71,197 research outputs found
Too Good To Hide: Tony Hayes
The article provides a brief profile of Tony Hayes. The text focuses on Hayes’ project ‘Window Dressing’ (2019) that documents shop window displays in Chester, Liverpool and Manchester. All of the photographs for this project include the reflection of the photographer – consequently the images combine the window display and the photographer’s self-portrait. Two of Hayes’ photographs are reproduced in the article and written about in the article text. The article complemented the exhibition ‘Too Good To Hide: Tony Hayes’ shown at the Rainbow Tea Rooms, Chester (28 Bridge Street, CH1 1NQ).The article ‘Too Good To Hide: Tony Hayes’ was written in relation to the exhibition of the same name at the Rainbow Tea Rooms in Chester (July - October 2024). The exhibition was curated by Stephen Clarke, and was the fourth curatorial project for Clarke at the café’s exhibition space in Chester city centre. Tony Hayes is a photographer based in Widnes who has undertaken an AA2A (Artist Access to Art Colleges) residency at the University of Chester. In the article Clarke considers how the camera operates as a series of lenses and mirrors to view a subject. Clarke refers to the catalogue essay by John Szarkowski for the exhibition ‘Mirrors and Windows: American Photography since 1960’ at the Museum of Modern Art New York in 1978. Szarkowski describes how a photographer uses a camera either as an objective ‘window’ to view the world or a subjective ‘mirror’ that reflects the photographer’s own sensibility. Clarke applies this discussion to the work of Tony Hayes who has made a series of photographs looking into shop windows that record both the view through the glass pane and the reflection of the photographer.
Stephen Clarke and Tony Hayes were interviewed by Sean Styles on BBC Merseyside in Liverpool at 1.30pm on Sunday 6th October 2024.unfunde
Spirit of Chester, Chester County, South Carolina History - Accession 1080 - M491 (542)
This collection consists of a magazine titled “Spirit of Chester: Chester County, SC” that was a supplement to The Chester News, October 28, 1932 as an advertisement of the county for prospective businesses, visitors, and potential inhabitants. It illustrates the history of Chester County, South Carolina up until 1932 and describes what makes Chester County in the 1930s the “Power Center of the South” and “A Good Place in Which to Live.” The article in the possession of Winthrop University Archives is a photocopy of the original.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/manuscriptcollection_findingaids/2096/thumbnail.jp
Portrait of Chester Porter QC, 2001 [1] [picture] /
Title from accession record.; Part of collection: Collection of portraits of Chester Porter QC, 2001.; Condition: Good
An evaluation of the 'Living with Cancer' project: Using neuro-linguistic programming techniques to maximise the coping strategies of carers and patients living with cancer in Ellesmere Port
The 'Living with cancer' project aimed to improve communication, relationship, and coping skills of health professionals, cancer patients and their carers in Ellesmere Port. The project delivered NLP Diploma training to 55 health professionals between April 2001-March 2004.Commissioned by Chester and Halton NHS Trust and funded through the New Opportunities Fund
Letter Written by Chester W. Desormeaux to the Bryant College Service Club Dated July 17, 1943
[Transcription begins]
ARDMORE ARMY AIR FIELDARDMORE, OKLA.
7/17/43
Dear Club Members:
This is to advise you of my new change of station. My new address will be:
2nd Lt. Chester W. Desormeaux394th B. Grp. 584th Sqdn.Ardmore Army Air FieldArdmore, Oklahoma
Your recent circular letter + your exchange list has been recently received. You are doing good work. Please accept my thanks. Please give Mr. Shors my regards as coming from “The French man”.
Yours sincerely,Chester W. Desormeaux
[Transcription ends
Portrait of Chester Porter QC, 2001 [2] [picture] /
Title from accession record.; Part of collection: Collection of portraits of Chester Porter QC, 2001.; Condition: Good
How Town of Chester v. Laroe Estates, Inc. Turned the One-Good-Plaintiff Rule into the One-Good-Remedy Rule
This Article argues that Town of Chester reframes the one-good-plaintiff rule, turning an inquiry focused on at least one plaintiff with standing for each asserted claim into one in which courts must assay standing for the entire field of damages seekers. In three parts, the Article reviews Article III standing juxtaposed with the advent of the one-good-plaintiff rule, discusses Town of Chester, and explores how Town of Chester affects the future of the one-good-plaintiff rule. Although Town of Chester did not address existing plaintiffs or how their extant damages theories can anchor other parties, the Court’s rationale is a salvo against the idea that a lawsuit can proceed based on one plaintiff’s standing. By focusing on the need to separate plaintiffs attendant to whether damages are sought collectively or individually, Town of Chester will force plaintiffs to craft and solidify damages theories early in litigation without the benefit of discovery. Town of Chester presages more narrowly tailored injunctions, nudging against the continued utility of nationwide preliminary injunctions. Town of Chester also could limit access to the courts for certain types of lawsuits, like politicized cases challenging executive policies. By demanding fulsome analysis on all plaintiffs, courts no doubt will face ineluctable administrative burdens each time they must satisfy themselves of not encroaching upon an advisory opinion for a party without standing. The upshot is a shift from who has standing to how certain relief is supported by standing. Town of Chester offers a minor adjustment with major implications, reconstructing the one-good-plaintiff rule into the one-good-remedy rule
'Regeneration for practitioners' at the University of Chester: Using a flexible, work based framework to deliver demand based education for professional regenerators
This conference paper discusses the development of a regeneration programme at the University of Chester
Using a work based learning framework to deliver regeneration education for practitioners at the University of Chester
This is the author's PDF version of an article published in Ad-Lib© 2009. The definitive version is available at www.cont-ed.cam.ac.uk/institute-media/pdfs/adlib/adlib38.pdfThis article discusses a regeneration practitioner programme delivered through the work based learning and integrative studies programme at the University of Chester
Good practice? invest in a framework!
M
any reports on major national
initiatives like the Crime Reduction
Programme acknowledge
‘implementation failure’. Common
explanations are ‘poor project-management
skills’,or ‘short-term funding regimes’.
Important as these are,Heraclitus’excellent
Soapbox article (‘Good Practice - What’s it
all about?’ Network News,Winter 2005) also
blamed ‘dumbing down.’
Higher echelons in crime prevention often
believe ‘The only information you can hope
to get into practitioners’heads is a slogan
or two,if lucky.’ I totally disagree. Crime
prevention’s basic idea is simple (cutting
the cause cuts the risk),but its practice
is complex
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