taft, Yale; Ray Woods, Illinois; Harry Young, Wash. & Lee. 1931 Columbia; Marcus Hurley, Columbia; Willard Hyatt, Wes Fesler, Ohio St.; George Gregory, Columbia; Joe Yale; Gilmore Kinney, Yale; C.D. McLees, Wisconsin; 1918 Reiff, Northwestern; Elwood Romney, BYU; John James Ozanne, Chicago; Walter Runge, Colgate; Chris Earl Anderson, Illinois; William Chandler, Wisconsin; Wooden, Purdue. Steinmetz, Wisconsin; -
Adventures and Letters by Richard Harding Davis
Adventures and Letters by Richard Harding Davis Adventures and Letters by Richard Harding Davis This etext was prepared with the use of Calera WordScan Plus 2.0 ADVENTURES AND LETTERS OF RICHARD HARDING DAVIS EDITED BY CHARLES BELMONT DAVIS CONTENTS CHAPTER I. THE EARLY DAYS II. COLLEGE DAYS III. FIRST NEWSPAPER EXPERIENCES IV. NEW YORK V. FIRST TRAVEL ARTICLES VI. THE MEDITERRANEAN AND PARIS page 1 / 485 VII. FIRST PLAYS VIII. CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA IX. MOSCOW, BUDAPEST, LONDON X. CAMPAIGNING IN CUBA, AND GREECE XI. THE SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR XII. THE BOER WAR XIII. THE SPANISH AND ENGLISH CORONATIONS XIV. THE JAPANESE-RUSSIAN WAR XV. MOUNT KISCO XVI. THE CONGO XVII. A LONDON WINTER XVIII. MILITARY MANOEUVRES XIX. VERA CRUZ AND THE GREAT WAR XX. THE LAST DAYS CHAPTER I THE EARLY DAYS Richard Harding Davis was born in Philadelphia on April 18, 1864, but, so far as memory serves me, his life and mine began together several years later in the three-story brick house on South Twenty-first Street, to which we had just moved. For more than forty years this was our home in all that the word implies, and I do not believe that there was ever a moment when it was not the predominating influence in page 2 / 485 Richard's life and in his work. As I learned in later years, the house had come into the possession of my father and mother after a period on their part of hard endeavor and unusual sacrifice. It was their ambition to add to this home not only the comforts and the beautiful inanimate things of life, but to create an atmosphere which would prove a constant help to those who lived under its roof--an inspiration to their children that should endure so long as they lived. -
46 SUE 4 Brown-Jr J' \
i: 46 SUE 4 Brown-Jr J' \ Wear Your School Colors on this distinctive gold filled buckle by Herff-Jones. Belt is a wide, Genuine Leather Original 50 Only $2 Plus 10c Tax SHOP TONITE — TAXI FREE — I GILBERT'S 813-817 S. Midiigan St. I LETTERS Dear Sir: May I add my "two-bits worth" to the suggestion of one, Thomas Auchler (SCHOLASTIC, March 7, 1947) regarding the houi-s of the library? Since it is the policy of the university (and rightly so) that some outside read ing be required in many of the courses, it hardly seems logical that the library 19 Trains Daily to CHICAGO should keep such short hours. I hardly think that it is a matter of insufficient First two morning trains leave South Bend at 6:00 A.M. and 6:50 A.M. Beginning at 7:30 A.M. and help, as I believe that many students until 9:30 P.M. there is a train every hour leaving would be happy to have a chance to earn at 30 minutes past the hour. The last two trains part of their tuition by working in the leave at 11:00 P.M. and 12:00 Midnight. Hourly service from Chicago, too. For travel information library. How about a comment on this call C. W. Veach, Ticket Office, 301 N. Michigan St., matter? Phone 3-3111. PETE WALLACE 238 Morrissey CHICAGO SOUTH SHORE & SO. BEND R. R. P.S. For my money, the SCHOLASTIC is the best college magazine on any campus. Dear Sir: Just who . -
2006-07 Annual Report Division of Collegiate Athletics, University of Illinois
2006-07 Annual Report Report 2006-07 Annual Division of Collegiate Athletics, University of Illinois of Illinois University Division of Collegiate Athletics, 2006-07 ANNUAL REPORT Division of Collegiate Athletics University of Illinois DIRECTOR’S ADDRESS Dear Fellow Illini: athletic program remains second to none, and, in 2006-07, the Fighting Coach Law joins a stable of Illinois head coaches that I believe is the Illini continued to set the academic standard against which other collegiate strongest in the country. Under their supervision, Illinois teams continue am pleased to present you with the student-athletes are measured. Many of the coming pages highlight these to reach new heights, competing every year for Big Ten titles and NCAA 2006-07 Annual Report for the impressive academic achievements. championships. Our head coaches lead with dignity and honor, and they I Division of Intercollegiate Athletics at serve as role models and advisors for the young men and women wearing the the University of Illinois. Years from now, Our commitment to academic excellence remains strong. In 2007-08, Illinois uniform, helping to prepare them for life beyond sports as successful 2006-07 will stand as a watershed year in our we will open the doors on a nearly $5 million expansion of the Irwin professionals, contributing members of their communities, and positive program’s proud history. Every champion Academic Services Center. The expansion will add over 11,000 square influences on future generations. must persevere in the face of adversity. This feet of space, more than doubling the original building’s size. The facility year we surmounted numerous obstacles will feature individual and group study rooms, tutor space, and additional Another cause for excitement is the Big Ten Network. -
Dangerousness and Criminal Justice
DANGEROUSNESS AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE Franklin E. Zimring* Gordon Hawkins** INTRODUCTORY The question of dangerousness arises in criminal law whenever de- cisions are taken in regard to the secure confinement of offenders: de- cisions about remand in custody, bail, criminal sentencing, parole, providing statutory terms of imprisonment for particular offenses, and prison building programs. Whether the likelihood of future harm should have a role in deci- sions about the use of imprisonment is the question we address in this article. This question is widely discussed in the literature on the juris- prudence of sentencing, and has inspired "a lot of rather uncritical and polemical literature" 1 and a good deal of muddled and emotive argu- ment, with which we are not concerned. At the same time, some seri- ously and deservedly respected scholars have, on this topic, advanced propositions and reached conclusions, which on consideration appear plainly illogical and untenable. Their contributions to the discussion are the focus of our attention here. The first section of this paper surveys some recent writings on the topic of dangerousness for major inconsistencies, which we regard as illuminating the special problem of dangerousness in the jurisprudence of criminal sentencing. The second section describes the "special problem of dangerous- ness," for, we believe, the first time. The special problem is the fear that any admission of calculations of dangerousness into sentencing decisions will lead to an overuse of dangerousness, which may be worse than the inefficiencies and hypocrisies we confront when deny- ing that future dangerousness is relevant to decisions about prisons. * Professor of Law and Director of the Earl Warren Legal Institute, University of Califor- nia, Berkeley. -
The Contractor State and Its Implications, 1659-1815 2012
VU Research Portal Global power, local connections Brandon, P. published in The contractor state and its implications, 1659-1815 2012 document license Unspecified Link to publication in VU Research Portal citation for published version (APA) Brandon, P. (2012). Global power, local connections: The Dutch admiralties and their supply networks. In S. Solbes Ferri, & R. Harding (Eds.), The contractor state and its implications, 1659-1815 (pp. 57-80). Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. • Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the public portal for the purpose of private study or research. • You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain • You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the public portal ? Take down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. E-mail address: [email protected] Download date: 07. Oct. 2021 Richard Harding Sergio Solbes Ferri (Coords.) The Contractor State and Its Implications, 1659-1815 Richard Harding Sergio Solbes Ferri (Coords.) The Contractor State and Its Implications, 1659-1815 CONTRACTOR STATE GROUP 0CSG1 International Congress Las Palmas de Gran Canaria 16th-18th November 2011 The Contractor State and Its Implications, 1659-1815 –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– CONTRACTOR STATE GROUP. -
Proceedings, 1945
t»0 <Jc3^VVvWv ,*i*»i»^i~i<Hi»»i*%~i>»i*»i»<>i»&»z*»i*&*^^ NINETEEN HUNDRED FORTY-FIVE PROCEEDINGS OF THE CONVENTIONEIGHTEENTH NATIONAL % Reg. TJ. S. Pat. Off. FUTURE FARMERS of AMERICA HELD AT I MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM KANSAS CITY - MISSOURI October 8-10, 1945 Prepared and published by the Future Farmers of America in co- operation with the U. S. Office of Education, Federal Security Agency *•-•• »*• *• **• •*** ^:< * *x* *r* *z* *•• *r* *r* •!* *x* *r* *x* *i* *t* *r* *r* *i* *i* *x* *!• •!• *v* *i* *i* *!•* "i* *i* *?• •*• •!* *i* *r* •!• *•* *r* *t* *i* *r* *r* *t* •t* *i* *r* *!• *r* *x^ NATIONAL OFFICERS, 1944-45 Constituting the NATIONAL BOARD OF TRUSTEES PRESIDENT OLIVER H. KINZIE Cushing, Oklahoma FIRST VICE PRESIDENT SIGVALD J. SANDBERG Ortonville, Minnesota SECOND VICE PRESIDENT DAVID B. JAMESON New Castle, Pennsylvania THIRD VICE PRESIDENT MERRILL J. HALLAM Spanish Fork, Utah FOURTH VICE PRESIDENT ...TOM VAUGHAN Yorkville, Tennessee STUDENT SECRETARY GEORGE C. FRY Laytonsville, Maryland ADVISER W. T. SPANTON Washington, D. C. EXECUTIVE SECRETARY A. W. TENNEY Washington, D. C. TREASURER D. J. HOWARD Winchester, Virginia PAST NATIONAL PRESIDENT ROBERT BOWMAN Buttonwillow, California NATIONAL ADVISORY COUNCIL, 1944-45 W. T. SPANTON, Chairman, U. S. Office of Education, Vocational Division, Washington, D. C. H. B. SWANSON, U. S. Office of Education, Vocational Division, Washington, D. C. J. H. PEARSON, U. S. Office of Education, Vocational Division, Washington, D. C. E. J. JOHNSON, U. S. Office of Education, Vocational Division, Washington, D. C. D. M. CLEMENTS, U. S. Office of Education, Vocational Division, Washington, D. C. R. E. CAMMACK, State Director of Agricultural Education, Montgomery, Alabama J. -
The Student Voice
THE STUDENT VOICE December 2016 Students pick their favorite journalists. This edition endorses some favorite unbiased. Because of her transfer status, Hannah journalists picked by each student in our gave some good advice to our MVCC students, Journalism EN 149 class. as did Carissa with much detail in the gift pack for students, profile article on a small town After studying several famous journalists, the heroine in the Coast Guard Academy, and students give evidence what they admire in the politics. Alana exudes patience and strength and journalists. While not all the students will go on her articles are insistently non-political but to have Journalism as their major or career, all intensely social, like the pipeline battle and have benefited from reading excerpts of famous scams in airline tickets. Belkisa is brief but journalists and heeding to their intense –courageous in her viewpoint on the recommendations of what makes good Superbowl, social and political issues. Anna journalism and interest topics. would love to save the world and one can see Above all, taking responsibility to composed her passion when she writes about Aleppo and and publish each paper was a result of strong the adverse effects of police profiling. And Alex team work and leadership. All the articles we Ambruso, a past student contributed his fiery published in our papers over the semester show sports articles. Six of our students can the passion for the subject matter that each confidently say they will take on journalism: student chose to write about, with heavy Hannah, Amajla, Chris, Carissa, Belkisa, Anna , emphasis on political issues, social concerns, and Alec. -
An Exploration of Gay Masculine Identity and Its Relationship to the Closet
JUXTAPOSE: AN EXPLORATION OF GAY MASCULINE IDENTITY AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO THE CLOSET. A project submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy RICHARD HARDING M.A. (Fine Art), B.A. (Fine Art), Grad Dip.Ed. (Art), Adv. Dip. Media School of Art College of Design and Social Context RMIT University, Melbourne July 2014 ii JUXTAPOSE: AN EXPLORATION OF GAY MASCULINE IDENTITY AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO THE CLOSET D ECLARATION I certify that except where due acknowledgement has been made, the work is that of the author alone; the work has not been submitted previously, in whole or in part, to qualify for any other academic award; the content of the exegesis is the result of work which has been carried out since the official commencement date of the approved research program; any editorial work, paid or unpaid, carried out by a third party is acknowledged; and ethics procedures and guidelines have been followed. Richard Harding July 2014 iii iv JUXTAPOSE: AN EXPLORATION OF GAY MASCULINE IDENTITY AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO THE CLOSET ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank my supervisors, Dr Phil Edwards and Associate Professor Keely Macarow for their encouragement and support throughout the project. I would like to gratefully acknowledge the support and assistance in this project of my work colleagues and fellow candidates from the School of Art, the Print Imaging Practice studio and Lygon Street Studios. I would like to especially acknowledge the assistance I received from the following people: Rob Dott, Sebastian Fransz, Stephen Gallagher, Don Gore, Andrew Gunnell, Mateusz Gwóźdź, Dr Shane Hulbert, Dr Ruth Johnstone, Neal Kenny, Rebecca Mayo, Cat and Nada Poljski, Andrew Tetzlaff, Andrew Weatherill, Deb Williams and Katie Van Heest.