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    Charles R. Clark

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    An obituary for educator and attorney Charles R. Clark

    R. G. Clark

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    An obituary for Iowa politician R. G. Clark

    Charles R. Clark

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    An obituary for educator and attorney Charles R. Clark

    Clark, Emma R.

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    Why visit Fort Stevens, D.C.? A narrative about President Abraham Lincoln that everyone should read, by Emma R. Clarke, retired teacher emeritus, Randall Jr. High School, Washington, D.C. /1946?/ Bound volume of clippings with text.https://dh.howard.edu/og_news/1003/thumbnail.jp

    The Unsettled Nature of the Union

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    This article is a response to Bradford R. Clark, The Eleventh Amendment and the Nature of the Union, 123 Harv. L. Rev. 1817 (2010). In his article, The Eleventh Amendment and the Nature of the Union, Professor Bradford Clark offeres an explanation for the puzzling text of the Eleventh Amendment, which appears to preclude federal jurisdiction over suits against a state by citizens of other states but not by its own citizens. Professor Clark argues that the Amendment\u27s text made sense to the Founders because they did not envision any suits against the states arising under federal law. Thus, by clarifying that the states could not be sued under Article III\u27s diversity provisions, the Amendment\u27s framers were effectively precluding all suits against the states in federal court. In this response, the author notes that Professor Clark\u27s defense of the Eleventh Amendment\u27s text combines a narrow claim and a broad claim. the author finds Professor Clark\u27s narrow claim that the Founders understood that the federal obligations of the states would be enforceable in suits against state officials rather than the states themselves to be well supported. On the other hand, he is unconvinced by Professor Clark\u27s broader claim that the Founders understood that the federal government would lack the power to impose legal obligations on the states. He finds Professor Clark\u27s evidence for this claim to be equivocal, most of it being susceptible to a narrower reading. In his view, the Founders did not settle this particular aspect of the legislative power of the federal government

    Ancestral Caddo Ceramic Vessels from the Wright Plantation (41RR7) and Rowland Clark (41RR77) Sites in the Harris Collection at the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution

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    The collection of R. King Harris at the National Museum of Natural History (NMNH) at the Smithsonian Institution has ancestral Caddo ceramic vessels from the Wright Plantation (41RR7) and Rowland Clark (41RR77) sites along the Red River in East Texas. Other than the site provenience and the burial number of two of the vessels at the Rowland Clark site, there is no more detailed documentation available on when or where within the sites that Harris obtained the ceramic vessels. Nevertheless, it is important as part of the broader study of the history of Caddo ceramic vessel forms and decorative motifs to put these vessels on record

    MGRRE_PureOilScoutTickets_Miller, Clark R. and Ina_1_21117028900000

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