29,393 research outputs found
Greg Daly: An Interview by Tony Martin
An interview by Tony Martin with Greg Daly exploring the motivations, inspirations and personal narratives associated with the piece of work that was so important that he kept it for himself
Portrait of artist Martin Sharp with one of his Artoons at the Yellow House, Macleay Street, Kings Cross, New South Wales, 1971 [picture] /
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription.; Inscriptions: "Martin Sharp with 'Artoon' Yellow House, 1971 Photograph Greg Weight 1971"; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4708160; Purchased from the photographer, 2009. Photograph of Martin Sharp holding an 'Artoon' which was his name for collage works made from combining images by two artists together in the one work. The work he holds shows a cut out of Gainsborough's 'Blue Boy' onto Drysdales 'Sofala'--Information supplied by photographer
General Post Office building, Martin Place, Sydney, ca. 1974 [picture] /
Title devised by cataloguer.; Part of the collection: Shopfronts, Sydney, 1972-1975.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn5807594
Flipping Books
Greg Martin, Digital Commons Director at Cedarville University, presented on his institutional repository\u27s successful implementation of Flipping Books
Greg Schmidt Portrait Photo
Wrestling portrait photo with the wrestler Greg Schmidt. Neg. No. 73-1771. [Subject: Greg Schmidt; Taken For: Dave Martin
BLOGS BOTHER ME
This is the published version Hirst, Martin and Treadwell, Greg 2011, Blogs bother me: social media
Oral History Interview: Jim Martin (1464)
Interview by Greg BondIn his 2016 interview with Greg Bond, Judge Jim Martin discusses his life, from a childhood in Racine, Wisconsin to a judgeship in Madison. Martin talks about the experience of segregation, specifically from the vantage of a young, black, student athlete. Later he attended the University of Dubuque, where he was further involved in sports. After Dubuque he taught briefly. Martin discusses later transition into coaching college football at UW-Madison. After coaching for UW, Martin became a student at its law school. After his time in law school Martin Worked in the city attorney's office and later became a judge. Here Martin reflects on race, sports, and his career in law
Greg Schmidt Portrait Photo
Wrestling portrait photo with the wrestler Greg Schmidt. Neg. No. 74-1250. [Subject: Wrestling; Taken For: Dave Martin
Arun Kundnani (2014) The Muslims are Coming! Islamophobia, Extremism and the Domestic War on Terror. London: Verso.
Martin Luther King Jr understood the link between individual violence at home and state violence abroad. In part of his message that is often downplayed, he told an audience at Riverside Church, New York in 1967 that the promotion of nonviolent direct action (or the prevention of violent extremism) among young Americans depended on opposing the violence of US foreign policy in places like Vietnam. Arun Kundnani ends his book arguing this point remains as valid today in the global war on terror. Indeed, in many ways, the material presented in the book paints a depressingly familiar picture of state secrecy and surveillance, the normalisation of preventative measures in the post-9/11 era, governments instilling fear and anxiety across populations, and the criminalisation of formerly lawful activities. It is now beyond dispute that these developments have eroded human rights and civil liberties in Western societies. But they have also impinged, more broadly, upon social relations and political processes. Not surprisingly, this has impacted Muslim communities the most because relations of trust have been eroded in the domestic war on terror. Download the PDF file from this page to read Greg Martin's complete review of Arun Kundnani's book. Download the PDF file to read the complete review of Arun Kundnan's book by Greg Martin.</p
"Sustaining Recovery--Medium-term Prospects and Policies for the U.S. Economy"
Though recent market activity and housing reports give some warrant for optimism, United States economic growth was only 2.8 percent in the third quarter, and the unemployment rate is still very high. In their new Strategic Analysis, the Levy Institute's Macro-Modeling Team project that high unemployment will continue to be a problem if fiscal stimulus policies expire and deficit reduction efforts become the policy focus. The authors--President Dimitri B. Papadimitriou and Research Scholars Greg Hannsgen and Gennaro Zezza--argue that continued fiscal stimulus is necessary to reduce unemployment. The resulting federal deficits would be sustainable, they say, as long as they were accompanied by a coordinated and gradual devaluation of the dollar, especially against undervalued Asian currencies--a step necessary to prevent an increase in the current account deficit and ward off the risk of a currency crash.
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