Browse Items (407 total)
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ACT UP Protest in NY In 1991
A clipping from a newspaper scan of the Anniston Star describing an ACT UP Protest in New York in 1991. -
Rev. A. Stephen Pieters Speaks about AIDS and his faith
The national field director of the Metropolitan Community Church's AIDS outreach ministries speaks in Montgomery, Alabama in 1989 and his faith and his AIDS diagnosis. -
Despite prejudices, churches develop outreach - Montgomery Advertiser
A clipping of a scan of the October 21, 1989 Montgomery Advertiser focused on a headline announcing churches creating outreach programs for AIDS patients. -
Frank Romanowicz Quote in the Birmingham Post Herald
A quote from AIDS volunteer Frank Romanowicz about housing for people with AIDS in a 1992 issue of the Birmingham Post-Herald. -
Advertisement for quinine treatments for malaria.
An advertisement for two different quinine treatments for malaria; quinine bisulphate and quinine sulphate. Marketed as of "exceptional purity". -
Mary Shelley
Portrait of Mary Shelley, oil on canvas, c. 1831-1840. -
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map of Commercial Row, 1898
This is a screenshot of page 10 of the 1898 Huntsville Sanborn Fire Insurance map. This image of Commercial Row shows that the store at No. 3 sells Wholesale Tobacco. This map shows that the Harrison Brothers sold Wholesale Tobacco from their store on Commercial Row -
AIDS Caregivers Workshop
An article about AIDS Caregiving Workshops in the Montgomery Advertiser. It focuses on Malcolm Marler and the programs he ran through the 1917 AIDS Clinic at UAB. -
Down Street Station
Map location of Down Street Station -
Convolutional Neural Net Loss Plot
A loss plot for the letter convolutional neural net classifier. -
Convolutional Neural Network Architecture
The architecture for the letter recognition convolutional neural network. -
Table of Results from Automated Transcription Pipeline
A table that holds the results from testing for the automated transcription pipeline. -
Layout for Letter Recognition Pipeline
The layout of the pipeline for the automated transcriber. It shows the input from a 1613 Bible, object detected, cropped, then transposed to a letter. -
Object Detection Bounding Box Loss Plot
The loss plot for the bounding boxes from a YOLOv12 object detection model. Used to detect letters in a word. -
YOLOv12 Object Detection Validation Prediction Results
The results from the validation test set for the YOLOv12 object detection model for the automated transcriber pipeline. -
Mary Shelley - Letter to Percy Bysshe Shelley (Audio)
"Shelley was now financially responsible for Mary and Claire as well as Harriet, who was heavily pregnant with their second child. Godwin refused to see him, but drew on his resources. Mary wrote this impassioned letter to Shelley when he was in hiding from his numerous creditors. They could meet only on Sundays, when it was illegal to make arrests for debt."
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Mary Shelley - Journal of Sorrow (Audio)
"In the months immediately following Shelley's death Mary lived at Albaro on the outskirts of Genoa. Her only regular companions were her young son, Percy Florence, and the journal she began on 2 October 1822.
To this 'Journal of Sorrow' she confided her innermost thoughts: 'White paper - wilt thou be my confident? I will trust thee fully, for none shall see what I write.' To be sure, Mary would not have shared the entries she wrote immediately after Shelley's death, in which her remorse and despair sometimes approached hysteria. But she left no instructions for the 'Journal of Sorrow' to be destroyed after her death, and was perhaps reconciled to the idea that this, and her other journals, would eventually be seen by other eyes." -
Draft of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein
A picture of a page of a draft of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. The draft includes annotations from Percy Bysshe Shelley. Never Let Me Go is based on the Frankenstein narrative. -
Percy Bysshe Shelley - Letter to Mary Shelley (Audio)
"'Everybody is in despair and every thing in confusion' writes Shelley in his last letter to Mary. He was in Pisa to discuss a new journal, The Liberal, with Leigh Hunt and Lord Byron.
Shelley had been delayed there by Hunt's personal situation (his wife Marianne had been told she did not have long to live) and by Byron's complicated affairs. He hints that Edward Williams might sail back to the Villa Magni ahead of him. Hurriedly concluding the letter, Shelley hopes that Mary was reconciled to staying at the Villa Magni, where he had never been happier, but where she had been ill and wretchedly depressed. In a PS he tells her that he has found the manuscript of his translation."
