5,012 research outputs found
Interview with Russell Beaton
Interview with Russell Beaton by Jim Knight on June 18, 2015. Russ Beaton was Professor of Economics at Willamette University in Salem. He participated in drafting the widely acclaimed 1973 Oregon legislation on land-use planning.https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/planoregon_interviews/1018/thumbnail.jp
Russell (Mifflin), Jane. Jane Russell (Mifflin) discusses nursing practices in Newfoundland
Russell graduated from nursing school in Newfoundland in 1939. She talks about working as a public health nurse in Harbour Grace
Al Beaton
Date scanned: 2003-07-10.Four photographs mounted on paper; Al Beaton presenting.See TJ1385 .I57 1979 ROPEWAY for Symposium proceedings.Held in the Russell L. and Lyn Wood Mining History Archive, Arthur Lakes Library, Colorado School of Mines.OITAF-NACS (International Organization for Transportation by Rope/North American Continental Section) 1st Continental Enclosed Carrier Tramway Symposium, Snowbird, Utah, August 27-31, 1979
Interview with Anne Russell
Interview with Anne Russell, playwright and author of several books on local history, including Wilmington: A Pictoral History
Arthur J. Russell Correspondence
Entries include brief biographical information corrected in pencil, letters of introduction to Russell and his sister concerning the Maine Author Collection, a handwritten reply from Emma M. Russell, typed correspondence between Dunnack and Russell concerning books that should have been purchased right away at secondhand stores, a Maine Library Bulletin envelope with a small photographic portrait of young Russell and a full-length photograph, a page typed with a misspelling by the Maine State Library presented with a photograph of the home of Russell\u27s birth in Hallowell, Maine, and a lengthy typed biography on Minneapolis Journal stationery
Author Mary Doria Russell talks about her most recent work "The Sparrow"
Author and "recovering academic" Mary Doria Russell talks about her most recent work "The Sparrow", which is about humanity's first contact with another intelligent species and the unexpected consequences. Sponsored by Michigan State University Libraries, Computing and Technology. Part of the MSU Libraries' Colloquia Series. Held at the MSU Main Library
Letter from H. L. Russell to Carl Hayden
Letter from H. L. Russell to Carl Hayden regarding fines in the park
The state of affairs in health
Angela Beaton and Lesley Russell introduce their analysis of the 2009-10 state and territory health budgets
THE GLOBAL financial crisis has been good for health in the sense that it has provoked the state and territory governments to inject capital into health infrastructure. But this major investment needs to be balanced with provisions to ensure that needed health services are there for the vulnerable and disadvantaged groups that are feeling the pinch in this economic downturn. Generally speaking, the marked investment in health infrastructure in all state and territory budgets, which includes the development and upgrade of metropolitan and regional hospitals, emergency departments, and the purchase of various bits of high-tech medical equipment, will help to improve health care services for many Australians. While there is a clear emphasis in all of the state and territory budgets on creating and sustaining jobs, provisions for prevention and indigenous health services seem to be secondary considerations. This is surprising given the increased emphasis on these issues and the national partnerships between the Commonwealth and state governments that are now in place to address them. These partnerships require that the states and territories provide funds for preventive health and Indigenous health ($772 million over four years). It is not at all clear that these funds have been committed and their expenditure is underway. Services for disadvantaged groups and issues around prevention surely become even more important at a time when people may be forced to choose cheaper, less nutritious foods and when a visit to the dentist is well down on the list of a family’s priorities. This highlights the importance of achieving real change in these areas by taking a more integrated and comprehensive approach, facilitated by the national partnerships, and backed up by shared accountability, better performance reporting and greater budget transparency. • An analysis of state and territory health commitments against the National Partnership commitments agreed through the COAG process is available from the Menzies Centre for Health Policy website. Angela Beaton is a researcher at the Menzies Centre for Health Policy, University of Sydney / Australian National University. Lesley Russell is the Menzies Foundation Fellow at the Menzies Centre for Health Policy, University of Sydney / Australian National University, and a Research Associate at the US Studies Centre, University of Sydney. She is currently working in Washington DC.
Photo: Andrew Jeffrey 
Russell V. Morgan Papers
Russell V. Morgan (1893-1952) was an American music educator, former President of the Music Educators National Conference (MENC), now known as the National Association for Music Education (NAfME), (1930-32) and MENC Hall of Fame inductee (1996). Morgan studied music education at Northwestern University where he received a BM (1915), MM (1921), and was awarded an honorary doctorate (1936). During his career, Morgan served as an army bandmaster during World War I, a church organist, a supervisor of music in public schools, and author of articles, books and school texts on music and music education. The Russell V. Morgan Papers covers the period from 1896-1998; the bulk of the materials date from 1920-1952. The collection consists of both personal and professional papers including published and unpublished writings, speeches, correspondence, programs, photographs, clippings, and articles related to the Morgans career as a music educator, his involvement with MENC, and music education and reference materials
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