10,248 research outputs found
Three people pose with their Athletic Awards trophies, circa 1982
Hughes trophy winner Catherine Desrosiers and Hebert Trophy winner Paul Saltzman with Cougar extraordinaire Joe Taylor at the Clark University Athletic Awards Banquet, 1982.
All photographs in this collection were digitized between 2022 and 2023.
The photographs in this collection are part of the Photographs and Media record group of Clark University’s Archives & Special Collections.https://commons.clarku.edu/athawardphotos/1000/thumbnail.jp
Catherine Fitch, soprano; Maureen Volk, piano; Clark Ross, guitar
Catherine Fitch, soprano; Maureen Volk, piano; Clark Ross, guita
Hamilton, Catherine Jane [pseud. Retlaw Spring] (1841–1935), author and journalist
Hamilton, Catherine Jane [pseud. Retlaw Spring] (1841-1935), author and journalist, was born on 25 January 1841 at Kilmersdon, Somerset, where she was baptized on 12 April 1841, the younger of two daughters of Richard Hamilton (1805?-1859), vicar of Kilmersdon, and his wife Charlotte, née Cooper (1809-1882), the fifth daughter of William Cooper, of Queens County, Ireland. She was of Irish heritage on both sides. Her father belonged to a military family with roots in Strabane (county Tyrone) - his father, John Hamilton, and her father’s four older brothers were all officers in the Fifth Foot – and was a graduate of Trinity College Dublin. He had been a bright scholar with an aptitude for languages, and as a preacher was praised for his powerful sermons and his ability to bring the Bible to life for his parishioners
Katerina Clark, Michael Holquist, Mikhail Bakhtin
Depretto Catherine. Katerina Clark, Michael Holquist, Mikhail Bakhtin. In: Revue des études slaves, tome 59, fascicule 4, 1987. Tome 59, fascicule 4. pp. 908-910
Behind the Scenes: Sets and Costumes
Behind the Scenes: Sets and Costumes
Traina Gallery Images
by: Christine Weinrobe and Catherine Spingler
Images photographed by: Greer Muldowneyhttps://commons.clarku.edu/vpae/1033/thumbnail.jp
Dr. Jennifer Erkulwater and Dr. Catherine Bagwell – Faculty Author Interview
Featured authors are Dr. Catherine Bagwell, Associate Professor of Psychology and Dr. Jennifer Erkulwater, Associate Professor of Political Science. Dr. Rick Mayes is another co-author, but he is unable to join us today due to a research leave project in Peru. Their new book, Medicating Children: ADHD and Pediatric Mental Health, integrates analyses of the clinical, political, historical, educational, social, economic and legal aspects of ADHD and the medications and treatment surrounding the mental disorder
Interview with Catherine McCall
Interview with Dr. Catherine McCall, graduate of UNCW's MFA in Creative Writing program and author of Lifeguarding: A Memoir of Secrets, Swimming, and the South
Richard Clark interviewed by Catherine Hallsworth, 6 December 2016
Richard Clark (RC) interviewed by Catherine Hallsworth (CH) on 06 December 2016. RC came to Leicester, England in 1989 to study a Master's Degree in Archaeological Studies Post-Excavation Skills. Applied to work for Leicester Archaeological Unit in 1991, began working on excavation at the Tax Office on Causeway Lane as Roman Pottery Specialist. Describes biggest physical changes to Leicester, construction of inner Ring Road through centre of the central North East quarter of the Roman, medieval and post medieval towns. Mentions excavation of Shires shopping centre and subsequent construction. Details the introduction of Planning Policy Guidance Notes 15 and 16 in 1990s; increase in volume of archaeological discoveries made as a result of development across city. Describes work as Roman Pottery Specialist and as a Planning Archaeologist, facilitating archaeological input in developments taking place across city. Appointed City Archaeologist in 1997 and stayed in post till 2003. Describes discovery of Richard III as highest profile archaeological discovery in Leicester. Details personal attitudes towards heritage, notes a shift in his perspective away from the archaeology at a small scale to archaeology and heritage at a wider level. Comments on changing public attitudes towards heritage, suggests effort should be made to better engage multi-cultural communities in Leicester's heritage sites. Describes impact of Planning Policy Guidance Notes 15 and 16, archaeologists could better anticipate archaeological concerns; allowed for structured programme of archaeological work. Mentions growth of commercial Archaeological Units. Comments on role as Principal Archaeologist for the county of Leicestershire, assessing impacts of developments upon the archaeological significance of a site and putting in place mitigation programmes. Comments on significance of heritage to city planning and development and importance of wider county heritage
New Mexico\u27s Right to Know: The Impacts of LANL Operations on Public Health and the Environment
Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety (CCNS) contracted with Bernd Franke, Catherine M. Richards, M.S., Steve Wing, Ph.D., and David Richardson, Ph.D. to investigate the following public health issues concerning LANL emissions:
• Historical and current emissions of radioactive materials from LANL (Los Alamos National Laboratory) operations into the air;
• Incidence and mortality rates for LAC (Los Alamos County) residents for 24 types of cancer compared with state and national reference populations; and
• Occupational health studies of LANL employees exposed to radionuclides.
These studies focus on localized impacts at LANL and in LAC. LANL employees and LAC residents may receive the highest dose of radiation because of their proximity to the facility. Therefore, exposure of LANL employees and LAC residents may serve as an indicator of impacts to those living in the surrounding communities.
This research was completed money allocated during Round 1 of the Citizens’ Monitoring and Technical Assessment Fund (MTA Fund). Clark University was named conservator of these works.
If you have any questions or concerns please contact us at [email protected]://commons.clarku.edu/ccns/1000/thumbnail.jp
Sapphic Consciousness in H.D. and de Noailles
In her article Sapphic Consciousness in H.D. and de Noailles Catherine Clark discusses how female modernists, like their male counterparts, re-evaluated their artistic position in relation to the Greeks and Romans as they explored experimental modes of aesthetic and literary expression. However, many women writers at the turn of the century developed a unique palimpsest with their predecessors, specifically Sappho, that deconstructed and destructed conventional approaches to classical legacy and myth. Clark analyzes selected poems by modernists H.D. (Hilda Doolittle) and Anna de Noailles in which they evoke a Hellenistic past and that collapses the artificial constructions of a largely hegemonic lyric tradition. These women poets evoke a Sapphic lyrical style as they re-imagine themselves in the poetics of the past, resulting in both fragmentation and reconciliation
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