94 research outputs found
Counting the Patsy Edwards Benefit Show proceeds
This 1951 photograph shows three bank executives counting the proceeds donated from the Patsy Edwards Benefit Show. Patsy Edwards was the ballad champion in 1949 and 1951 in the Mountain Youth Jamboree. Her father was accidentally killed while Ms. Edwards was performing for the Dance Masters of America in Washington, D.C. with other Mountain Youth Jamboree contestants. The Jamboree champions gave a benenfit program to assist her and her family. Founder and director of the Mountain Youth Jamboree, Hubert H. Hayes (1901-1964) auditioned and directed youth to perform in folk dance, music, and folk and ballad singing. The jamboree was held in the Asheville City Auditorium (now known as Thomas Wolfe Auditorium) from 1948 to 1973, and Hayes’ wife, Leona Trantham Hayes (1913-1989) continued to direct the program after his death in 1964. Hubert Hayes was an author, playwright, and alumni of Duke University
Patsy Edwards singing with Jimmy Haynie on guitar
This undated photograph shows Patsy Edwards of Woodfin Jr. High School singing with Jimmy Haynie on guitar. Ms. Edwards was the ballad champion in 1949 and 1951 in the Mountain Youth Jamboree. Founder and director of the Mountain Youth Jamboree, Hubert H. Hayes (1901-1964) auditioned and directed youth to perform in folk dance, music, and folk and ballad singing. The jamboree was held in the Asheville City Auditorium (now known as Thomas Wolfe Auditorium) from 1948 to 1973, and Hayes’ wife, Leona Trantham Hayes (1913-1989) continued to direct the program after his death in 1964. Hubert Hayes was an author, playwright, and alumni of Duke University
My Nursery Tale Book
This is my earliest version of this book. I have two other copies printed in 1970 and 1972. All three of these stem from the 1961 copyright. Earlier copyrights were in 1949 and 1954. This copy differs from the 1970 printing by using the blue page facing the title-page as a paste-down inside front cover. The same is true in the back of the book. Thus two nice illustrations are not included, as they are on the first page facing the blank inside cover and the corresponding last page facing the blank inside back cover: Pierre Bear reading a book (excerpted from the front cover's picture and the first picture in "Pierre Bear") and Duck sleeping in bed. As I wrote on the 1970 version, TMCM told by Patsy Scarry has a quaint flapper city mouse in its water colors. The picture of the cat discovering the two mice may be the best. This story adds a vacuum cleaner! The picture on the back cover has a dog never mentioned in the story! FC by the same author adds an elephant and a tiger to its cast of characters. Overall, I continue to believe that there is little special here for the lover of new and different understandings of fables. Inscribed in 1966.This is a hardbound book (hard cover)1964 printingPatsy Scarry et a
Patsy Nailed the Horse-Shoe
A man hangs a horse shoe upside down and has bad luck.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/kgbsides_uk/2510/thumbnail.jp
Author In Town
Photograph used for a story in the Daily Oklahoman newspaper. Caption: "Dr. Joyce Brothers, left, visits with Sheron Hendryx and Patsy Sine at a cocktail party preceding a recent dinner given by Maguire Brothers Inc. in the Marriott Hotel's grand ballroom.
A study of thirty-six non-follow-up Negro mothers in Postpartum Clinic, Grady Hospital, Atlanta, Georgia, 1947
Using palliative care assessment tools to influence and enhance clinical practice
Author version made available in accordance with publisher policy.The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration focuses on supporting palliative care services in Australia to measure service- and patient-level outcomes, and to use these data to drive continuous quality improvement. The introduction of a suite of clinical assessment tools nationally has resulted in important enhancements to care provision at individual service level. Improved communication, enhanced assessment of patient needs, and improved identification of triggers for the need to change care plans or for referral have resulted from this change
For a dialectic of planning pasts and futures: Theoretical courses and recourses in conversation with Patsy Healey
plaNext – Next Generation Planning, 15 (2025)This reflective essay revisits the intellectual legacy of planning theory by engaging with past debates and reconnecting them with contemporary concerns. Drawing inspiration from a concluding paragraph drafted by Patsy Healey for plaNext Volume 3, the author explores how new generations of planning scholars can better understand the historical trajectories of concepts such as system thinking, resilience, and transnational flows of planning ideas.
The article reconstructs the origins of the 9th AESOP Young Academics Conference (Palermo, 2015) and analyses its thematic emphasis on geographical differences, postcolonial critique, and the blind spots between micro-practices and broader urban trends. It highlights how issues once considered marginal—such as Western-centrism, uneven development, and the politics of knowledge transfer—have since become central in planning theory.
The essay then examines how planning scholars engage with concepts of time, challenging linear narratives of progress. Drawing on critical theory, political economy, and abolitionist thought, the author argues for a dialectical understanding of planning futures: not as predetermined visions to be implemented, but as emergent possibilities already present in the struggles, contradictions, and unrealised alternatives within the contemporary urban condition.publishedVersio
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