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Interview with William Franklin Mitchell - VHP 011
In his February 24, 2004 interview with Georgia Williamson, William Franklin Mitchell describes life as a volunteer chaplain for the army during WWII. Specifically, Mitchell shares the reason why he joined the service and what...
Published by: Winthrop University
Interview with William Ledford - OH 103
William Ledford
Jan 01, 0001
In his November 30, 1980 interview with his daughter Anne Ledford, William Ledford remembers his service in the Army during WWII. In particular, Ledford details his basic training and journey through Iceland, England, and...
Published by: Winthrop University
Interview with William D. Wolfe - VHP 022
William D. Wolfe
Jan 01, 0001
In his October 20, 2003 interview with Alan Garmendia, William D. Wolfe recollects about his time in the Navy during WWII, the Korean War, and Vietnam. Wolfe shares the details of his work in the Navy on an experimental...
Published by: Winthrop University
Interview with Samuel William Searles - VHP 057
Samuel William Searles
Jan 01, 0001
In his November 1, 2005 interview with Ebony Williams, Samuel William Searles recalls being drafted for the army during WWII. Searles explains his job during war and how he and fellow soldiers celebrated the end of the war....
Published by: Winthrop University
William C. Stadie, 1942
William C. Stadie. Intermediary Metabolism in Diabetes Mellitus Lecture delivered January 15th, 1942 Posted with permission
William H. Welch, 1916
Prof. William H. Welch. Medical Education in the United States Lecture delivered April 20, 1916
Published by: J.B. Lippincott Company
Education Faculty Member Wins Award for William Barton Rogers Book
Winthrop University
Jan 01, 0001
Published by Johns Hopkins University Press, the book is titled "William Barton Rogers and the Idea of MIT." "William Barton Rogers and the Idea of MIT" focuses on Rogers and his efforts to establish the Massachusetts Institute...
Published by: Winthrop University
Stanford Moore and William H. Stein, 1957
Stanford Moore and William H. Stein. Determinations of the structure of proteins: studies on ribonuclease. Lecture delivered February 21, 1957 Posted with permission
The print depiction of King William III’s masculinity
Owen Brittan
May 10, 2017
This article examines both positive and negative print depictions of King William III, specifically how William’s masculine identity was produced and perceived in relation to readily accessible norms of manhood. That...
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An Architect of the New South: a Case Study of William Lawrence Hill and Sharon, South Carolina
Paul Laffredo, III
Jan 01, 0001
This is a case study of William Lawrence Hill and Sharon South Carolina. Mr. Hill was born in 1866 and grew up under the harshness of Reconstruction which taught Hill that above all else he did not want to become a southern...
Published by: Winthrop University
The Ursinus Weekly, February 28, 1908
Lecture William Cullen Bryant Personals Editorial: The college campus Alumni notes Freshman declamation contest Seminary notes College world Class officers Literary societies
Published by: Ursinus College
G. William Bouldin, More Than a Businessman
Mario M. Gutierrez
Apr 01, 2020
When the average person thinks about African American history, the two major historical subjects that possibly comes to their mind are slavery and the civil rights movement. I believe this is the case because African American...
William Morris, cultural leadership, and the dynamics of taste
This examination of the social processes that inform cultural production asks how tastes are formed, transmitted, embedded, and reproduced across generations. These questions are explored through a study of William Morris, his...
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G. William Bouldin, More Than a Businessman
Mario M. Gutierrez
Apr 01, 2020
When the average person thinks about African American history, the two major historical subjects that possibly comes to their mind are slavery and the civil rights movement. I believe this is the case because African American...
William Morris, cultural leadership, and the dynamics of taste
This examination of the social processes that inform cultural production asks how tastes are formed, transmitted, embedded, and reproduced across generations. These questions are explored through a study of William Morris, his...
Published by:
Memories of and Gratitude for Philip McShane
William Zanardi
Mar 16, 2022
William J. Zanardi is Professor Emeritus at St. Edward’s University in Austin, Texas. Over the last thirty plus years, the works of Bernard Lonergan and Philip McShane have greatly influenced his teaching and writing. As one of...
An Ecclesiastical Descent
JE KIRBY
Nov 29, 2018
This article explores the relationship between religion and historiography in the work of the historian and bishop William Stubbs (1825–1901). Previous studies of Stubbs have neglected the High-Church influences which...
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The Role of Science Institutions in Our Civilization
This booklet prints the Founders' Day address delivered by Dr. William D. Coolidge at Ursinus College on October 13, 1942, as well as a speech by Dr. George E. Pfahler and others.
Published by: Ursinus College
Memories of and Gratitude for Philip McShane
William Zanardi
Mar 16, 2022
William J. Zanardi is Professor Emeritus at St. Edward’s University in Austin, Texas. Over the last thirty plus years, the works of Bernard Lonergan and Philip McShane have greatly influenced his teaching and writing. As one of...
G. William Bouldin, More Than a Businessman
Mario M. Gutierrez
Apr 01, 2020
When the average person thinks about African American history, the two major historical subjects that possibly comes to their mind are slavery and the civil rights movement. I believe this is the case because African American...
My utopia is your utopia? William Morris, utopian theory and the claims of the past
Joe PL Davidson
Oct 03, 2019
This article examines the relationship between utopian production and reception via a reading of the work of the great utopian author and theorist William Morris. This relationship has invariably been defined by an...
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David Hume, Adam Smith, and William Hamilton of Bangour
Felix Waldmann
Jan 10, 2019
National Library of Scotland, MS 23159.7 is a thirty-two line poem in the hand of David Hume (1711–76), the philosopher. The poem is conserved within a collection of manuscripts devised to the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1838...
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