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Searched all Perseus collections for "Side A: komos.Side B: komos" 2000 results in 6 categories
Results summary (items)
Art objects (99)
Atlas sites (1)
Collections (2)
Images (1275)
Text sections (2)
Texts (621)
Additional results suppressed. Try restricting your search to a single collection.
99 Art objects
  1. Williams 64.9: Late Archaic; Attic Red Figure; Stamnos; Side A: Poseidon vs. PolybotesSide B: komos [Vase] (16.21)

  2. Arezzo 1465: Late Archaic; Attic Red Figure; Volute krater; Side A: Herakles and AmazonsSide B: Amazons running upNeck: komos [Vase] (10.73)

  3. Berlin V.I. 4560: Late Archaic; Attic Red Figure; Pelike; Side A: athlete washing. Side B: youth. [Vase] (10.73)

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1 Atlas site
  1. A B A Lateral: Colorado, United States [Atlas site] (4.31)

2 Collections
  1. James B. Reston Papers 1935-95: , James B. Reston (1909-95) papers include correspondence, publications, manuscripts, memoranda, reports, speeches, interview transcripts, and photographs relating to Reston's career with the Associated Press (1934-39) and with The New York Times (1939-89) as a reporter (1939-89), chief Washington correspondent (1953-64), associate editor (1964-68), executive editor (1968-69), vice president (1969-74), and columnist (1974-89). Reston won the Pulitzer Prize twice, in 1945 and in 1957, and several times served as a juror who helped select Pulitzer Prize recipients. Reston's papers contain information regarding World War II; the development of American journalism in the post-World War II period; the Pulitzer Prizes; the origins and growth of the United Nations; post-World War II U. S. presidential administrations and elections; U. S. Cold War diplomacy and relations with the Soviet Union and China, especially the decision to recognize mainland China in 1971; the Vietnam War, especially press coverage of and student demonstrations against; and the history, administration, design and labor relations of The New York Times. Notable correspondents and interviewees include Dean Acheson, Joseph Alsop, Russell Baker, Chester Bowles, George Bush, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Wallace Carroll, Jimmy Carter, Turner Catledge, E. Clifton Daniel, Orville Dryfoos, Max Frankel, Henry Kissinger, Aleksei Kosygin, Anthony Lewis, Miguel de la Madrid, Lester Markel, Francois Mitterand, Jean Monnet, A. M. Rosenthal, Anwar Sadat, Carlos Salinas de Gortari, I. F. Stone, Lewis Strauss, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Arthur Hays Sulzberger, Pierre Trudeau, George Wallace, and Tom Wicker., Scope and Contents of the Collection: The Reston finding aid uses a functional arrangement to organize the material. While he was chief of the Washington bureau, Reston started the practice of hiring a year-long intern to act as his assistant; one of the intern's jobs was to maintain Reston's files. There is a list of the names and tenure of these interns following the Collection Overview. While this system of changing assistants worked well for the interns and Reston, it also meant that these files would exhibit a wide variety of strategies for such tasks as arranging research notes, filing correspondence, and drafting memorandums. As a result, the Reston papers had a haphazard arrangement at best, as indicated by the inventory notes taken by Reston intern Amy Wallace during her "Washington project" (see "James B. Reston--Washington project, 1984" in SUBJECT FILE, Box 84)., Scope and Contents of the Collection: The archives has divided the Reader Mail into two distinct groups. The first contains files relating to specific columns that Reston wrote. In particular, one 1971 column on Vice President Spiro Agnew generated so many responses that Reston drafted three different form letters to send to his readers. The General Reader Mail contains large groups of letters filed chronologically, often with a copy of Reston's reply attached., Scope and Contents of the Collection: Reston's enormous popularity and success as a journalist made him a sought-after public speaker. Speeches and Travel holds the documents and speech drafts that Reston wrote and delivered in his years as a public speaker. This group also contains material relating to Reston's trips abroad, both for journalistic reasons and for personal relaxation. Television and Radio Appearances contains material related to Reston's talks, interviews, and relations with the broadcast media. ... , Scope and Contents of the Collection: AUDIOVISUAL MATERIALS include audiotape recordings of interviews conducted by Reston, telephone calls with governmental officials, government news events, and a visit with Reston's mother containing family recollections., Scope and Contents of the Collection: A final two boxes in the collection contains OVERSIZED MATERIAL from throughout the categories. Among these papers are copies of the Dumbarton Oaks proposals, the publication of which earned Reston his first Pulitzer Prize, as well as material on the foundation of the United Nations. ... , Scope and Contents of the Collection: PUBLICATIONS AND WRITINGS holds material relating to Reston's writing outside of the New York Times. It contains three major divisions. The first covers publications by Reston, both in periodical and book form. The largest amount of material consists of drafts and correspondence regarding Deadline, Reston's 1991 memoir. The second division contains periodical pieces about Reston and his role as a journalist, while the third major division contains publications and articles that he collected within his personal papers. ... , Scope and Contents of the Collection: The NEW YORK TIMES category comprises two major areas related to the newspapers. First, the Administrative sub-category holds all the material regarding the paper's internal operations and administrative decisions, including information regarding printers' strikes and the 1971 decision to publish the Pentagon Papers. As chief Washington correspondent, associate editor, executive editor, and then vice president for the Times in the years from 1953 to 1974, Reston's work involved him both in the production and analysis of news and the management of the paper as a business enterprise. Reston Clerks, the second sub-category, covers Reston's contribution to the newspaper's staffing practices. It includes applications for clerkships and correspondence with interns both during and after their tenure with Reston., Scope and Contents of the Collection: The SUBJECT FILES cover 57 boxes and represents the largest single category of the papers. It contains the working and permanent files that Reston and his clerks created and maintained, often for research purposes, on important political and journalistic leaders, crucial events, and influential organizations. In addition, these files contain a number of sub-categories. There is an extensive file of research and interview notes and information concerning James and Sally Reston's 1971 trip to China, including his hospital stay and interview of Chou En-Lai. Columns and Column Clippings contain Reston's working drafts and notes on his journalism pieces, as well as an extensive collection of his pieces from the Times, clipped and saved by successive clerks., Scope and Contents of the Collection: The Foundations, Organizations, and Institutions sub-category contains files on the variety of organizations and institutions with which Reston became involved. Several of the more important were the Jean Monnet Foundation, dedicated to realizing the Frenchman's dream of a unified Europe; the World Book, to which Reston contributed an article on U. S. politics for its annual yearbook; and the Pulitzer Prize committee, upon which Reston served several times during his career., Scope and Contents of the Collection: Interview Notes and Transcripts contains the unedited typescripts of conversations that Reston held with important political and social leaders, both in the U. S. and abroad. These included Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir, then-Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter, and Yugoslav President Tito. While the transcripts contain little information that cannot be found in published accounts, they provide a window into Reston's practices as a reporter and interviewer. [Collection] (75.94)

  2. W. McNeil Lowry Papers 1941-93: Born in Columbus, Kansas, Wilson McNeil Lowry (1913-93) was a leader in planning and administering philanthropic support for the arts and humanities in the 1960s and early 1970s. Following brief periods as University of Illinois English instructor, Navy lieutenant, and journalist, Lowry (B. A. 1934, Illinois; Ph. D. 1941, Illinois) was hired by the Ford Foundation in 1953 to direct its education program. In this capacity, Lowry developed the Ford Foundation's program in the arts and humanities, and became its first director when it was formally established in 1957. Through this and related senior posts at the Ford Foundation, he directed the distribution of over $320 million to performing arts organizations, artistic institutions, and individual artists and $60 million to humanities scholarship. After his 1975 retirement, Lowry, continued to serve the arts as a pro bono consultant in the arts, president of the San Francisco Ballet (1988-91), and as an advocate of public support for the arts until his death., Scope and Contents of the Collection: Papers of W. McNeil Lowry (1913-93), A.B. 1934, Ph.D. 1941, including correspondence, memoranda, reports, press releases, publications, manuscripts, notes, oral histories, clippings, appointment books, audiotapes and videotapes concerning his work as a journalist (1946-52); his work for the Ford Foundation as assistant to William McPeak and Program Director of Education (1953-57), as Vice President of the Office of Policy and Planning (1964-66), as Acting President (1965-66), and as head of the humanities and arts program (1957-75), including material on travel (1953-73); the Tax Reform Act of 1969; and support of the theatre including the Alley Theatre (Houston) and the Arena Stage (Washington, D.C.); of music, including the National Music Council composer in residence project (1958-62), the Recording/Publication Program (1969-75), and the Symphony Orchestra Program (1965-74); of dance; of lithography, including the Tamarind Institute; of humanistic scholarship; of creative writing; of translations; of film; of television; of the visual arts; of the arts and humanities in Greece; of the Travel and Study Program; of an economic survey of non-profit performing arts organizations (1970-73); and of the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts (1956-63). The papers cover Lowry's work as arts consultant and advocate (1975-93), including his organizing of conferences of the American Assembly (1977-84) and of Symposia on the arts (1977-82); and his presidency of the Board of the San Francisco Ballet (1989-91). The collection includes chapters in manuscript of an unfinished book on the arts since World War II (1975-77), and interviews with George Balanchine (1979-80) and Lincoln Kirsten (1983-84) for New Yorker articles. Significant correspondents include Fred C. Cole, Ruby d'Arschot, Milton S. Eisenhower, Zelda Fiehandler, Theodore Hoffman, Hubert H. Humphrey, Lincoln Kirsten, Whitney J. Oates, James Reston, Urs Schwarz, James H. Semans, Charles Shattuck, Peter Smith, Frank Thompson, Nina Vance, and June Wayne., Arrangement: By type of material and alphabetically or chronologically thereunder [Collection] (24.16)

1275 Images
  1. Louvre G 355: Side B: komos [Image] (9.64)

  2. Boston 10.198: Side B: komos [Image] (9.64)

  3. The George. a, upper side; b, under side; c, upper side raised, showing a portrait of Henrietta Maria. Prom the original Print by Hollar. [Image] (9.52)

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2 Text sections
  1. , 490-470 B.C., 530-500 B.C., A WORK OF THE KLEOPHRADES PAINTER, About 500 B.C. ... [Section in J. D. Beazley, L. D. Caskey, Attic Vase Paintings in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston] (5.51)

  2. B-a-r-b-e-c-u-e [Section in Tales of Hofman] (4.62)

621 Texts
  1. ... , Anderson A.L. ... , Betev B.L. ... , Cartacci A.M. ... , Jin B.N. ... , Konig A.C. ... , Bencheikh A M. ... , Roe B.P. ... , Syed A.A. ... , Vorobev A.A. ... , Yang B.Z. ... , van der Zwaan B.C.C. ... , Ball A H. ... , Nilsson B S. ... , Carter A A. ... , Honma A K. ... , Janissen A C. ... , Kennedy B W. ... , Lee A M. ... , Martin A J. ... , Rossi A M. ... , Schaile A D. ... , Shen B C. ... , Smith A M. ... , Watson A T. ... , Thompson A S. ... , Belk A T. ... , Greene A M. ... , Wright A G. ... , Finch A J. ... , Patel A D. ... , Halley A W. ... , Schwarz A S. ... , Lutz A M. ... , Betteridge A P. ... , Litke A M. ... , LeClaire B W. ... , Walsh A M. ... , Benvenuti A.C. ... , Buytaert J.A.M.A. ... , Camacho Rozas A.J. ... , Forbes K.A.J. ... , Frodesen A.G. ... , Khomenko B.A. ... , Korytov A.V. ... , Nielsen B.S. ... , Olshevski A.G. ... , Bauerdick L A T. ... , Read A.L. ... , Schyns M.A.E. ... , Segar A.M. ... , Sisakian A.N. ... , Vodopyanov A.S. ... , Wetherell A.M. ... ; Measurement of the mass of the Z boson and the energy calibration of LEP [Text] (55.01)

  2. ... , Karyukhin A.N. ... , Kozhin A.S., Kononov A.I. ... , Myagkov A.G. ... , Minaenko A.A., Moiseev A.M. ... , Pleskach A.V. ... , Soldatov A.P., Solodkov A.A. ... , Vorobev A.P., Vovenko A.S. ... , Zaitsev A.M. ... , Dubnickova A.Z. ... , Clark A.G. ... , Watson A.T. ... , Doyle A.T. ... , Flavell A.J. ... , King B.T. ... , Carter A.A. ... , Martin A.J. ... , Green B.J. ... , Hawes B.M. ... , Segar A.M. ... , Weidberg A.R. ... , Gillman A.R. ... , Payne B.T. ... , Saunders B.J. ... , Wicklund A.B. ... , Goshaw A.T., Lee A.M. ... , Lankford A.J. ... , Wadsworth B.F. ... , Pope B.G. ... , Bogush A.A. ... , Demchenko A.I. ... , Gazizov A.Z. ... , Schaffer A.C. ... , Leite M.A.L. ... , Rewiersma P.A.M. ... , Konig A.C. ... , Wijnen T.A.M. ... , Frodesen A.G. ... , Erasov A.B. ... , Larichev A.N. ... , Selikov A.V. ... , Borisov A.A. ... , Dushkin A.Yu. ... , Fenyuk A.B. ... ; ATLAS computing technical proposal [Text] (48.86)

  3. ... , Jin B N. ... , Koenig A C. ... , Nilsson B S. ... , Roe B P. ... , Stringfellow B C. ... , Syed A A. ... , Vorobyov A A. ... , Yang B Z. ... , Ball A H. ... , Carter A A. ... , Kennedy B W. ... , Lee A M. ... , Martin A J. ... , O'Neill B P. ... , Rossi A M., Halley A W. ... , Schaile A D. ... , Shen B C. ... , Smith A M. ... , Watson A T. ... , Thompson A S. ... , Belk A T. ... , Greene A M. ... , Wright A G. ... , Finch A J. ... , Patel A D., Rowlingson B S. ... , Schwarz A S. ... , Lutz A M. ... , LeClaire B W. ... , Walsh A M. ... , Bauerdick L A T. ... , Buytaert J A M A. ... , Camacho Rozas A J. ... , Eerola P A M. ... , Frodesen A G. ... , Heck B W. ... , Hyams B D. ... , Khomenko B A. ... , King B J. ... , Korytov A V. ... , Nielsen B S. ... , Olshevskii A G. ... , Pinsent A C. ... , Read A L. ... , Segar A M. ... , Sissakian A N. ... , Wetherell A M. ... , Anderson A L. ... , Betev B L. ... , Bouwens B T. ... , Cartacci A M. ... ; Electroweak parameters of the Z$^0$ resonance and the standard model [Text] (46.99)

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