3,040 research outputs found

    Financial Summit: J.R. Briggs & Dave Briggs

    No full text
    Dave and J.R. Briggs speak on stewardship of finances. Dave Briggs currently serves as the stewardship director at Central Christian Church of Arizona. Previously he served in a similar role at Willowcreek Church and prior to that was a finance manager for GE for 27 years. He has developed numerous financial seminars and classes and regularly speaks at churches and conferences around the country. Dave and his wife Debbie had two sons attend Taylor and served for three years on the Taylor Parents’ Cabinet. J.R. Briggs wears a variety of ministry hats. On a local level, he serves as one of the pastors of The Renew Community. He is also the Founder and Director of Kairos Partnerships and Director of Leadership and Congregation Formation for the Ecclesia Network. He is a life coach, consultant, frequent speaker, and author of seven books. He and his wife Megan, along with their two sons Carter and Bennett, live in the Philadelphia area

    Dave Bennett's most exciting game (1967)

    No full text
    This article was written by Dave Bennett, the captain for the 1967 Springfield College baseball team. In the article, Dave described his most exciting baseball game, the win over Wesleyan with a 3-2 score. "History Baseball" is written on the top of the article.In the season of 1967, Springfield College Baseball team had a final record of 14-7. David Bennett was the captain of the Springfield College baseball team and the co-captain and quarterback of the football team. He graduated from Springfield College in 1967 and became an instructor in physical education and a coach

    Dave Hughes and Dave Bennett

    No full text
    A photograph of Dave Hughes, linebacker, and Dave Bennett, quarterback, on the the 1965 Football Team. Both men are standing holding footballs on the first steps of Springfrield College's Marsh Memorial building.The 1965 Springfield College Football team went 9-0-0 and remains the only College Football team to go undefeated and untied during a season. Springfield College’s opponents in ’65-'66 were the US. Coast Guard (30-14), Amherst College (13-0), Williams College (28-8), Colby College (42-13), Northeastern University (16-14), American International College (43-6), Rhode Island University (7-6), University of New Hampshire (43-13), and Wagner College (30-13). The game against Amherst College was televised on Channel 22 and was the first Western Mass football game ever televised in the region. The team received many honors, including Ted Dunn being named UPI New England College Division Coach of the Year and several players received honors including being selected for the All Decade Team. The team came in second to the University of Maine for selection for a bid to play in the Tangerine Bowl in Orlando, FL, December 11, 1965

    Dave Bennett

    No full text
    A newspaper article photograph of Dave Bennett, the quarterback for the 1965 Springfield College football team. In the picture he is in position to hike the football, in a crouch with his two hands held on the football.The 1965 Springfield College Football team went 9-0-0 and remains the only College Football team to go undefeated and untied during a season. Springfield College’s opponents in ’65-'66 were the US. Coast Guard (30-14), Amherst College (13-0), Williams College (28-8), Colby College (42-13), Northeastern University (16-14), American International College (43-6), Rhode Island University (7-6), University of New Hampshire (43-13), and Wagner College (30-13). The game against Amherst College was televised on Channel 22 and was the first Western Mass football game ever televised in the region. The team received many honors, including Ted Dunn being named UPI New England College Division Coach of the Year and several players received honors including being selected for the All Decade Team. The team came in second to the University of Maine for selection for a bid to play in the Tangerine Bowl in Orlando, FL, December 11, 1965

    Ramona Bennett, Tacoma, October 1976

    No full text
    Ramona Bennett (b. 1938) is a prominent Puyallap Tribe leader and activist. She was elected to the Puyallup Tribal Council in 1968, and served as Tribal Chairwoman from 1971 to 1978. Bennett is also a pioneer of fishing rights advocacy, co-founding the Survival of American Indians Association in 1964, and helping to bring “fish-in” protests to national prominence. Much of Bennett’s work focuses on social welfare issues, mainly fighting for the rights of women, children and families. She began her social service work in the 1950s, with the Seattle’s American Indian Women’s Service League. In 1972, she co-founded the Local Indian Child Welfare Act Committee, where she developed a model for childhood and family services that she used to co-author and secure the national Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978, a Federal law that governs the removal and out-of-home placement of indigenous children. In the 1980s, she co-founded the Rainbow Youth and Family Services in Tacoma, a non-profit which she ran for many years. This photo of Ramona Bennett was taken for a profile of her run by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer in October 1976. At the time, Bennett was chairwoman of the Puyallup Tribal Council.Caption information source: “Ramona Bennett,” The Seattle Civil Rights & Labor History Project, University of Washington, https://depts.washington.edu/civilr/bennett.htm Caption information source: "Ramona Bennett - a Cool, Witty, Charming Leader" by Jack Wilkins, Seattle Post=Intelligencer, October 28, 1976, p. A71 photographic print: b&w; 8 x 10 in

    Smith and Bennett at the 2019 festival

    No full text
    Ragtime artists Hal Smith and Dave Bennett pose for a photohttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/cht-ragtime/2093/thumbnail.jp

    Barnhart and Bennett at the 2019 festival

    No full text
    Ragtime artists Hal Smith and Dave Bennett pose for a photohttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/cht-ragtime/2100/thumbnail.jp

    Bennett and Smith at the 2019 festival

    No full text
    Saturday evening\u27s concert featured Ragtime artists Dave Bennett and Hal Smithhttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/cht-ragtime/2120/thumbnail.jp

    Bennett and Barnhart at the 2019 festival

    No full text
    Ragtime artists Dave Bennett and Jeff Barnhart share their insight for the group chathttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/cht-ragtime/2132/thumbnail.jp

    Health, Safety and Environmental Education at the Canadian Labour Congress

    No full text
    This piece describes involvement and reflections by Dave Bennett in three areas: 1) union education at the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) from the late 1970s onwards; 2) insights regarding how the CLC moved into health and safety education in the early 1980s; and 3) further thoughts on how the CLC moved from health and safety into environmental protection education in the early 1990s, and consequent changes in the perspective adopted by health and safety courses. There are two types of critical comment on these educational processes, one which examines the educational dilemmas at the time, with an evaluation of the decisions reached, and the other a retrospective view of the educational process as a result of reflective hindsight. </jats:p
    corecore