164 research outputs found
Supplemental Material - A conceptual model of the impact of including carers in museum programmes for people with dementia
Supplemental Material for A conceptual model of the impact of including carers in museum programmes for people with dementia by Debbie Kinsey, Noreen Orr, Rob Anderson and Iain Lang in Dementia</p
Music for classical guitar by South African composers : a historical survey, notes on selected works and a general catalogue
Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 296-309).This is the first comprehensive investigation of music for, or including, the classical guitar by South African composers. The focus of this research has been, firstly, to uncover as much of the repertoire as possible, and, secondly, to collate, study, catalogue and report on the information. A brief historical survey of the guitar in South Africa provides the context within which this study was conducted. The primary sources of quantitative data collection were through the archival catalogues of the South African Music Rights Organisation and through personal contact with guitarists, composers and guitar teachers. Other sources consulted were publishers, broadcasting corporations, recording companies, libraries and the internet. The body of the dissertation comprises biographical sketches, background notes, analyses and technical notes on 17 selected solo and chamber works dating from 1947 to 2007 by some of South Africa's most prominent composers and guitaristcomposers. The repertoire ranges in style from the traditional and ethnically inspired to the experimental and abstract. As this is an empirical survey, each selected entry includes details on instrumentation, duration, level of difficulty, number of pages, scordatura, commissions or requests, sources or publishers, premières and recordings. A biography of each composer is provided as well as background notes which offer an overview of the selected work. The notes discuss historical, cultural, musical and extra-musical influences, and frequently include references to interview material. The commentaries on the selected works, with musical examples, include an analytical component describing structure, form, stylistic and compositional elements, while the technical observations include performance suggestions and a grading for each work
Supplemental Material - A conceptual model of the impact of including carers in museum programmes for people with dementia
Supplemental Material for A conceptual model of the impact of including carers in museum programmes for people with dementia by Debbie Kinsey, Noreen Orr, Rob Anderson and Iain Lang in Dementia</p
Supplemental Material - A conceptual model of the impact of including carers in museum programmes for people with dementia
Supplemental Material for A conceptual model of the impact of including carers in museum programmes for people with dementia by Debbie Kinsey, Noreen Orr, Rob Anderson and Iain Lang in Dementia</p
sj-docx-1-jpc-10.1177_21501327211052401 – Supplemental material for Improving Outcomes of Mothers With Opioid Use Disorder Using a Community Collaborative Model
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-jpc-10.1177_21501327211052401 for Improving Outcomes of Mothers With Opioid Use Disorder Using a Community Collaborative Model by Carolyn Jones, Stephanie Duea, Kellie Griggs, William Johnstone and Debbie Kinsey in Journal of Primary Care & Community Health</p
Andricus tecturnarum Kinsey 1920
Andricus tecturnarum Kinsey, 1920 (Fig. 2) Andricus tecturnarum Kinsey, 1920: 312 Type material: ‘‘ San Luis Potosi, Mex, Edw. Palmer Coll, Loose in box’’, ‘‘ Q. Potosina Ed. Palmer coll’’, ‘‘ Andricus tecturnarum COTYPE’’ (red label), ‘‘ AMNH_IZC 00322810 ’’, ‘‘ LECTOTYPE Andricus tecturnarum Kinsey, 1920: 306 design. M. Ferrer-Suay 2016 ’’ (red label). Comments. According to the original description eight female cotypes and three clusters of galls are deposited in the AMNH, in the MCZ and in the author’s collection. In the AMNH we have found an adult and several galls and the adult is designated as lectotype and has been so labeled by the first author. This species remains as Andricus; pending a complete Andricus worldwide revision A. tecturnarum is considered a valid species. Images of the lectotype and its labels are given in Fig. 2.Published as part of Mar Ferrer- Suay, James M. Carpenter, Christine Lebeau & Juli Pujade- Villar, 2017, Designation Of Lectotypes For The Mexican Species Of Andricus Described By Alfred Kinsey And Comments About Some Generic Synonymies (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae), pp. 29-34 in Entomologica Americana 123 (1) on pages 31-32, DOI: 10.1664/1947-5144-123.1-4.29, http://zenodo.org/record/110112
Ms. Neely Terrell, RWWL AUC, March 2012
This video is a conversation with Ms. Neely Terrell. Ms. Terrell talks about her book, "Super Singles Activate". Anthony Kinsey and Jahnesta Horney, AUC Woodruff Library, are the interviewers
Dorothy Anne Hodson with the mess hall crew, Cobbs and Mitchell Lumber Company, Valsetz, Polk County, Oregon, approximately 1938
Caption on image: Herbert A. Templeton Lumber Company, Sales Agents, Portland, Oregon, "The Cook House Crew"- You're Invited to Dinner, Cobbs & Mitchell Company, Valsets, Oregon
PH Coll 516.694The Cobbs & Mitchell Company was a Michigan based company that moved to Oregon in the early 1900s after buying timber tracts in the Siletz Basin. In about 1919, the Cobbs & Mitchell Company built the Valley & Siletz Railroad, connected to the Southern Pacific Railroad in the town of Independence, Oregon. They established a company town at the end of the railroad called Valsetz, a name which was a combination of "Valley and Siletz." In the 1920s, the population of Valsetz grew to almost 300 men, largely single men. However, over the next few decades, the population would double and men would live with their families in the company town. In 1947, the land, the company, and the town of Valsetz were sold to Herbert A. Templeton, who renamed the company the Valsetz Lumber Company. In 1959, the town was sold to the Boise-Cascade Corporation. The town of Valsetz would become one of the most long-lived company towns until it was bulldozed and abandoned in 1983. The young girl pictured is Dorothy Anne Hodson, the author of the town newspaper the Valsetz Star. (Sources: Lumber Ghosts by Kenneth A. Erickson, Valsetz, 1928 by Richard Engeman of the Oregon Historical Society, National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (United States Department of the Interior) for the Cobbs, Frank J. and Maude Louise Estate, "Valsetz: A City Made Famous by a Ten-Year-Old"from the Sunday Oregonian, June 26, 1938, and The Valsetz Star by Dorothy Anne Hodson)
“It Has Always Known And We Have Always Been ‘Other’: Knowing Capitalism And The ‘Coming Crisis’ Of Sociology Confront The Concentration System and Mass-Observation,”
A Picture Is Worth a Thousand Words: A Unique Voice for People With Aphasia
Abstract
Date Presented 3/30/2017
This study used photos in conversations with people with aphasia about occupations. Seven participants completed three photographic assignments, interviews, and a focus group about their occupations. Researchers found that photography can be a useful tool when communicating with people with aphasia.
Primary Author and Speaker: Lori Breeden
Additional Authors and Speakers: Lauren Cain, Erin Velpel
Contributing Authors: Kayla Ford, Emily Hauser, Jaimie Hutchins, Kinsey Lengerich</jats:p
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