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Topic: Edward P. Felt


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In the News (Mon 21 Dec 09)

  
 AIM25: School of Oriental and African Studies: China Association
It was felt that public pressure was needed to push the Government into action, and Sir Edward Ackroyd suggested that the Association change its strategy and reorganise into a 'League'.
Against the background of growing fear of commercial competition from Russia, France and Japan, certain members of the General Committee and Shanghai Committee felt that the Association's influence with the Foreign Office was exaggerated, and that the Government was failing to effectively represent British mercantile interests in China.
This proposal was voted down, with the effect that the insurgents formed the China League, with R. Yerburgh as Chairman and G. Jamieson as Secretary.
www.aim25.ac.uk /cats/19/65.htm

  
 The Media and the Sam Sheppard Trial
The decision by the District Court was appealed again by prosecutors who felt that Sheppard was still a guilty man and whom also felt that the verdict of guilty reached in the first trial was consistent with the fact that Dr. Sheppard did receive a fair trial to begin with.
The trial itself was held under the supervision of Judge Edward J. Blythin in Ohio State Court.
As if the press wasn't already having a field day with this case, Judge Blythin allowed his courtroom to be jam packed with reporters onboth the national level and local level and he even blocked off another room so that radio reporters could do their reports from their.
www.providence.edu /polisci/students/sheppard_trial/media.htm

  
 Harsh Vengence at Bear River
Patrick Edward Connor, a fiery, ambitious Irishman of 42, was unhappy.
Connor's recorded correspondence shows that he felt his "duty of assuring Mormon loyalty was...as important as preventing Indian raids along the...mail and telegraph routes." Although the feisty Connor respected Brigham Young, he had little use for the man personally.
The request was denied, and Connor came to Utah with a burning desire to do something--anything--to gain the military recognition he felt he had been denied.
historynet.com /we/blharshvengencebearriver   (1149 words)

  
 In Memoriam: Samuel Edward Konkin III
It is to be hoped that a similar posthumous collection will be made of the writings of Samuel Edward Konkin III, who died on February 23, 2004, the better to extend his legacy to the next generation of libertarians, and the next.
He made no secret of his own views, of course; in fact, if he published an article by anyone who disagreed with him about anything, he felt free to annotate the article with parenthetical comments in square brackets to make clear what he felt the "plumb line" position was on the topic at hand.
Samuel Edward Konkin III was born in Saskatchewan, Canada on July 8, 1947.
www.isil.org /resources/fnn/2004spring/sek-iii-riggenbach.html   (2770 words)

  
 Edward
Edward Porter Felt Edward Porter Felt (BEA Systems, Inc. as a technical director.
Edward Hincks Edward Hincks (1866), Irish Assyriologist and one of the decipherers of Mesopotamian cuneiform.
Edward Bransfield was born in Ballinacurra, County Cork, in 1785.
www.brainyencyclopedia.com /topics/edward.html   (6524 words)

  
 Jeff Riggenbach on Samuel Edward Konkin III
It is to be hoped that a similar posthumous collection will be made of the writings of Samuel Edward Konkin III, who died on February 23, 2004, the better to extend his legacy to the next generation of libertarians, and the next.
He made no secret of his own views, of course; in fact, if he published an article by anyone who disagreed with him about anything, he felt free to annotate the article with parenthetical comments in square brackets to make clear what he felt the "plumb line" position was on the topic at hand.
Samuel Edward Konkin III was born in Saskatchewan, Canada on July 8, 1947.
www.isil.org /resources/fnn/2004spring/sek-iii-riggenbach.html   (2780 words)

  
 Richard Nixon News - The New York Times
What do the Rev. Billy Graham, W. Mark Felt, Edward F. Cox, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton and the authors of two books about her have in common?
In " The Secret Man," Bob Woodward chronicles his sometimes tense relationship with W. Mark Felt, the Watergate source who became known as Deep Throat.
topics.nytimes.com /top/reference/timestopics/people/n/richard_milhous_nixon   (479 words)

  
 Antarctic Explorers: Robert Falcon Scott
A splinter group of six men, called the Eastern Party, was to be dispatched in unexplored King Edward VII Land, four hundred miles to the east.
Scott blamed himself for the tragedy as he was in a hurry to get the ship unloaded so she could embark with Campbell and his crew for King Edward VII Land.
Six men missing from the hut at Cape Evans were Victor Cambell and his five companions who, having failed to get ashore on King Edward VII Land, had been taken by the TERRA NOVA to Cape Adare, where they established their base near Borchgrevink's old camp.
www.south-pole.com /p0000090.htm   (479 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: St. Edward the Confessor
Such was the contentment caused by "the good St. Edward's laws", that their enactment was repeatedly demanded by later generations, when they felt themselves oppressed.
Early misfortune thus taught Edward the folly of ambition, and he grew up in innocence, delighting chiefly in assisting at Mass and the church offices, and in association with religious, whilst not disdaining the pleasures of the chase, or recreations suited to his station.
Upon Canute's death in 1035 his illegitimate son, Harold, seized the throne, Hardicanute being then in Denmark, and Edward and his brother Alfred were persuaded to make an attempt to gain the crown, which resulted in the cruel death of Alfred who had fallen into Harold's hands, whilst Edward was obliged to return to Normandy.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/05322a.htm   (541 words)

  
 Edward Porter Felt - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
We don't have an article called "Edward Porter Felt"
Wait a few minutes, or check the deletion log.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Edward_Porter_Felt   (541 words)

  
 Edward Sorin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It was to the first of these countries that the Abbé Sorin felt attracted; and to the end of his long life accounts of the trials and triumphs of Chinese missionaries had for him a singular fascination.
At the time of Father Sorin's ordination, glowing reports of missionary enterprise in foreign lands had fired afresh the hearts of French clergy, and inspired numerous vocations, not a few of which were those of future martyrs, particularly in China and Japan.
Father Sorin was elected superior-general of his order in 1868, and held this important office during the rest of his life.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Edward_Sorin   (687 words)

  
 The History Behind Braveheart
Bruce himself believed it to be that dread disease, and he felt that it was a punishment for his involvement in the death of John Comyn on a sacred altar.
Edward II refused to cooperate, which resulted in Gaveston's murder in 1312 (Edward I had been dead for five years by that time; only his ghost could have had anything to do with Gaveston's murder).
Edward and his new friends, the Despensers, who were father and son, fought back and were the winners of civil war (1321-2).
www.mygen.com /users/bruce/brv_hist.htm   (4426 words)

  
 www.brucefamily.com - Family of Bruce International, Inc. - History of The Bruce
Bruce began throwing away weighty items he felt he could spare.
Bruce was entering a hall of mirrors, where things may not be what they appear to be and where any given situation could rapidly deteriorate into one as slippery as a bald tire on black ice.
Physically, Bruce not only was recuperating from his ordeal in the desert, but he had contracted malaria and a rather nasty parasite, a guinea-worm, had taken residence in one of his legs.
www.brucefamily.com /history.htm#james   (10118 words)

  
 FLUXEUROPA: EDWARD BUNKER
EDWARD BUNKER will be best known to most people for his cameo part as Mr Blue in Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs, but he was a real gangster and is now a successful author.
But Bunker also honestly describes the enjoyable aspects of being a career criminal: no nine-to-five tread-mill, and the feeling of power (admittedly short and often sordid) felt over the everyday world the criminal lives and feeds amongst and on.
Bunker has an excellent natural style and the book is very hard to put down.
www.fluxeuropa.com /edwardbunker.htm   (505 words)

  
 Sir William Parker
Edwards had accompanied him on many of his journeys, while the greatest sympathy is felt for her in the loss of her husband after 55 years of married life.
Sarah Edwards had decided to give 2 of her shares to her son Harold so that he would have the same as his brother Henley, and her other 2 shares were to be given to her grandchildren Dick and Frances Edwards so they would have the same as their cousin Daphne.
He was the son of Charles Edward Parker Edwards (1852-1930), a sailor, and Sarah Frances Crews Edwards.
www3.sympatico.ca /dljordan/parker-edwards.htm   (7188 words)

  
 Edward Weston: Photography and Modernism
Weston spent two long periods in Mexico between 1923 and 1926, immersing himself in a culture he felt was spiritually and aesthetically richer than his own.
Called "the quintessential American photographer of his time," Edward Weston (1886-1958) is best known for his still lifes of peppers and shells, his heroic portraits, and abstract close-ups of nudes, rocks, and trees.
Weston's early experimentation with modernism begins with the soft-focus, romantic pictorialist portraits he took of friends and models and culminates with a much different series of nudes taken in 1936.
www.tfaoi.com /aa/3aa/3aa238.htm   (1761 words)

  
 273-1870.txt
Edward Cooper did not testify as to the time the Partnership was formed other than to say it was subse- quent to his notice to the Union.
Cooper said that he could not help it, that he was low on finances, he had to make a change and he felt the notice he had given was okay.
Upon learning this, Business Representative Walter Young sent word to Edward Cooper to meet him at a service station near IBM.
www.nlrb.gov /nlrb/shared_files/decisions/273/273-1870.txt   (7000 words)

  
 Ed Abbey: A Life "The Bard of Moab, 1974-1978"
Abbey felt comfortable there not only because he loved the canyon country, but also since he already had a number of friends in the area, dating from his 1956, 1957, and 1965 ranger seasons in the area and many other visits.
Edward Abbey: A Life will be available from the University of Arizona Press early this fall and can be ordered (or pre-ordered) directly from the Press at1-800-426-3797.
The following excerpt from Edward Abbey: A Life, by James M. Cahalan, to be published in Fall 2001 by the University of Arizona Press.
www.canyoncountryzephyr.com /aug-sept2001/edabbeybio.htm   (1468 words)

  
 Edward Steichen Award (ESA)
Joanna T. Steichen, the artist's widow, was unable to come to Luxembourg to preside at the first award of the 'Prix Edward Steichen', which is being sponsored by different national and overseas organizations.
Edward Steichen became Luxembourg's most distinguished migrant and one of the world's greatest photographic artists of the 20th century.
She joined her parents in Luxembourg for the award ceremony, which was attended by about one hundred Luxembourgish admirers of Edward Steichen's art.
luxamcc.org /id14.html   (1186 words)

  
 King Edward Hammer Of The Scots
Edward, white-haired and ailing, must have felt he was an English Sisyphus, condemned to roll the rock of conquest forward again and again.
Edward had a surprise waiting in the wings - swarms of Welsh archers, who came forward in large numbers to discharge their deadly shafts.
Like most of his Plantagenet dynasty, Edward had a volcanic temper that sometimes erupted into murderous rages.
www.thepennyfarthing.com /articles/braveheart.htm   (1186 words)

  
 A 1940 review of Shanks
Edward Shanks sets out to trace the origin and growth of that influence and to define it; moreover, being himself a critic and poet of considerable standing, he is able to show us the actual mechanism whereby Kipling made that influence felt.
Shanks accords to Kipling's poem "Boots" the same high ranking that I have always thought it deserved, describing it as 'A feat of technical virtuosity which even Kipling, virtuoso as he was in the handling of rhythms, never surpassed.
Shanks emphasizes the importance of remembering that Kipling (like Dickens) spent his early years in the routine practice of journalism, observing that "all his work was in one sense reporting on a grand scale".
www.kipling.org.uk /facts_shanks.htm   (1186 words)

  
 History of Edward Montagu 's Regiment - ScotWars
On the 13th Edward Montagu was sent to negotiate the surrender of York as the representative of Manchester's Eastern Association.
Montagu's regiment was part of this force although Edward was not present.
Edward Montagu received a 'local' commission to raise a regiment of foot in June 1643 from his cousin the 2nd Earl of Manchester - Historians beware as the Earl of Manchester was also called Edward Montagu!
www.scotwars.com /html/montagus_regt.htm   (1591 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: St. Edward the Confessor
Such was the contentment caused by "the good St. Edward's laws", that their enactment was repeatedly demanded by later generations, when they felt themselves oppressed.
Early misfortune thus taught Edward the folly of ambition, and he grew up in innocence, delighting chiefly in assisting at Mass and the church offices, and in association with religious, whilst not disdaining the pleasures of the chase, or recreations suited to his station.
Upon Canute's death in 1035 his illegitimate son, Harold, seized the throne, Hardicanute being then in Denmark, and Edward and his brother Alfred were persuaded to make an attempt to gain the crown, which resulted in the cruel death of Alfred who had fallen into Harold's hands, whilst Edward was obliged to return to Normandy.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/05322a.htm   (541 words)

  
 Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis - The Region - Edward W. Kelley Jr Interview (September 1999)
KELLEY: Well, I'm not sure that I'd use the term "drag," but I think the concern that has made people hesitant has been the felt need to not lose the vital district cultures, and indeed the essence of the independence of the individual district.
KELLEY: A major interest is in opera and art, and my wife, Janet, and I spend a good deal of time in those areas.
KELLEY: I try to be broadly available, and my relationships with the reporters who have wanted to have access to me have gone quite well.
woodrow.mpls.frb.fed.us /pubs/region/99-09/kelley.cfm?js=0   (4039 words)

  
 Hyde and Hare
People who met Hyde immediately felt a sense of loathing and disgust and had the distinct sense that he was somehow deformed, yet not a deformation was apparent.
Hyde was not merely an evil reflection of Jekyll, he was apparently a physical reflection of his psyche.
Hyde until 1885 and he was not an active murderer, this would come much later as his darker side took greater control of his personality.
www.pjfarmer.com /secret/hyde/hydenhair.htm   (9679 words)

  
 Hicks’s Peaceable Kingdom
Edward Hicks allows us to see the Light coming out of all living beings and the world, speaking to that which shines within every one of us.
Hicks believed in the Inner Light and its power; he felt it, therefore he saw it.
Many people would recognize the work of Edward Hicks (1780-1849) in his Peaceable Kingdom paintings.
www2.gol.com /users/quakers/Hicks_Peaceable_Kingdom.htm   (1203 words)

  
 Prince Edward Island: News Release (Murphy Named Horseman of the Year)
Harkness said the Maritime harness racing industry needs the support of governments and said Atlantic Post Calls felt it was important to recognize the contributions made by people such as Mitch Murphy.
The Prince Edward Island government continued to provide financial assistance for the purse pool at Island tracks and for such grass root programs as the matinee tracks and also introduced a new stakes program, The Lady Slipper, designed to assist standardbred breeders.
The Official Website of the Government of Prince Edward Island, Canada.
www.gov.pe.ca /news/getrelease.php3?number=2399   (1203 words)

  
 Making Innovative Literature Available for Everyone... An interview with Prof. Ed Foster; by Figen Bingül
Foster discusses this in an interview for Here Comes Everybody: "I don't think it is possible, or at least desirable, to escape from personality and emotion in poetry." While not resisting personality and personal emotion in his poems, Foster manages to sustain just enough distance from his subject matter to avoid the charge of solipsism.
Foster was at one point in fact warned by the American embassy not to go to the university campus.
Foster was seven when he witnessed his father's death; he was terrified and he felt guilty for not going near his father at his last moments.
www.lightmillennium.org /2005_15th/edfoster_fbingul_interview.html   (3015 words)

  
 Sir Edward Elgar: English Composer
Later in Edward's career he would address that very subject and be outspoken about his belief that music should be brought to those he felt needed it the most, the ones that couldn't afford it.
Edward inherited his love of literature from his mother Ann, who was a refined and well read English woman from a yeoman family of Herfordshire.
Edward abandoned his idea of becoming a solo-violinist and from 1885 to1889 he succeeded his father as the organist for the St. George's Church in Worcester.
thedesmonds.com /elgar.html   (1582 words)

  
 carson.htm
Carson now felt that his place should be taken by a younger man, and at a meeting of the Ulster Unionist Council held on 4 February 1921 he announced his resignation as leader of the Ulster Unionists.
The Carson papers comprise c.3,000 documents, 1861-1947, mainly deriving from Sir Edward Carson, Lord Carson of Duncairn (1854-1935), barrister, Law Officer and Law Lord, MP successively for Dublin University and for North Belfast (Duncairn), First Lord of the Admiralty, and Dublin-born leader of the Ulster Unionists in opposition to the Third Home Rule Bill.
Carson's first success at the English bar was in the libel action brought in 1895 by Oscar Wilde against the Marquess of Queensberry, which caused him to be acknowledged by common consent as one of the foremost advocates at the bar.
www.proni.gov.uk /records/private/carson.htm   (1582 words)

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