Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "1997 Central Texas tornado outbreak" ¶ 14
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Jarrell and at
* Randall Jarrell a nationally acclaimed poet lived in Greensboro, where he was a professor at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro until his death in 1965.
" Fortunately for Tate and his wife, Lowell soon settled into the so-called " writer's house " ( a dorm that received its nickname after it had accrued a number of ambitious young writers ) with fellow students Peter Taylor, Robie Macauley and Randall Jarrell .< ref > McAlexander, Hugh, " Peter Taylor: The Undergraduate Years at Kenyon ," The Kenyon Review, New Series, Vol.
Lowell also maintained a close friendship with the previously mentioned poet / critic Randall Jarrell from the time when they met at Kenyon College in 1937 until Jarrell's death in 1965.
Jarrell, along with E. C. Haeber, the town was settled at the intersection of an old stagecoach road and the Bartlett and Western Railway that was under construction.
He studied there under Robert Penn Warren, who first published Jarrell's criticism ; Allen Tate, who first published Jarrell's poetry ; and John Crowe Ransom, who gave Jarrell his first teaching job as a Freshman Composition instructor and tennis coach at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio.
Jarrell taught English at Kenyon for two years, coached tennis, and served as the resident faculty member in an undergraduate dormitory that housed future writers Robie Macauley, Peter Taylor, and poet Robert Lowell.
According to Lowell biographer Paul Mariani, " Jarrell was the first person of own generation he genuinely held in awe " due to Jarrell's brilliance and confidence even at the age of 23.
Jarrell went on to teach at the University of Texas at Austin from 1939 to 1942, where he began to publish criticism and where he met his first wife, Mackie Langham.
Jarrell divorced his first wife and married Mary von Schrader, a young woman whom he met at a summer writer's conference in Colorado, in 1952.
They first lived together while Jarrell was teaching for a term at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana.
The couple also moved temporarily to Washington D. C. in 1956 when Jarrell served as the consultant in poetry at the Library of Congress ( a position that later became titled " Poet Laureate ") for two years, returning to Greensboro and the University of North Carolina after his term ended.
Whichever side of the Atlantic one chooses to place Eliot, Jarrell was his superior in at least one significant respect.
In addition to poetry and criticism, Jarrell also published a satiric novel, Pictures from an Institution, in 1954 ( a National Book Award for Fiction finalist ) — drawing upon his teaching experiences at Sarah Lawrence College, which served as the model for the fictional Benton College.
* Jarrell page at Poets. org
* Jarrell page at Modern American Poetry site
* Finding Aid for the Randall Jarrell Papers at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
In 1993, Michael Jarrell was appointed professor of composition at the University of Music and Performing Arts, Vienna.
* Michael Jarrell at Musinfo – List of works and short bio

Jarrell and Central
* 1997 – The unusual 1997 Central Texas tornado outbreak Jarrell, Texas

Jarrell and Texas
* May 27 – The second-deadliest tornado of the 1990s hits in Jarrell, Texas, killing 27 people.
The F5 tornado that struck the town of Jarrell, Texas killed 27 people out of 1319 residents.
Jarrell is a city in Williamson County, Texas, United States and is located about 12 miles north of Georgetown, Texas or about 38 miles north of Austin.
es: Jarrell ( Texas )
sh: Jarrell ( Texas )
# REDIRECT Jarrell, Texas
James Jarrell Pickle ( October 11, 1913 – June 18, 2005 ), also known as J. J. ' Jake ' Pickle, was a United States Representative from the 10th congressional district of Texas from 1963 to 1995.
Word Records was founded in Waco, Texas, in 1951 by Jarrell McCracken.
However, extreme CAPE, by modulating the updraft ( and downdraft ), can allow for exceptional events, such as the deadly F5 tornadoes that hit Plainfield, Illinois on August 28, 1990 and Jarrell, Texas on May 27, 1997 on days which weren't readily apparent as conducive to large tornadoes.
A National Secretariat was formed and the National Cursillo Office ( currently in Jarrell, Texas ) was established.
Cursillo is a registered trademark of the National Cursillo Center in Jarrell, Texas.
Harry Jay Knowles was born in Austin, Texas, the son of Jarrell Jay Knowles and Helen Jane ( Harrison ) Knowles, who married September 19, 1970, in Austin.
A deadly F5 tornado that hit the city of Jarrell, Texas in 1997 moved to the southwest-directly opposite of commonly expected storm motion.

Jarrell and Tornado
On May 27, 1997, the town suffered from the destructive Jarrell Tornado, which destroyed the Double Creek Estates subdivision.
Additionally, many tornadoes have traveled in directions other than northeasterly, including the Jarrell Tornado ( F5 on the Fujita scale ), which moved south-southwesterly.

Jarrell and May
* May 6-Randall Jarrell, poet ( died 1965 )
Randall Jarrell ( May 6, 1914 – October 14, 1965 ) was an American poet, literary critic, children's author, essayist, novelist, and the 11th Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress, a position that now bears the title Poet Laureate.

Jarrell and 1997
Karl Shapiro ( 1913 – 2000 ), Randall Jarrell ( 1914 – 1965 ) and James Dickey ( 1923 – 1997 ) all wrote poetry that sprang from experience of active service. Together with Elizabeth Bishop ( 1911 – 1979 ), Theodore Roethke ( 1908 – 1963 ) and Delmore Schwartz ( 1913 – 1966 ), they formed a generation of poets that in contrast to the preceding generation often wrote in traditional verse forms.

Jarrell and by
* The Lost World, a poetry collection by Randall Jarrell
The county is divided into two regions by the Balcones Escarpment, which runs through the center from north to south along a line from Jarrell to Georgetown to Round Rock.
: Bebung may also refer to a musical composition by Michael Jarrell.
Jarrell is served by the Jarrell Independent School District.
Jarrell Emergency services are provided by the Jarrell Volunteer Fire Department operating under Williamson County ESD # 5.
In 2004 the PBS program History Detectives investigated a game board owned by Ron Jarrell of Arden, Delaware, which had elements of both The Landlord's Game and Monopoly.
Then, near dusk on October 14, 1965, while walking along U. S. highway 15-501 near Chapel Hill, N. C., where he had gone seeking medical treatment, Jarrell was struck by a car and killed.
Encouraged by Edmund Wilson, who published Jarrell's criticism in The New Republic, Jarrell quickly became a fiercely humorous critic of fellow poets, but in the post-war period, his criticism began to change, showing a more positive emphasis.
Jarrell translated poems by Rainer Maria Rilke and others, a play by Anton Chekhov, and several Grimm fairy tales.
Selected and with an introduction by Randall Jarrell.
edited by Mary Jarrell and Stuart Wright.
He is survived by his great-nephew Jacob K Roberts ( age 30 ) in Jarrell, Tx who is also an amateur no-limit poker player.
John Crowe Ransom ( right ) with Robie Macauley as he prepares to become editor of The Kenyon Review in 1959. In 1959 Robie Macauley succeeded Ransom as editor of The Kenyon Review, where he published fiction and poetry by John Barth, T. S. Eliot, Nadine Gordimer, Robert Graves, Randall Jarrell, Richmond Lattimore, Doris Lessing, Robert Lowell, V. S. Naipaul, Joyce Carol Oates, Frank O ' Connor, V. S. Pritchett, Thomas Pynchon, J. F. Powers, Karl Shapiro, Jean Stafford, Christina Stead, Peter Taylor, and Robert Penn Warren, as well as articles, essays and book reviews by Eric Bentley, Cleanth Brooks, R. P. Blackmur, Malcolm Cowley, Richard Ellmann, Leslie Fiedler, Martin Green, and Raymond Williams.
Pictures from an Institution is a 1954 novel by American poet Randall Jarrell.
Murphy plays Chandler Jarrell, a social worker who is informed by Kee Nang, played by Lewis, that he is " The Chosen One " and is destined to save " The Golden Child ", the savior of all humankind, from the demon, Sardo Numspa, played by Charles Dance.
* Pictures from an Institution by Randall Jarrell ( 1954 )

0.332 seconds.