7,587 research outputs found
Land Lease #1 between Carson Estate Company and Wong Foon, 1943-1946
Agreement beginning April 1, 1943 and ending March 31, 1946 for 35 acres of land of the Victoria D. de Carson tract. Yearly rent is $700. Signed by Hamilton H. Cotton, secretary, Carson Estate Company and Wong Foon. Lease includes Foon's citizenship serial number
Land Lease #1 between Carson Estate Company and Glen Wong, 1944-1946
Describes lease agreement terms beginning April 1, 1944, ending March 31, 1946 on about 35 acres of land of the Victoria D. de Carson tract with a yearly rent of $700. Signatures of Hamilton H. Cotton, secretary, Carson Estate Company and Glen Wong, lessee are present
Land Lease #1 between Carson Estate Company and [John Hajime] Masuzumi, 1946-1949
Describes agreement terms beginning April 1, 1946, ending March 31, 1949. Lease for 35 acres of the Victoria D. de Carson tract; yearly rent is $875. Lease terms are beneath the affixed page of the document
Land Lease #1 between Carson Estate Company and Glen Wong, 1943-1946
Describes lease agreement beginning April 1, 1943, ending March 31, 1946 for 35 acres "more or less" of the Victoria D. de Carson tract. Yearly rent is $700. Lease agreement also includes Foon's citizenship serial number. Lease agreement is transferred to Glen Wong from Wong Fu on March 6, 1944 as handwritten on the second page of the lease
Panel: Wright State undergraduate research
This Wright State panel on undergraduate research featured Victoria Carson, Deborah Rocheleau, and Hyatt Hammad
Landscapes of violence: women surviving family violence in regional and rural Victoria
In this research, family violence survivors have identified issues and barriers they have encountered, and have provided suggestions in regards to how both the criminal justice system and the broader Victorian community might assist survivors and help prevent family violence.
Overview
This project combines the findings of two studies undertaken by the Centre for Rural and Regional Law and Justice. Drawing on and extending the findings in Women\u27s experience of surviving family violence and accessing the Magistrate\u27s court in Geelong, Victoria (2013), this report extends the research in terms of geographic areas, issues covered and range of participants.
It examines the experiences of, and outcomes for, women survivors of family violence in regional and rural Victoria, considering their contact with, and perceptions of, government agencies (including Victoria Police, the Victorian Magistrate\u27s courts and the Department of Human Services) as well as private and community advocates (legal services, women\u27s services and family violence services) and healthcare professionals.
Through this research, survivors have identified issues and barriers they have encountered in escaping family violence, and have provided suggestions in regards to how both the criminal justice system and the broader Victorian community might assist survivors and help prevent family violence. As well as being informed by survivors, this publication includes insights provided by government and non-government practitioners and organisations who have offered their views on this report\u27s key findings and recommendations. In addition to the generous contributions of these participants, this report utilises relevant data and emerging research in an effort to identify best practice responses to family violence; improve access to justice, support and safety; and protect and promote women\u27s rights and entitlements
Reader\u27s Guide for Maaza Mengiste\u27s Beneath the Lion\u27s Gaze
A reader\u27s guide for Beneath the Lion\u27s Gaze by Maaza Mengiste. This guide was prepared by Victoria Carson, Abigail Booher, and Andrew Hurst
African American Storyteller, Victoria A. Casey McDonald
In the deep resonance of storyteller Victoria A. Casey McDonald’s voice, you will hear her tell stories about growing up in Western North Carolina, and the kind of Christmas she had as a child. The late Victoria was our friend, a CSA board member, author, and “Stories of Mountain Folk” interviewer
Art Forum - Lynn, Victoria
4 September 2002. -- Victoria Lynn is a distinguished curator and writer who has worked in the field of contemporary and Australian visual arts over the last two decades. She has recently been appointed Director of Creative Development at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image, an innovative exhibition venue located at Federation Square in Melbourne, due to open later this year. She is currently Chair of the Visual Arts/Crafts Board of the Australia Council. From 1991 to 2001 she was Curator of Contemporary Art at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, and the numerous exhibitions she has curated have received substantial critical acclaim. She is the author of many articles, catalogue essays and edited collections, and books on artists Marion Borgelt and Eugene Carchesio. In her lecture she will discuss both Australian and International work, the challenges at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image, and the different modes and understandings of what the moving image can and might be understood as
Black Fashion Designers Symposium: Dr. Victoria Rovine “Fashion in Africa and Beyond”
Dr. Victoria Rovine, “Fashion in Africa and Beyond” at The Museum at FIT's annual fashion symposium, Black Fashion Designers, held on Monday, February 6, 2017. The one-day symposium featured talks by designers, models, journalists, and scholars on African diasporic culture and fashion.Victoria Rovine is an associate professor of art history at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and author of African Fashion, Global Style: Histories, Innovations, and Ideas You Can Wear
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