Typescripts
Found in 490 Collections and/or Records:
Vocabulario de solo los nombres de la lengua Pocomam / escrito y ordenado por el padre fray Pedro Moran en el convento de N.P. Santo Dom. de Guathemala, 1720
Contains a bound typescript of Moran.
Vocabulario en la lengua de Maya, approximately 1591-1940
Contains a bound typescript of the dictionary, Maya to Spanish.
Vocabulario en la lengua de Maya, approximately 1521-1940
Contains a typescript of the dictionary, Spanish to Maya.
Vocabulario en las lenguas Cakchicel y Castellana / por Fr. Thomás de Santo Domingo, 1928
Contains typed notes from Gates related to his work in transcribing and translating Thomás de Santo Domingo's "Vocabulario en la Lengua Cakchiquel."
Vocabulario en lengua Tzeldal / Domingo de Ara, 1571
Typescript of the Guzman copy.
Vocabulario en que yran en Latin por el orden de el abecedario los adverbios y preposiciones de acusativo y ablativo, y las conjunciones, para que con mas facilidad halles el que hiciere a tu intento / Pedro Moran, 1720
Contains a bound typescript of Moran.
Vocabulario Gramatical del Español y Quecchí / Ramón G. Saravia, 1895
Samuel Wagstaff papers
Collection includes a nineteenth-century ledger used for a journal and an incomplete letter written from prison. Also in the collection are photocopied photographs and a typescript of the journal.
We are enjoined to overcome the last wilderness -- ourselves / by Mary Mizell, 1927
This file contains a screenplay of We are Enjoined to Overcome the Last Wilderness -- Ourselves, 111 pp., dating from 1927. This screenplay is arranged into four sections: We Are Enjoined to Overcome the Last Wilderness -- Ourselves; Lina Elise Roth Grey "Dolly"; Zane Grey "Zane"; and Postlude and Five Years Later. A note on the front says: "This screenplay, though written via special contract with Zane Grey Corporations... is a work of fiction."
Clyde E. Weeks interview
Typescipt of an interview taken from the included audiocassette. The interview as conducted by Richard Weeks on 3 Feb. 1985. Clyde E. Weeks talks about his youth and about his decision to join the Marine Corps at age 17. He describes his training and his experiences in combat while attacking three different islands in the Pacific. One of the islands was Guam.