946 research outputs found
Memorandum of the Articles deposited in the cornerstone of Kenyon College
Memorandum of the Articles deposited in the cornerstone of Kenyon Collegehttps://digital.kenyon.edu/chase_letters/1717/thumbnail.jp
Report of the committee appointed to investigate the difficulties at Kenyon College
Report of the committee appointed to investigate the difficulties at Kenyon College.https://digital.kenyon.edu/chase_letters/1904/thumbnail.jp
Born with a Plastic Spoon in Mouth: Food in the Experience of Low Income Kenyon Students
At Kenyon College, more students hail from the top one percent of wealth in the country than the bottom sixty percent combined. This project explores the ways in which low income students at Kenyon College experience marginalization on an everyday basis, particularly in their interactions with food. In the Fall of 2017, the author conducted in-depth interviews with low income students (N=23), interviews with college administrators (N=5), distributed a survey (N=242), conducted focus groups, and was a participant observer. Contextualizing this data within a framework of cultural capital and structuration theory, this paper reveals the nuances in the experiences of low income students. The experienced isolation of low income students appears to be correlated with their racial identity, pre-collegiate experience, and overall sense of community. This paper concludes with several suggestions for the student body, faculty, and administration to better foster an inclusive community for students from low income backgrounds
The Inspirers
Written piece by WWP author, Kenyon Simon. This helped to inspire the film, Inspiration . This also includes dialogue between Kenyon and UNI art students
Land and changing social relations in South Africa's former reserves : the case of Luphaphasi in Sakhisizwe Local Municipality, Eastern Cape.
Includes abstract.
Includes bibliographical references
Spider
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the Kenyon Review via the link in this recordShort stor
Keynote Presentation: The Looting of the Kenyon College Library
Program: Mr. McDade has written several books on the theft of valuable rare papers, books, and book plates by an odd assortment of thieves, almost entirely motivated by greed. One of the most amazing cases occurred at Kenyon College in the 1990s when an employee of the Kenyon College Library stole hundreds of rare items over several years. Mr. McDade details this bizarre story in Disappearing Ink: The insider, the FBI, and the looting of the Kenyon College Library. Additionally, Mr. McDade will talk briefly about his most recent research as well as mention some of his other work.
The Octavofest guest speaker is Travis McDade, the Curator of Law Rare Books and Associate Professor of Library Service at the University of Illinois College of Law. Professor McDade is the country’s foremost expert on crimes against rare books, maps, documents, and other printed cultural heritage resources. He is the author of three books on the subject: The Book Thief: The True Crimes of Daniel Spiegelman; Thieves of Book Row: New York’s Most Notorious Rare Book Ring and the Man Who Ended it; and Disappearing Ink: The Insider, the FBI, and the Looting of the Kenyon College Library
Uncovering Cryptic Parasitoid Diversity in Horismenus (Chalcidoidea, Eulophidae)
The file attached is the Published/publisher’s pdf version of the article.© 2015 Kenyon et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.NHM Repositor
Open Access: Is OA Ok?
Open Access (OA) publishing is growing exponentially across many disciplines. What do UNE students and faculty need to know about it? UNE Librarian Beth Dyer presents its opportunities and pitfalls, with advice on how to approach OA both as an author and a consumer. UNE College of Pharmacy’s Dr. Dan Brazeau talks about his experiences with OA publishing. UNE Librarian Bethany Kenyon discusses UNE\u27s open access digital repository, DUNE: Digital UNE, where UNE community members can deposit and share original content
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