105,946 research outputs found

    Richard I. Scott Vietnam collection [DIGITAL CONTENT]

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    This collection contains documents and publications that record the experience of Richard I. Scott was a conscientious objector and anti-war activist during the Vietnam War

    Every Person By Name: Legacies of Labor and Leadership of People of Color at Agnes Scott

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    In the summer of 2022, Agnes Scott College received a grant from the Mellon Foundation to support the Acknowledging Our Past: Acting Now for a Transformed Future project. Dr. Yves-Rose Porcena, vice president for global diversity and inclusion served as the principal investigator on this project. Part of this work included “Every Person By Name,” a story collection and archival effort dedicated to honoring the college’s invisible workers. “Every Person By Name” is a research and storytelling project dedicated to honoring the lives and contributions of individuals whose essential work has supported Agnes Scott College throughout its history. These individuals, often men and women of color, played vital roles in shaping the college, even though their efforts were not always fully documented in the institution’s official records. This project is divided into two parts. Part I, presented in this volume, brings together 110 years of fragments of workers’ stories from the college’s founding in 1889 to 1999, gathered from student newspapers, alumnae publications, Founder's Day recordings, administrative records, oral history interviews, census data, college archives, anecdotes, descendant or family history websites into one collective space

    Willie and Ella Scott (Helen Scott)- Burnthill Farm, April 1960

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    Three Men Went A-Hunting / Willie Scott; [indecipherable]; Statin Island / Willie Scott; Bonnie Jean Gordon / Ella Scott and Willie Scott; Scotland the Brave / Willie Scott; The Thistle of Scotland / Willie Scott; The Flooers o\u27 Edinburg, The East [indecipherable] o\u27 Fife/The Girl I left Behind Me / William Scott; The Lass o\u27 [indecipherable] / Willie Scott; The Laird o\u27 [indecipherable] / Willie Scott; [indecipherable] / Willie Scott; Flow Gently Sweet Afton / Ella Scott; A Well Bird / Ella Scott; Burns and his Highland Mary / Ella Scott; Alford Vale / Ella Scott; The Laddie that Handles the Plough / Ella Scott; Lord Randal / Ella Scott; This is the nicest my Johnny [indecipherable] / Ella Scot

    Letter From William Bell Scott to Mr Chambers

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    abstract: Concerning Scott's thanks, his writings about his own works, and a manuscript of "The Nightingale Unheard."Seller's Description: Reads "A.L.S. from Author to Mr. Chambers explaining how busy he is... The sonnet is printed in the book. Fredeman: 56.7 £87.50"Handwritten Note: Unknown handwriting at top right reads "June 1st 1877."Publication Details: "The Nightingale Unheard" published in "Poems" by William Bell Scott.Creation Date Details: Undated range is the author's lifespan.Provenance: Removed from: Poems / by William Bell Scott. Ballads, studies from nature, sonnets, etc. / illustrated by seventeen etchings by the author and L. Alma Tadema. Publisher London : Longmans, Green, 1875. CALL # HAYDEN SPECIAL COLL SPEC PRB-13

    Scott Belsky in Conversation with DesignByThem - Part One.mp4

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    Watch here as Scott Belsky (CEO/Founder Behance + Author Making Ideas Happen) joins Sydney design duo Sarah Gibson and Nicholas Karlovasitis from DesignByThem to discuss some of the challenges facing creative companies as they try to grow their business. In part one Nick and Sarah get some great advice from Scott about what makes an effective partnership and how to learn from the challenges that can arise. Scott also explains the Behance technique of ?Concepting Teams? with representatives from all areas of the business to brainstorm issues or new ideas

    Cardozo AELJ Author Interview Series: Scott Semaya, Class of 2023

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    The Cardozo AELJ Author Interview Series seeks to give our readers further insight into the Articles and Notes published in the Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal. In this interview, Scott Semaya discusses his Note, Name, Image and Likeness: Giving College Athletes the Clearest Guidance to Best Profit off Their NIL, which was published in Volume 41, Issue 2. This post was originally published on the Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal website on June 6, 2023. The original post can be accessed via the Archived Link button above

    Cardozo AELJ Author Interview Series: Scott Semaya, Class of 2023

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    The Cardozo AELJ Author Interview Series seeks to give our readers further insight into the Articles and Notes published in the Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal. In this interview, Scott Semaya discusses his Note, Name, Image and Likeness: Giving College Athletes the Clearest Guidance to Best Profit off Their NIL, which was published in Volume 41, Issue 2. This post was originally published on the Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal website on June 6, 2023. The original post can be accessed via the Archived Link button above

    Scott Belsky in Conversation with DesignByThem - Part Two.mp4

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    Sarah Gibson and Nicholas Karlovasitis from DesignByThem continue their conversation with Scott Belsky (CEO/Founder Behance + Author Making Ideas Happen). They discuss the relationship between taking financial risks in creative enterprise whilst valuing professional standards in their work

    Belonging and not belonging : understanding India in novels by Paul Scott, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala and V.S. Naipaul.

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    PhDThis thesis is essentially about the "how" and "why" of the Indian experience as documented in novels by Paul Scott, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala and V S Naipaul. The study points to the difficulty of arriving at any conclusive definition of the country and its people. I show that differences in attitudes, responses or behaviour are both overt and subtle, and depend upon whether the writer or the character identifies with the situation or community with which he or she interacts. It is the individual's sense of belonging or not belonging to his or her own group - be this along racial, cultural or gender lines - that accounts for the differing perspectives evident in these novels. The points-of- view of the outsider and the insider can therefore be seen as mutual comments upon the other. Since the struggle between belonging and not belonging becomes acute when the old meets the new, focus is centred on communities experiencing change. These include the British in India, West-Indian Indians and westernised Indians. Despite their differences, all three communities share similar reasons for either an acceptance or rejection of the 'Other'. The thesis argues that the need for emotional stability compels allegiance to the traditional group, while the desire for individuality encourages surrender to the new. The former nurtures a sense of belonging while, it is argued, that the latter is perceived as the hallmark of those who do not belong. Tensions arise when both these needs demand to be met. What I show to be ironic in this struggle between belonging and not belonging is that those things which individuals overtly reject are often unexpressed parts of their personal pysche. The barrier between "them" and "us" is therefore very fragile
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