526 research outputs found
Curtiss, Geoff and Linda Curtiss, September 27, 2019 [Interview]
Geoff Curtiss and Linda Wiggins Curtiss were interviewed by Michael Birkner on September 27, 2019, about their lives, with focus on their time as Gettysburg College students between 1966 and 1971.Vannorsdall, John W.; Hanson, C. Arnold; Nowlan, Steve; Smith, Don; Loose, John H.; Hammann, Louis J.; Richardson, Norman E.; Hinsley, Jay; Moore, Carey A.; Holder, Leonard I.; Alinsky, Saul; Blessit, Arthur; Clark, Ramsey;Carl Arnold Hanson Years
The Demidenko story so far [Monkeys discussing controversial author Helen Darville/Demidenko] [picture] /
Title devised by cataloguer.; Published in the Canberra Times on 22 August 1995.; Part of the Pryor collection of cartoons and drawings.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3512930. Helen Demidenko's controversial book 'The Hand that Signed the Paper' causes much comment from the 'chatterati' when it wins the 1995 Miles Franklin Award . When the author is later revealed to be Helen Darville and the book itself to be a total invention, the comment continues unabated.--Information supplied by Geoff Pryor
"Lies! - nothing but lies and misrepresentations - should sell a squillion!" [the Demidenko diary] [picture] /
Title devised by cataloguer.; Published in the Canberra Times on 7 January 1996.; Part of the Pryor collection of cartoons and drawings.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3524010. 'The Hand that Signed the Paper', by Helen Demidenko, a supposedly true account of a Ukranian family's involvement in the Holocaust and the winner of the 1996 Miles Franklin Award, is exposed as a hoax when the author, real name Helen Darville, is revealed as having made it all up. Darville, an odd person to say the least, would hardly be disappointed at the outcome, you might think.--Information provided by Geoff Pryor
Remember Simon - Whatever you do, don't hurt his feelings - Beazley talking to Crean about Abbott and Costello big deformation payout, 1999 [picture] /
Title devised by cataloguer from information provided on image.; Part of the Pryor collection of cartoons and drawings.; Published in the Canberra Times on 7th March 1999.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4352326. In a joint action before the ACT Supreme Court, senior Liberal politicians Tony Abbott and Peter Costello win a big payout in a defamation action brought against author (and Labor ally) Bob Ellis and his publisher for comments made in his book 'Goodbye Jersalem'.--Information provided by Geoff Pryor
Lotto night - Abbott and Costello, 1999 [picture] /
Title devised by cataloguer from information provided on image.; Part of the Pryor collection of cartoons and drawings.; Published in the Canberra Times on 14th March 1999.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4352342. Tony Abbott and Peter Costello win their defamation case in the ACT Supreme Court against writer Bob Ellis for a passing reference to the pair's sexual behaviour in their days as Young Liberals in his book of reminisences 'Goodbye Jerusalem: the Night Thoughts of a Labor Outsider'. Everyone acknowledges the law can be a lottery, but nevertheless you would imagine Ellis' publisher, Random House, would be less than happy with their wayward author.--Information provided by Geoff Pryor
Lost conversations: finding new ways for black and white Australians to lead together
It\u27s time for a game-changer in how black and white Australians relate.
The difficulties we have in coming together—to talk, to work, to lead change—are core to our challenge to reconcile, as a country. But if we want to shift the status quo, if we want to lead change on entrenched Indigenous disadvantage, we don\u27t need another program, initiative or money to try and \u27fix\u27 the problem. We need to start having a different conversation.
The result of two years experience working together as part of a Social Leadership Australia initiative, Lost Conversations brings together the diverse perspectives and personal stories of five Aboriginal and four non-Indigenous authors, all with first-hand knowledge of what happens when black and white Australians come together to try and work on change.
Lost Conversations asks the questions and starts the conversations that we daren\u27t have in Australia ... until now:
What is \u27black\u27 power?
What is \u27white\u27 power?
What qualifies someone to lead in this cross-cultural space?
Why is this so hard to talk about?
Can we start to name these things and try to shift the status quo?
Can we change?
Should we?
 
James Clavell - Author of King Rat - Taipan Shogun - Guest on Mike Walsh shop Sept 21 [picture] /
Published in the Canberra Times on 27 September 1981.; Part of the Pryor collection of cartoons and drawings
The People's Poet transformed: Geoff Goodfellow in conversation with Garry Costello
An Author event presented by The Friends of the University of Adelaide Library and held in the Ira Raymond Room, Barr Smith Library, 16 May 2019Legendary performance poet and short prose writer Geoff Goodfellow has performed his poetry at schools, jails, colleges, universities, construction sites, factories, rock concerts and literary festivals, across Australia and in Canada, the United States, Cuba, China, Europe and the United Kingdom
twardokus/pq-v2verifier: NDSS'24 Final Artifact
<p>This record is an archival copy of the source code for PQ-V2Verifier, a software application associated with the conference paper listed below. Details can be found in the README file of the source code included in this record.</p><p><strong>Conference Paper </strong></p><p>This record contains artifacts for the 2024 Network and Distributed System Security Symposium (NDSS), associated with the following paper:</p><p>Geoff Twardokus, Nina Bindel, Hanif Rahbari, and Sarah McCarthy, "When Cryptography Needs a Hand: Practical Post-Quantum Authentication for V2V Communications," <i>Network and Distributed System Security Symposium (NDSS 2024)</i>, San Diego, CA, Feb. 2024.</p><p>Bibtex:</p><blockquote><p>@inproceedings{twardokus2024when,<br> author = "Geoff Twardokus and Nina Bindel and Hanif Rahbari and Sarah McCarthy",<br> title = "When Cryptography Needs a Hand: Practical Post-Quantum Authentication for {V2V} Communications",<br> booktitle = "Proc. Network and Distributed System Security Symposium (NDSS)",<br> month = feb,<br> year = "2024", <br> address = "San Diego, CA",<br> pages = ""<br>}</p></blockquote><p> </p>
twardokus/pq-benchmarks: NDSS'24 Final Artifact (Revised)
<p>This record is an archival copy of the source code for PQ-Benchmarks, a software application associated with the conference paper listed below. Details can be found in the README file of the source code included in this record.</p><p><strong>Conference Paper </strong></p><p>This record contains artifacts for the 2024 Network and Distributed System Security Symposium (NDSS), associated with the following paper:</p><p>Geoff Twardokus, Nina Bindel, Hanif Rahbari, and Sarah McCarthy, "When Cryptography Needs a Hand: Practical Post-Quantum Authentication for V2V Communications," <i>Network and Distributed System Security Symposium (NDSS 2024)</i>, San Diego, CA, Feb. 2024.</p><p>Bibtex:</p><blockquote><p>@inproceedings{twardokus2024when,<br> author = "Geoff Twardokus and Nina Bindel and Hanif Rahbari and Sarah McCarthy",<br> title = "When Cryptography Needs a Hand: Practical Post-Quantum Authentication for {V2V} Communications",<br> booktitle = "Proc. Network and Distributed System Security Symposium (NDSS)",<br> month = feb,<br> year = "2024", <br> address = "San Diego, CA",<br> pages = ""<br>}</p></blockquote>
- …
