806 research outputs found
Johnny Zee / Songs for Our Daughters / The Feelgood Factor
Band, audience, dancers, photographs, cityscape, etc. John Mostyn, Music Publisher, talking about meeting Johnny and Kendall, and being excited by their mixture of bhangra and reggae music. Intercut with shots of band in changing rooms, Johnny in recording studio, all VO. Johnny Zee talking about his career, and how he composes; his collaboration with Kendall; the fusion of Punjabi and English in the lyrics. Intercut with shots of him playing with his dog, playing keyboards, Kendall, Johnny and Kendall in studio, all VO. Kendall talks about his own patois contribution, and taking his own sound to audiences, maintaining his identity. His VO street scenes, builder’s yard. Band playing in builder’s warehouse. Johnny about his background and the difficulty this caused with his family. Intercut with photos of his parents, the family builder’s yard, Johnny in studio, with his girlfriend, all VO. Mostyn says Johnny will have to get away from his family in order to find his audience. Johnny says he can’t abandon his music. The band in performance. Women talking. Pregnant woman in rocking chair. Lisa Crook says people always ask where she’s from – half Guyanese and half English. Mavis Crook-Massey says she’s much lighter-skinned than her other children. Woman and daughter playing hand-clapping game. Carolyn Ebanks talking about mixed-race children, how she wants to give hers a balance of both cultures, and how she points out to them that images in Africa will be of black people while those in Britain will be of whites. Woman reading in dialect to her daughter. Ebanks talking about the need to find books with black characters, black dolls, etc. Woman and daughter. Crook-Massey talking about the difficulties of replacing her hsuband’s potato diet with rice back in the 1950s. Ebanks on making Grenadan gungo pea soup. Woman and daughter shopping for fruit, confronted by black and white people who all complain about the mixed race child. Crook on being light skinned. Her mother tells a story about two women talking about the pair of them. Crook talking about going to Mexico with a Jamaican friend who was ignored by the local people. Ebanks on not wanting her children to believe they were better because they were lighter skinned. Crook doesn’t want to be categorised. Ebanks’s children; she says whatever choices they make, she’ll be there to support them. Woman and daughter. VO says there is a debate about the cultural value of crime thriller by black writers. Steve Pope, Publisher, the X Press, talks about a new style of crime writing Victor Headley’s Yardie, Donald Gorgon’s Cop Killer, Moss Side Massive. Dramatised sequence from Cop Killer. David Upshal, Critic, suggests these books are pulp fiction. Peter Kalu, Author of Lick Shot, also critical of the literary value of some of the books. Upshal: these books represent a very narrow part of black experience. Lee Pinkerton, Journalist, says no book can represent the whole of the black community, and people want to read about this small portion. Discussion continues with Upshall, Pinkerton and Kalu intercut giving opinions of on the undesirability of repeating stereotypes about black people as gangsters, the books being mainly about criminal activity, and there not being enough other books to balance; the universality of some of the themes in the books; one book offering the political message that black people need to organise in order to resist, having a high ranking policeman character being a good thing. Dramatised sequence from Lick Shot, in which DCI Patterson visits Frankie, a police informer. Kalu believes two major themes of his book are justice and the struggle to maintain moral integrity. Cast. Credits
2 prospectors the letters of Sam Shepard & Johnny Dark
"Pulitzer Prize-winning author of plays such as True West, Fool For Love, and Buried Child, and Academy Award-nominated actor in many films, including The Right Stuff, Sam Shepard is arguably America's finest working dramatist. He has said many times that he will never write a memoir. But he has written intensively about his inner life and creative work to his former father-in-law and housemate, Johnny Dark. This book gathers nearly 40 years of their correspondence, which provides the most honest and complete record of Shepard's professional and personal lives that he is ever likely to publish. The book is illustrated with Dark's candid, revealing photographs of Shepard and their mutual family across many years, as well as facsimiles of numerous letters. It makes a perfect companion to Treva Wurmfeld's recent film, Shepard & Dark"-
Satellite Oceanography from the ERS Synthetic Aperture Radar and Radar Altimeter: A Brief Review
Johannessen, J.A. et. al.-- 26 pages, 13 figures, 1 tableThe cloud independent, all weather, day-and-night, active microwave Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) and Radar Altimeter (RA) operated continuously on ERS-1 from July 1991 to March 2000 and on ERS-2 from October 1995 to July 2011. In addition the two ERS satellites also operated the active microwave C-band scatterometer (see A. Stoffelen, Chapter N1). [...]The advances in satellite oceanography based on the ERS Synthetic Aperture Radar and Radar Altimeter observations over the last 20 years have been possible thanks to the involvement and efforts of a large range of scientists, engineers and technicians with support from national and international funding agencies, as well as the steady supply of data and scientific support studies initiated by ESA as well as other space agenciesPeer reviewe
Opportunities for the development of geometrical reasoning in current textbooks in the UK and Japan
Developing a good model of the school geometry curriculum continues to be one of the most important tasks in curricular design in mathematics. This paper reports on an initial analysis of current best-selling textbooks used in lower secondary schools in Japan and the UK (specifically England and Scotland). The analysis indicates that, following the specification of the mathematics curriculum in these countries, Japanese textbooks set out to develop students’ deductive reasoning skills through the explicit teaching of proof in geometry, whereas comparative UK textbooks tend, at this level, to concentrate on finding angles, measurement, drawing, and so on, coupled with a modicum of opportunities for conjecturing and inductive reasoning. The available research suggests that each approach has its own strengths and weaknesses. Finding ways of capitalising on the strengths and mitigating the weaknesses could prove helpful in formulating new curricular models and designing new student textbooks
Monitoring the Norwegian Coastal Zone Environment (MONCOZE)
No abstracts are to be cited without prior reference to the author.The Norwegian marine coastal environment is characterized by the interaction of complex and coupled physical and biochemical upper-ocean and atmospheric boundary layer processes at spatial and temporal scales ranging from meters to hundreds of kilometers and seconds to seasons. In addition, the coastal zone is strongly affected by terrestrial influences such as freshwater runoff and waste effluents, the major sources of which are found in the Baltic Sea and the southern North Sea (Johannessen et al., 1993). The Norwegian Coastal Current (NCC) is the most prominent feature of the coastal zone. It acts as the highway for transporting nearly all the pelagic chemical and biochemical material entering the North Sea, and spreads it from the Skagerrak to the Barents Sea. As such, it strongly influences the near-coast water quality, which is of major importance for the rapidly increasing fish farming industry. Blooms of harmful algae, such as the Chrysocromulina polylepis toxic bloom in 1988 (Dundas et al., 1989; Johannessen et al., 1988), have clearly demonstrated that this major industry is highly vulnerable. In the future, it is likely that there will be increasing demand for quality flags which document that marine food comes from a clean environment
Corresponding author:
N.B.: When citing this work, cite the original article. This is the authors ’ version of the following article: Stina Axelsson, Maria Hjorth, Johnny Ludvigsson and Rosaura Casas, Decreased GAD(65)-specific Th1/Tc1 phenotype in children with Type 1 diabetes treated with GAD-alum., 2012, Diabetic Medicine, (29), 10, 1272-1278. which has been published in final form at
Monitoring the Norwegian Coastal Zone Environment (MONCOZE)
Introduction: The Norwegian marine coastal environment is characterized by the interaction of complex and coupled physical and biochemical upper-ocean and atmospheric boundary layer processes at spatial and temporal scales ranging from meters to hundreds of kilometers and seconds to seasons. In addition, the coastal zone is strongly affected by terrestrial influences such as freshwater runoff and waste effluents, the major sources of which are found in the Baltic Sea and the southern North Sea (Johannessen et al., 1993).
The Norwegian Coastal Current (NCC) is the most prominent feature of the coastal zone. It acts as the highway for transporting nearly all the pelagic chemical and biochemical material entering the North Sea, and spreads it from the Skagerrak to the Barents Sea. As such, it strongly influences the near-coast water quality, which is of major importance for the rapidly increasing fish farming industry. Blooms of harmful algae, such as the Chrysocromulina polylepis toxic bloom in 1988 (Dundas et al., 1989; Johannessen et al., 1988), have clearly demonstrated that this major industry is highly vulnerable. In the future, it is likely that there will be increasing demand for quality flags which document that marine food comes from a “clean” environment.
Over the past two decades, the means to observe and model the Norwegian coastal zone, including the Norwegian Coastal Current, have gradually improved through a) developments of in situ and remote sensing observational technologies; b) advances in numerical simulation and high performance computing; and c) new methods for assimilation of heterogenic, time-dependent atmospheric, oceanic and chemical data. Despite these developments there are still major deficiencies in our ability to understand and describe the variability of the NCC and its influence on the marine environment and ecology, locally as well as downstream. These deficiencies arise from lack of regular observations as well as from gaps in our knowledge of the many processes involved. Closely allied with these is the need to fully integrate an adequate hierarchical set of properly
validated models capable of assimilating the heterogenic data and simulating the state and
evolution of the system with its large range of underlying components
Johnny and David Tate
This undated photograph shows Johnny and David Tate of Cranberry High School playing a "washtub bass" and guitar. Founder and director of the Mountain Youth Jamboree, Hubert H. Hayes (1901-1964) auditioned and directed youth to perform in folk dance, music, and folk and ballad singing. The jamboree was held in the Asheville City Auditorium (now known as Thomas Wolfe Auditorium) from 1948 to 1973, and Hayes’ wife, Leona Trantham Hayes (1913-1989) continued to direct the program after his death in 1964. Hubert Hayes was an author, playwright, and alumni of Duke University
The role of synergy in developing a marine SAR analysis and interpretation system
The European project 'Marine SAR Analysis and Interpretation System for application to the coastal zones' (MARSAIS) is aimed at developing a tool for the exploitation of Earth Observation data and a better provision of scientific results into new or existing applications. Based on integrated use of mature algorithms and synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imaging models, the implementation of a MARSAIS prototype will concentrate predominantly on improving the exploitability of SAR data by the non-expert user. In this study we demonstrate how synergy between the SAR images and data from thermal and visible sensors facilitates and contributes to SAR image interpretation in the coastal zone and how this will be applied within the framework of MARSAIS
Correspondence to the Atlanta Inquirer from Johnny Parham, circa 1960
This is a handwritten letter to the Atlanta Inquirer from Johnny Parham. The letter is about a proposed agreement about ceasing the non-violent protest to desegregate schools. Parham describes his apprehensive sentiments about the agreement and its integrity. He is concerned that the movement would be in vain if the agreement was signed. The agreement is a compromise invalidating African Americans' legal entitlement to equal rights. Parham mentions the student movement, and African Americans have moved passed compromises but are in a stage of demanding their equal rights. 2 pages
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