53,840 research outputs found
Oral History Interview, David Hart (2423)
In his 2024 interview with Troy Reeves, Academic Staff Award Winner David Hart speaks about his career path, time at UW-Madison, and experience as a GIS Specialist at Wisconsin Sea Grant. To learn more about this oral history, download & review the index first (or transcript if available). It will help determine which audio file(s) to download & listen to.In his 2024 interview with Troy Reeves, Academic Staff Award Winner David Hart speaks about his career path, time at UW-Madison, and experience as a GIS Specialist at Wisconsin Sea Grant. Hart’s 30+ year career started in urban planning and led him to a position in Great Lakes management and outreach. Hart speaks about his work, which includes traveling to coastal public access sites throughout Wisconsin, inventorying, mapping, and sharing information about them, especially through the creation of interactive maps. Hart also discusses covid-19, academic-faculty relationships, and public outreach in science. This interview was conducted for inclusion into the UW-Madison Archives and Records Management Oral History Program for the Academic Staff Award Winners oral history project
Art (and) Criticism: Hart Crane and David Siqueiros
The article focuses on an analysis of Hart Crane’s essay “Note on the Paintings of David Siqueiros.” One of Crane’s few art-historical texts, the critical piece in question is first of all a tribute to the American poet’s friend, the Mexican painter David Siqueiros. The author of a portrait of Crane, Siqueiros is a major artist, one of the leading figures that marked the history of Mexican painting in the first half of the twentieth century. While it is interesting to delve into the way Crane approaches painting in general and Siqueiros’ œuvre in particular, an analysis of the essay with which the present article is concerned is also worthwhile for another reason. Like many examples of art criticism—and literary criticism, for that matter—”Note on the Paintings of David Siqueiros” reveals a lot not only about the artist it revolves around, but also about its author, an artist in his own right. In a text written in the last year of his life, Hart Crane therefore voices concerns which have preoccupied him as a poet and which, more importantly, are central to modernist art and literature
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The David W. Fentress Family Letters, 1856-1969
Transcript of a letter by an unidentified author to David Fentress regarding sharing federal newspapers and the banning of federal newspapers in some areas. The author passes on the news of the war including the destruction of the Federal merchantmen by the Confederate fleet. He passes along world news: Russia preparing to go to War with Europe and how that could negatively affect the Confederacy. There is also speculation on the future of the war
The David W. Fentress Family Letters, 1856-1969
Transcript of a letter by an unidentified author to David Fentress regarding sharing federal newspapers and the banning of federal newspapers in some areas. The author passes on the news of the war including the destruction of the Federal merchantmen by the Confederate fleet. He passes along world news: Russia preparing to go to War with Europe and how that could negatively affect the Confederacy. There is also speculation on the future of the war
Lenore Hart, 31st Annual ODU Literary Festival
Lenore Hart is the author of the novels Waterwoman (a Barnes and Noble Discover Great New Authors title), Ordinary Springs, and Black River. Her recent novel, Becky: The Life and Loves of Becky Thatcher (2008), follows Twain’s characters Tom Sawyer, Huck Finn and Becky Thatcher — as adults — through Civil War-era Missouri, the Comstock mines of the Sierra Nevada and San Francisco. Her books for children include T. Rex at Swan Lake and The Treasure of Savage Island. She lives on the Eastern Shore of Virginia with her husband, novelist David Poyer
James H. Hart\u27s Contribution to Our Knowledge of Oliver Cowdery and David Whitmer
Most Latter-day Saints take for granted the existence of portraits of the Three Witnesses, but in fact no likeness of Oliver Cowdery was available to the Church until 1883, and then it was touch-and-go whether one would be obtained. Had it not been for the faith and tenacity of James H. Hart, who pursued the portrait when others had failed, we might never have known just what Oliver Cowdery looked like. In the course of following the trail of the portrait, Hart was also able to conduct important interviews with David Whitmer
"In His Own Voice: H.L.A. Hart in Conversation with David Sugarman”. Online blog for Oxford University Press to accompany the publication of the online audio interview, “Hart Interviewed: H.L.A. Hart in Conversation with David Sugarman"
Oxford University Press has digitalised the audio version of David Sugarman’s (Lancaster University Law School, UK) interview with H.L.A. Hart of 1988 and posted it on the Web as part of the 50th anniversary celebrations marking the publication of Hart’s The Concept of Law and a new (third, 2012) edition. The interview delineates the particulars of Hart’s life and work: his background, early education, and undergraduate studies; learning law, practising at the Bar, and journalism; working in military intelligence; the early years as a philosophy don and the principal philosophical influences that shaped his work; and the state of Oxford jurisprudence in the 1940s and 1950s. It then addresses Hart’s work and ideas between 1945 and the 1980’s: his appointment to the Chair of Jurisprudence at Oxford; the Hart-Fuller Debate and his year at Harvard; the writing of Causation in the Law and The Concept of Law ; the 1950’s, the Cold War, and the 1960’s; “The Hart-Devlin Debate”; and what Hart called, “the Thatcher world”. The interview also illuminates Hart’s work beyond legal and political philosophy — the seminars to Labour Party groups on closing loopholes in the tax law; and the duties he undertook for the Monopolies Commission (1967-73) and the Oxford University Committee on Staff-Student Relations (the “Hart Report”, 1968-69). The interview includes Hart’s assessment of Bentham, Nozick and Dworkin, a general discussion of the virtues and limitations of sociology, sociological jurisprudence and analytical jurisprudence, of legal education, and the relationship between university legal education and the legal profession. A succinct summary of Hart’s contribution to legal philosophy brings the interview to a close. An edited version of the interview was published as: “Hart Interviewed: H.L.A. Hart in Conversation with David Sugarman”, (2005) 32 Journal of Law and Society pp. 267-293. The audio version of the interview, and a blog about the interview, can be accessed at http://blog.oup.com/2012/12/h-l-a-hart-in-conversation-with-david-sugarman
Harrigan and Hart "The Little Frauds" promotional material
Black and white photograph promotional material for "the Little Frauds" (Edward Harrigan and Tony Hart (Anthony J. Cannon) pioneers in musical theater, Harrigan would compose and write lyrics with David Braham, while Hart was know for Quick-Change artistry playing multiple roles at onc
Portrait of author David Foster at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 8 June 2011 /
Title from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Portraits of author David Foster at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 8 June 2011.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia
Letter from Viola L. Hart, December 5, 1967
Letter from Viola L. Hart to Fayez Sayegh, December 5, 1967, regarding his appearance on the David Susskind show and the Arab-Israeli conflict
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