396,058 research outputs found

    Marriner S. Eccles, general correspondence, 1951 - 1977: G [03]

    No full text
    Correspondence of Marriner S. Eccles with economist John Kenneth Galbraith, discussing various topics including Galbraith\u27s published books

    George S. Tanner correspondence with Kenneth W. Porter

    No full text
    Scan of a typed letter dated 29 June 1955 from Kenneth W. Porter of Salt Lake City to George S. Tanner (then in Moscow, Idaho), concerning Porter and Bryant genealogy

    Oral history interview with Kenneth S. Greenberg (SOH-037)

    No full text
    Kenneth S. Greenberg, the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Suffolk University, discusses his career at Suffolk, which began in 1978 as an assistant professor in the history department and eventually led to his appointment as dean in 2004. He touches upon his educational background in history and how it intertwines with his position at Suffolk. He also describes his responsibilities as dean, the changes he has noticed at Suffolk since the beginning of his career, and the university’s housing situation. Greenberg concludes by discussing future plans for Suffolk’s diverse and ever-evolving student body.https://dc.suffolk.edu/soh/1026/thumbnail.jp

    Bennion, Kenneth S.

    No full text
    Bennion, Kenneth S., House (Salt Lake), 194

    The Study of Music Therapy: Current Issues and Concepts (Kenneth S. Aigen)

    No full text
    This is a review of the book "The Study of Music Therapy: Current Issues and Concepts" authored by Kenneth S. Aigen. Title: The Study of Music Therapy: Current Issues and Concepts | Author: Kenneth S. Aigen | Publication year: 2014 | Publisher: Routledge | Pages: 280 | ISBN: 978-041562641

    Kenneth S. Rice

    No full text
    Kenneth S. Rice sitting at a table. In front of him are various glass bottles and instruments.Inscriptions on image and/or album page: #1137Digitized by: MBLWHOI Libraryimage/jpg black and white image reformatted digitalPhotograph

    Kenneth E. Hunt

    No full text
    Associate Director for Diversity and Inclusion Kenneth Hunt currently serves as the Associate Director for Diversity and Inclusion at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach, FL. Kenneth is retired Air Force having spent over 10 years as an aircraft maintenance technician and another 10 years and an Inertia Navigation instructor. He worked and taught on three types of military airframes: C-5A/B’s, C-141’s and C130’s. As an aircraft instructor specialist, he performed intermediate maintenance support and training on the aircraft’s guidance and control system-both radar and satellite communication, automatic flight control system, Inertial Navigation Systems (INS), flight instruments, Fuel Savings Advisory System (FSAS), and the Malfunction Analysis Detection and Recording System (MADARS). Before joining, Embry-Riddle, Kenneth coordinated tutoring and additional instructions for four years for the Supplemental Instruction lab for the Division of Academic Enrichment at Delaware State University, Dover, DE. He has a M.B.A. from Wilmington University, Wilmington, DE; a B.S. from Southern Illinois University in Industrial Technology; and a certificate in Lean Six Sigma Black Belt from Villanova University. He is currently pursuing a doctoral degree in Business Administration from Wilmington University, Wilmington, DE.https://commons.erau.edu/lep-images/1013/thumbnail.jp

    Kenneth S. Curtis and survey instrument

    No full text
    Kenneth S. Curtis, Prof. Surveyin

    Taylor, S K (Stanley Kenneth), QX16372

    No full text
    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/420674Surname: TAYLOR. Given Name(s) or Initials: S K (STANLEY KENNETH). Military Service Number or Last Known Location: QX16372. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 44134.245384 Item: [2016.0049.52935] "Taylor, S K (Stanley Kenneth), QX16372

    Political autobiography, nationalist history and national heritage: the case of Kenneth Kaunda and Zambia

    No full text
    Magister Artium - MAThe research for this thesis started off as a long academic essay that sought to review a 1970s biography of Kenneth Kaunda.1 In its original focus, the study aimed at evaluating the work on the narrations of Kenneth Kaunda�s life from a theoretical and critical perspective. Specifically it sought to evaluate the biography for its theoretical and methodological approaches, its attention to issues of sources, archives, narrative and history. In addition, it aimed at locating the biography in relation to debates over biography and history in South Africa. As I began my research for the long essay, it soon became apparent that the biography of Kenneth Kaunda ended its narration in 1964 and yet it was published ten years later in 1974. By ending its �coverage� of the narrations of Kenneth Kaunda�s life in 1964, it seemed obvious that its coverage was in many ways similar to his autobiography that was published in 1962.2 The ending of the biography�s coverage in 1964 thus seemed rather abrupt as it precluded any representations of the subject in the post 1964 period in which he had become President of Zambia. Kenneth Kaunda was resident of Zambia for nearly three decades (1964-1991) having led the �final� phase of the nationalist struggle for Independence through the United National Independence Party (UNIP). Surely, I surmised, the meanings of Kenneth Kaunda�s life as nationalist leader, as presented in most of his biography, would differ from those of him as President? Upon evaluating the biography, it seemed to be a largely chronological and descriptive rather analytical account of the subject�s life. However, what made it profound to me was the ways in which it entwined the narratives of Kenneth Kaunda�s life with the events, dates 1 The biography of Kenneth Kaunda by Fergus Macpherson was the subject of the long essay. See Fergus Macpherson, Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia: The Times and the Man (Lusaka: Oxford University Press, 1974). 2 Kenneth D. Kaunda, Zambia Shall Be Free: An Autobiography (London: Heinemann Educational Books td, 1962). and activities of the history of the Zambian nation. Some accounts inadvertently referred to this interconnection by referring to Kenneth Kaunda as the �founder of Zambia�. My exposure to various other debates around the production of history in the public domain such as through museums and national heritage sites or monuments prompted me to consider undertaking a study of the post-1964 historiography of Kenneth Kaunda. Rather than attempting to fill Kenneth Kaunda�s post-1964 historiographical gap with a chronological account of his political life, I wanted to trace the narratives of Kenneth Kaunda�s life in connection with the production of history in different domains in Zambia. This thesis thus aims at examining the political auto/biographical narrations of Kenneth Kaunda in relation to the production of nationalist history and national heritage in Zambia in the years following the country�s Independence in 1964.4 One of the key questions that this study sought to engage with was: how did the �representations� of Kenneth Kaunda influence the ways in which Zambia�s post-independence nationalist history and national heritage were produced? In seeking to provide an answer to the question, the study evaluated the auto/biography of Kenneth Kaunda itself, as well as how it reflects in the history texts utilised in Zambian schools and in history in the public domain through national heritage sites or monuments and museum exhibitions. The thesis will show that in Zambia, the auto/biography of Kenneth Kaunda has acquired significance through history as school lesson and as history in the public domain, through the production of national heritage sites and museum exhibitions
    corecore