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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Thomas Daniel Rudd Wa

Thomas Daniel of Colonial Virginia and Eight Generations of His Descendants
This book is intended for anyone interested in the Daniel(s) surname. Thomas Daniel descended from an ancestor who settled early in America. Thomas moved from Virginia to Kentucky with his family about 1789 and from there they spread across the nation. Members of this family resided in Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas before 1850. This book traces 1,200 of his descendants in eight generations. Lines of daughters are followed for one generation. Several lines have added an 's' to the Daniel name The author has personally visited many courthouses, cemeteries, genealogical and historical societies, and has corresponded with and interviewed dozens of cousins. Information was also obtained from the National Archives, family history centers and many other sources. Primary records were used whenever possible. Nearly four hundred footnotes document the sources. The book also includes several hundred biographies, dozens of obituaries, a surname index, a Daniel(s) given name index, several photographs, and copies of many original signatures.
Waking Their Neighbors Up

Waking Their Neighbors Up

Thomas Daniel Young

University of Georgia Press
2010
pokkari
Stung by attacks upon the South following the celebrated Scopes “monkey trial” in the 1920s, some of the poets comprising the Fugitive group at Vanderbilt University—notably John Crowe Ransom, Donald Davidson, Allen Tate, and Robert Penn Warren— conceived the idea of a symposium that would argue for the worth of an ordered, traditional society as an alternative to what they perceived as the increasing materialism of their times. The Fugitives were joined by eight other southerners, and the result was the 1930 Agrarian manifesto I’ll Take My Stand. Published in 1982, this retrospective look at the Nashville Agrarians traces the evolution of I’ll Take My Stand, explains what the men who made it were trying to do, and argues that time has proved them to be prophets.
Possible Mechanisms of Histamine-human Gamma Globulin Interactions
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work.Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and made generally available to the public. To ensure a quality reading experience, this work has been proofread and republished using a format that seamlessly blends the original graphical elements with text in an easy-to-read typeface.We appreciate your support of the preservation process, and thank you for being an important part of keeping this knowledge alive and relevant.
Fabulous Provinces

Fabulous Provinces

Thomas Daniel Young

University Press of Mississippi
2010
nidottu
In this affectionate memoir one of the principal scholars of southern literature reflects of his lifelong study and offers his view of how the great writers of the South chanced to emerge during the worst of economic eras in that region. Though he sees this phenomenon through the lens of his own experience in Mississippi, he brings into focus the questions so often asked by literary critics and historians: ""Why did the American literary renaissance between 1920 and 1940 occur in the South?"" Young provides a fresh answer. His own background in a Mississippi hamlet, his growing up as the son of a country doctor, and his awakening to the riches of his heritage in an economically backward region cause him to see in himself parallels throughout the South that produced the remarkable literary outburst. A heritage like his own that arose from deeply felt human qualities rather than from secure economic conditions he feels was principally responsible. Thus, Fabulous Provinces is Young's reflection upon a long career which is filled with representative events, episodes, and persons who, as he feels, ""accurately portray social, economic, and cultural developments during the first seven decades of this century. I have tried to present, from the point of view of a first-person narrator, not always the author, what it was like to grow up and live in Mississippi. By emphasizing that the quality of life in that representative state eclipsed the low plane of living, he suggests why the South became a literary center of America from 1920 to 1950, producing William Faulkner, Eudora Welty, and three of the most significant literary movements of the century--the Fugitives, the Agrarians, and the New Critics. Fabulous Provinces will cast an appeal over many discerning readers wishing to hear a fresh answer to a question that never ceases to arise.
Deeper Than Suspected

Deeper Than Suspected

Thomas Daniel Nehrer

John Hunt Publishing
2020
nidottu
Thomas Daniel Nehrer presents in Deeper Than Suspected an intimate awareness of Oneness, its interconnected quality. Here, collected, is a range of topics answered from a perspective of consciousness for the sincere seeker. The reader will find total personal freedom: detachment from religions and movements, release from fear and self-doubt, increased reliance on Self and personal creative power. Unattached to common movements and popular notions, Nehrer's deep insights into the workings of the subconscious and its integrated tie to experienced reality move the reader forward. With no hidden agenda, seeking no followers nor establishment of a new movement, Nehrer simply illustrates all aspects of Consciousness. He exposes the fallacy of religion, shortcomings of science, and the rigid restriction of modern philosophy, and, with it, the pure fantasy of common thinking.
Der Forschungskraftunternehmer

Der Forschungskraftunternehmer

Thomas Daniel Zabrodsky

Vs Verlag Fur Sozialwissenschaften
2012
nidottu
Thomas Daniel Zabrodsky untersucht, welche Lebensstile Jungakademiker unter den gegenwärtigen Bedingungen an Universitäten ausbilden. Um die durch das Gefüge propagierten Lebensstile und den damit verbundenen gesellschaftlichen Rahmen herauszuarbeiten, führt er eine Diskursanalyse nach Michel Foucault durch. Anhand einer empirischen Studie analysiert der Autor mithilfe des „Strategien und Taktiken“-Konzepts von Michel De Certeau die praktizierten Lebensstile und geht folgenden Fragen nach: Wo und wie (re)produzieren Jungakademiker den gegenwärtigen Diskurs, wo bauen sie Widerstände gegen diesen auf? Abschließend werden die für die Lebensführung handlungsleitenden Muster herausgestellt und die Tendenzen beschrieben, die sich für die Forschungsarbeit ergeben.
Memoir of Daniel Macmillan (1882). By: Thomas Hughes: Daniel MacMillan (Scottish Gaelic: Dòmhnall MacMhaolain; 13 September 1813 - 27 June 1857) was a
Daniel MacMillan (Scottish Gaelic: D mhnall MacMhaolain; 13 September 1813 - 27 June 1857) was a Scottish publisher from the Isle of Arran, Scotland. Life: Daniel MacMillan was born on 13 September 1813, in the Isle of Arran to a crofting family. Moving to London, he founded Macmillan Publishers, with his brother Alexander. In 1833, he came to London to work for a Cambridge bookseller. In 1844, he decided to expand into the publishing business. Macmillan, with the recommendation of his brother Alexander, sent George Edward Brett to open the first American office in New York. He died at Cambridge on 27 June 1857. He is buried in the Mill Road cemetery, Cambridge. Family He married, on 4 September 1850, Frances, daughter of a Mr Orridge, a chemist in Cambridge. They had two sons, Frederick (born 1851) and Maurice Crawford Macmillan (1853-1936). Maurice married Helen (Nellie) Artie Tarleton Belles (1856-1937), and their son Maurice Harold Macmillan became Prime Minister........... Thomas Hughes QC (20 October 1822 - 22 March 1896) was an English lawyer, judge, politician and author. He is most famous for his novel Tom Brown's School Days (1857), a semi-autobiographical work set at Rugby School, which Hughes had attended. It had a lesser-known sequel, Tom Brown at Oxford (1861). Hughes had numerous other interests, in particular as a Member of Parliament, in the British co-operative movement, and in a settlement in Tennessee reflecting his values. Early life Hughes was the second son of John Hughes, editor of the Boscobel Tracts (1830) and was born in Uffington, Berkshire (now Oxfordshire). He had six brothers, and one sister, Jane Senior who later became Britain's first female civil servant. At the age of eight he was sent to Twyford School, a preparatory public school near Winchester, where he remained until the age of eleven. In February 1834 he went to Rugby School, which was then under the celebrated Thomas Arnold, a contemporary of his father at Oriel College, Oxford. Hughes excelled at sports rather than in scholarship, and his school career culminated in a cricket match at Lord's Cricket Ground. In 1842 he went on to Oriel College, and graduated B.A. in 1845. At Oxford, he played cricket for the university team in the annual University Match against Cambridge University, also at Lord's, and a match that is still now regarded as first-class cricket. Legal career Hughes was called to the bar in 1848, became Queen's Counsel in 1869 and a bencher in 1870. He was appointed to a county court judgeship in the Chester district in July 1882. Works While living at Wimbledon, Hughes wrote his famous story Tom Brown's School Days, which was published in April 1857. He is associated with the novelists of the "muscular school", a loose classification but centred on the fiction of the Crimean War period.Although Hughes had never been a member of the sixth form at Rugby, his impressions of the headmaster Thomas Arnold were reverent. Hughes also wrote The Scouring of the White Horse (1859), Tom Brown at Oxford (1861), Religio Laici (1868), Life of Alfred the Great (1869) and the Memoir of a Brother. His brother, George Hughes, was the model for the Tom Brown character..............
Tales from the North Woods

Tales from the North Woods

Thomas M Daniel

Thomas M Daniel
2021
pokkari
Drs. Nancy Vincent and Arthur Loring take vacation from their academic medical careers in Minneapolis and embark on a wilderness canoe trip the Minnesota-Ontario Boundary Waters. Their idyllic adventure is interrupted by an out-of-control forest fire that pursues them as they make their way south up the Magnetic River to Gunflint Lake. Forestry service planes pass overhead as they drop water on the advancing blaze.Crossing the lake and reaching Gunflint Lodge, they set up a medical aid station for injured fire-fighters at the resort. Their medical skills are welcomed by men returning from the fire and needing aid.