2,078 research outputs found
Willis Kent Interview, August 1982
Willis Kent describes how his father and grandfather first taught him how to trap in Missouri. Kent details his life as a trapper and tells of the numerous other jobs he took up to provide additional support for his family. He discusses how after trapping for many years in Missouri, he moved to Great Falls, Montana, for health reasons and continued to trap there. Kent talks about becoming involved with trapping for predator control in Montana, first as a federal employee and then through the local government in Phillips County. Kent recalls how his efforts effectively managed coyote populations that threatened the stock of local ranchers.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/montanafurtrappers/1018/thumbnail.jp
Bronze Age tin-bronze metalwork assemblages in Kent: Composition, distribution and context
The main objectives of this thesis are to analyse and discuss Bronze Age tin-bronze assemblages in Kent, the study area, with focus on their composition, distribution and context.
The purpose of this thesis is largely in response to Professor Richard Bradleys following statement;
‘All too often, studies of such deposits have been concerned with content rather than context. This is a tradition that can be traced at least as far back as the work of Sir John Evans (1881). Since so little is known about the circumstance in which this material was deposited, it is perhaps a moot point whether such chronologies can be entirely reliable, but in the present account they are followed for want of anything better.’ (Bradley, 1998, 13)
The corpus of data comprises 66 assemblages identified in the subject area, given in Chapter 3 in the form of Datasheets and in the Appendices, in the form of graphs, a Compendium of Assemblages and maps. Comparisons are also made in relation to distribution alongside Bronze Age settlement, monuments and topographical data.
The thesis includes Methodology for collation of the corpus of research, followed by Distribution, Analysis, Assemblages in Retrospect and Current Thinking, Discussion and a Conclusion. The Discussion focuses on context of assemblages and metalworking from the subject area and the Bronze Age in northern Europe.
The Conclusion draws largely on the Analysis and data compiled from the Appendices, which have provided some fascinating and unexpected results that will hopefully provide further impetus for academic discussion and deliberation.
The thesis also recommends some further areas of research that would be of great benefit, particularly in the realm of non-destructive metallurgical analysis
Kent State Scrapbook 1920s and 1930s
Scrapbook containing items from Kent State University from the 1920s and 1930s. Also included is the university name of Kent State Normal College. Includes early commencement programs and photographs.FAIR KENT STATE
By MARIE F. KULOW, 1923
Tune: "'Believe me, if all those endearing young charms."
Fair Kent State, we· re singing our praises to you,
We students who've known you so long,
We believe in you, love you;
We know you will prove
Everything that is noble and strong.
For these few short years
We've lived with you here,
We've labored, we've played, we ve been free:
And now to you, dear Alma Mater, we raise,
We raise up our voices to thee.
With the rise of each morn,
And the set of each sun,
We pledge our allegiance anew;
The hills and the woodlands re-echo our praise;
Kent State, we are honoring you.
Tho' ties may be severed, and knowledge forgot,
Alma Mater, our faith will be true;
As the swallows will ever come back to their nests,
Fair Kent State, we'll come back to you.
PROCESSIONAL.
Ruth Hartlerode.
~t; ~ ~-~l_---=~~~~-==#.r!+~==M~=~~
~ -r-• - r---.1- y · r-r-~ -1----?:•--r-- - .-- •----
voic - es tiow we raise; We sing each one, Kei1t Nor - m11l, Deep
place in Mem' - ry's halls, Of Loy - al - t.y, Kent Nor - mal, En-aft
- er ,years we'll yearn To speed the day the fu - ture Holds
I 1 ~ J -D-F-==,-----1-~--"-- -~~-tt~J=l I~~---.-•-- -r=i-s==-=~:_:rl======G'j-~-== -- • '=:1 r--r- -~--r : ti -• I 9---- i r -r.
l~==#=--=&J~=t~~;;g i I i+,_f=L~~i==~~
~8- -•-:_;• ·r ctt ~ -•· ·•-.. -------..
-heart-felt word~ of praise. With love we'll e'er re - vere you, With pride we'll speak your
d11r- ing as your walls. Firm bonds of love and friendship Will bind us close tu
II _ forth for our re - turn. A - gain we'll tread your pathways, Once more we'll view your
~==ft=--i4 if&BF~bhJtW1t~•t ~ !=l ~ ..- -r ... .. d.
name,
you,
walls,
"
cresc. I _ l i
With· joy - ous-ness. we'll cher - ish
These bonds we ne'er will sev - er,
Re - gret will mark our part - ing,
The splen - dor of your fame.
Each day will find them true.
When_ 110 - ble du • ty calls .
. r=P 1al
R. E . MANCHESTl!R.
lo strict march time.
I. We'll sing to Kent. We'll siog to state
z. We'll Jell for Keot. We'll yelf for state s. We'll fight for Keat. We'llfigllt for state
toy-al
Joy- al
toy- al
our sing-er
our yell-er
our fight- er
Buck-eye men
Buck-eye meu
Buck-eye men
8
full of
full of
full of
8
sing,
,rel!,
f,gbt,
We'll aiog to
We'll yell tor
We'll figbt for
0. We'll
0, We'll
O. We'll
8 8 8
KATHLEEN BOYD-21
We'll siof to Col-lege
We'll ;rel for Col-lege
We'll figllt for Col - lege
And
Aud
And
wom-eu, brave aufl
wom-eu brave and
wom-eu brave aud
Wher-ev -er
Wber-ev- er
'l\'ber- ev - er
we may
v.•~ may
we may
We'll sing to
We'll yell for
We'll fight for
0
0
0
8
too.
too.
too.
true.
true•
true.
r...
Copyrigbt
-
~ THIRD cANNUAL
li{ ~ n1 ?f.r conirin« 1 I1I .~ Din mHeIt' .'
IN THE 8v!ASONIC TEMPLE, CLEVELA
ND, OHIO :: cAT FIVE O'CLOCK
FRIDAY, OCTOBc<RT._W ENTY-EHJHT
W,__INETEENTW ENTY-OW,__£
• ~
L·===·~ •
....
"Ohio"
Our Profession Ansalen Cobbs
Co-operation Prof. C. S. Van Deusen
Loyalty Miss Lucile Hillis
From Far Away . Miss May H. Prentice
Our Alumni Mr. Gordon De Witt
Our Future . President J. E. McGilvrey
" Processional "
0-H-1-0
R. E. MAl!ICHESTBR.
In strict march time.
Keat. We'll siag to state
Keat. We'll yelf for state
Kent. We'll figbt for state
loy -al
loy- al
loy- al
Buck-eye men
Buck-eye men
Buck-eye men
We'll aing to
We'll yell tor
Wo'll figtlt for
8 8
full of sing,
full of yelT,
full of fight,
0. We'll
0, We'll
0- We'll
fl
KATHLEEN BOYD-21
We'll sinf to Col-lege
We'll yel for Col-lege
We'll fight for Col-lege
And wom-eo.,
And wom-en
And wom-eo
brave aad
brave and
brave aud
too.
too.
too.
true.
true.
truo.
Wber-ev - er we may go,
Wher- ev - er we may go,
Wber-ev-er we may go,
We'll sing to
We'll 7ell for
We'll f1gbt for
8
0 g
Copyri&tlit
•
JArnt ~tate ftormal ~ollege
NINTH ANNUAL
COMMENCEMENT
J[ull! t!)e Wwentl!•oixt!), Jl'linetern [Qunllren ann Wlllentl!•tlllo
<!College aunttotf um
PROGRAM
March of Graduating Class.
Invocation.
Doxology.
Processional _____________________________ Ruth Hartlerode Bentley
Piano (a) En Automne ____________ ·---··············Moszkowski
(b) Chant d' Amour ........... -····· ............ Stojowski
(c) Dance of Gnomes ........ - ....................... Liszt
Alma Schirmer
Violin (a) On Wings of Song .................. Mendelssohn•Aver
(b) Spanish Dance ...... -·•···-····· .............. Rehfeld
Howard deGant
Address ...................................... Dr. Carroll R. Reed
Superintendent of Schools, Akron, Ohio.
Piano. The Etudes Op. 10, Nos. 6, 12 ..................... Chopin
Alma Schirmer
Violin (a) Ave Mari a ........................ Schubert-Wilhelmj
(b) From the Brake ............................... Gardner
Howard deGant
Presentation of Diplomas ............ President John E. McGilvrey
Conferring of Degrees
The Star Spangled Banner
God Be With You Until We Meet Again
The Senior Cl~s
of the
Kent St3..te C0Ue3e
z,..rmounces their
CommetJcement E.:icercises
Tuursd.,,.y,July the nineteenth
JYineteen hundred Z>..tJtdw e1Jtythree
z,..t eight o'clock
College Auditorium
•
~ent ~tatr ftormal <lCollege
TENTH AININUAIL
COMMIENCIEMENT
]Ul1! tbr ntnetuntb. ntnrtem bun'tlttll tturnt~•tbtre
<ll:icil)t o'clock IJ:). S@.
<!Colleg~eu n itorium
PROGRAM
March of Graduating Class.
Invocation______ _____________ ___ _ _______ Rev. J. H. Dobbyn
Doxology
Processional __________________________R_u_th Ha1·tlerode Bentley
Voice
a. King of the Winds ---·-------------------------David
b. Mighty Lak a Rose -------··----·--·-··----Neidlinger
c. Beloved, It Is Morn ...... ·---------·· ........ Alyward
Mr. Frederick True.
God of Our Fathers __ .. _. ___ ·-·- -···· ·-····.---··------Warren
To Thee, 0 Country-··--- _______·- - __. _____.- ·--- ... -··- Eichberg
Chorus
Address_ ... --·---·-·-··-Glenn Frank, Editor, Century Magazine
Voice
a. Invictus --------------------------·---·--· -·-··-Huhn
b. A Memory --------------·-----------------------Ganz
c. Lift Up Thine Eyes --····- .. ········----·-····--Logan
Mr. Frederick True.
Presentation of Diploma and Degrees ___ .Pres. John E. McGilvrey
Benediction. God Be With You.
I
©tatluate~
<fltmmtarp ~iploma~
Esther May Arn
Anna M. Baird
Helen Lenora Baker
Ethel Marie Balson
Lois Evelyn Barker
Frances Barnes
Hazel L. Bauder
Harriet Lanning ,
Audrey Lucille Becker
Anna Gayle Berry
Susie Mae Bleadingheiser
Berniece Alcox Braucher
Nettie Brink
Lela May Brookshire
Anna L. Burns
Hazel Albertine Corbett
Louise E. Decker
Hattie Helen Dunlap
Elsie May Eddy
Lucille May Esch\iman
Mabel Frase
Esther L. Gibson
Florence Katherine Golde
Mildred Nancy Graham
Ina L. Griffin
Clyde Hake
Eva Pearl Hassler
Martha B. Hindman
lmsie B. -Hodes -
Cora Riley Horwell
Mary Jane Hughes
Ethel May Johnson
Ethel Mae Jones
Anna Margaret Keener
Margaret Roosevelt Kenaston
Maude Lucille King
Wilm. T ,. Kirkbride
Minn; ...::arolyn Kulow
Lucille Marie Lyons
Inez Mae McCollum
M. Ethel Mccutcheon
Jane Margaret McGuire
Katherine Agnes McGuire
Helen M. Mayne
Florence M. Mehnert
Pearl Amanda Mohr
L. Janice Moore
Elsie Lillian Nash
Lucile Margaret Patterson
Charlotte Payne
Helen E. Perry
Ardis Marie Pfile
Christine Pitkin
Lydia Elizabeth Poley
Stella L. Potschner
Thelma Ruth Proehl
AuVergne Geneve Proper
Hazel M. Reisinger
Rose Rinkoski
Marie Jeannette Roetzel
Bertha Helen Rogers
Willis Ross Root
Rebecca Margaret Rothstein
Grace Lillian Roxbury
Cletus Scheetz
Lyle Delano Shatto
Alice Fern Siegfried
Dora Saima Simukka
Erl~ar William Slough
Elsie May Sohnlein
Saima Marie Sopanen
Blanche S. Stall
Blanche Verena Stauffer
Hazel Louise Stilgenbauer
Eva Sarah Thomas
Bertha Thone
Lillian Leona Timmins
HeTeri M. Turner -
Mattie A. Warner
Vinnietta Jeannette Warner
Gle'l'ina 1-1. Wickert --
Alma Marie Zinning(lr
~ptcfal ~iploma~ in ~omt <fconomfc~
May Gladys Cowdery Edith Meyer Harriet Mae Spinneweber
<!tanninstes for §pedal lDiplomas in 11.)om(e[l ;conomici!g,u C!,3 1, 1923
Ida Florence Critz Naomi Wise
Esther Wattleworth Winnigene Wood
~ptcial ~iploma in £@anual 1<[.raintng
Clyde C. Steele
<!tanninate for ~pedal lDiploma in ~anual ~rainine1, guC!, 31, 1923
Harold W. T~on
15. ~. ~tgree tn <ftmcation
M.A. Shook
~anlJilJatt~ tor <fltmmtarp ~iploma~
\IU(!IISt 31, 1923,
Ruth G. Alspaug
Ruth E. Amos
Bernadette JuRe Arnold
Pearl Arnold
Sophia Bachman
Iva M. Badger
Thelma Barker
Helen E. Bates
Ada G. Bauman
Katht·yn Baughman
Bauschlinger
Irma Beale
Edna Beard
Florence Beaty
Andrew Beechy
Anna Berman
Jessie 0. Billeter
Lucien C. Black
Glennetta Booth
Nora Bowser
Hazel M. Brandt
Helen Bremer
Winona Breyley
Myrtle Mae Bucklew
Ruth Carlson
Hazel Chubb
Mable M. Crubaugh
Margaret Cully
Laura L. Davis
Bessie Dildine
Mary Doyle
Mildred Edwards
M. Ruth Erwin
Bina E. Evans
Eda Fett'!s
Esther Flock
Letha N. Foust
Jean Fowler
Zelda Fry
Bunice G. Ganyard
Hilda Geddert
Ellen E. Geer
Myrtle Gibbs
Fannie Hamalain
Emma B. Hamilton
Daisy May Harper
Laverne Harrison
Zelma F. Harter
Esther R. Hartford
Gwendoline Hartzell
Ina Ruth Hawke
Mary Highberger
Gladys Mildred Hoff
Carrie B. Hutzell
Mary Helen Justice
Nora Nell Kinsey
Ida Marie Kraft
Eleanor Krauss .... '
Mrs. Helen LaBord 1 :>.
Helen E. Ladd
Frances Langhorst
Ethel Alvira Lennig
Edna K. Limbacher
Marion Long
N. E. O. T. A. BANQUET SON \i S
CHEER FOR KENT
Hearts and voices all united,
Cheer for Kent!
Let the echoes ring in answer,
Cheer for Kent!
Square our shoulders. lift our faces,
\\'c arc in our proper places,
KEN Tl
Cheer for Kent!
Join us, all together, in a
Cheer for Kent!
Tho the coming years may take us
Far from Kent,
Younger hearts will fill our places
Herc in Kent.
Tho the voice and step may .falter,
There's a word that none can alter
KENT!
Cheer for Kent!
Every loyal voice will answer
Cheer for Kent.
KENT STATE
h: cnt State College is set en a hill,-
To win to her door you must climb with a
will.
:\ 11d K.ent State Hill is wcariful long,Hut
we trudge on together, a glad-hearted
throng.
Climbing the hill at Kent.
Kent State portal is open wide;
You've made the grade and you're safe
inside;-
There's a clarion call to 111:tiden and youth,
For now is the time you begin. in truth,
Climbing the hill at Kent.
For. hills of the earth or hills of the soul.
It is all the same. for they take their toll,
One of the body and one of the mind,
:\nd the summit is hard to gain. we find.
Climbing the hill at Kent.
But keep a-stepping. and first you know.
You arc u1> on top where the cool wind~ blow
Below. farstrctched. lies a wonderful view
.\nd glad arc the c~·cs and the heart of you
That you climbed the hill at Kent.
\\'c'II yell for loyal Bucke.re men
.\nd women. brave and true.
\\'e'II keep our yeller full of yell,
\Vhcrccvcr we may go,
We'll yell ,for 0, We'll yell for Hi
We'll yell for O - Hi - 0.
\\'c'II fight for Kent,
\\'e'II fight for State
\\' c'II fight .for College, too.
We'll fight for loyal Buckeye men
And women. brave and true.
\\'e'll kce1> ou,· fighter full of ,fight,
\ \'hcrcevcr we may go,
\\'e'll fight for 0, \'\le'll fight .for Hi
We'll fight for O - Hi - 0.
PROCESSIONAL
1 n joyous song, Kent College,
Our ,·oiccs now we raise:
\\'c sing each one. Kent College
Deep heart-felt words of praise.
\\lith love we'll e'er revere you,
\\'ith pride we'll speak your name;
\\'ith joyousness we'll cherish
The splendor of your fame.
A halo bright. Kent College,
\\'c place in Niem'ry's halls.
Of loyalty. Kent College,
Enduring as your walls.
Firm bonds of love and friendship
\\'ill hind us close to you,
These honds we ne'er will sever,
t:ach day will find them true.
Although we leave your campus,
1 n after years we'll yearn
To speed the day the future
Holds forth for our return.
.\i;(ain we'll tread your pathways,
Once more we'll view your walls.
Regret will mark our parting
\\'hen noble duty calls.
PERFECT DAY
\\'hen you come to the end of a per.feet clay,
.\nd yon sit alone with your thoughts.
\\'hile the chimes ring out with a carol gay
OHIO For the joy that the clay has brought.
\\'e'II sing to Kent, Do you think what the encl of a perfect day
\N'c'll sing to State. Can mean to a tired heart
\\'e'll sing 10 College. too. \\'lwn the sun goes down with a flaming ray
\\'c'II sing to loyal Buckeye men \nd the dear friends have to part?
And women. brave and true. \\'e'I. this is the end of a perfect day,
\\'c'll keep our singer full of sing. ~car the end of a journey. too:
vVhercevcr we 111ay go, ft leaves a thought that is big and strong
\N'e'II sing to 0, we'll sing to JTi \\'ith a wi~h that is kind and true.
\Vc'll sing to O - Hi - 0. For memory has painted that perfect clay
\Ve'll yell for Kent, \\'ith colors that never fade.
\\'e'l! yell for State .\nd we find at the end of a per,feet day.
\Ve'II yell for Colleg~, too. The soul of a friend wc'\'C made. _....;;....:,_~------..:...:.:.:........::;..:;.;....;.;_;;,..:..;....=::.....;.:..::....;~=~'
(
THE KENTON IAN
=========
I <- .,_,.
r' I / I ..
e. ::1. ~~
KENT STATE NORMAL COLLEGE
The State College of Northeastern. Ohio
Two Year Course Four Year Course
leading to the Diploma and State lending to the Bachelor or Science
Life Certificale for Teaching- Degree in Educalion
in the Elemenlary Schools
DEPARTMENTS
Mathemalics Educr,1iou
Foreign Languages
Reading and Expression
llome Economics
Kindergnrlcn
Manual Training-
!Vlusic.
SurveyingHis1or~•
Ari
Geography
Agriculture
Physics
Chcmis1ry
Social Science
Physical Educalion
rail Quar1er beginning October J, J923
f.or catalog write,
PRESIDENT J. K McGILVREY.
I
THE KENTON IAN
I
AUTOGRAPHS
J f u.,~ .
-/~
,_ I
r
IJl,,,. lg.d 1~~.:u-e~
.~.
~
==========
I I
KENT STATE NORMAL COLLEGE, KENT, OHIO, 1922.
THE FACULTY AT CHAPEL
They sit on the chapel platform
And never smile, you see;
For while they've a sense of humor
They're the K. S. N .. C. Faculty.
They must make a pretense of singing
Though they can't tell A from G,
They must follow churches ragtime.
Because they're the Faculty.
They cannot sit down at prayer,
Though tired as they can be,
For they can't "sit" a good example
They're the Kent State Faculty. '
D'yu know, a new Dean's come to our
school to stay,
To make us act just like we should and
brush gay times away;
An· shoo the men right off the porch,·
and make us go and sleep,
And study till we're nearly dead-and
all her long rules keep.
And all the other college folks, when
their dull class is done,
They go and ride 'bout everywhere
and has the mostest fun I
But better listen to the rules that Kent
State has about-
Or the Dean'll git you
Ef you
Don't
Watch
Out!
An' one time a little girl 'ud allus laugh
an grin,
An' make fun of all the rules and tilt
up high her chin;
An' onc't, when she had "company,"
and no one else was there, t"
She went automobile riding, an' said
she didn't care!
An' jist as she climbed in the car and
couldn't run an' hide-
There was the verv Dean herself
a-standin' by her side,
An' she snatched her to the office 'fore
she knowed what she's about!
An' the Dean'll git you
Ef you
Don't
Watch
Out! -8. P.
Rotarians Listen
To Songs by Girl~
The Rotary hear.cl songs galore
Tues.day noon. President J. E. McGilv1
·ey, of the Normal, brought a
.ctoze:1 gi ,·Is from the school on the
hill antd they sang their ~vay into the
hearts of the Rotarian~. presenting
chornses and solos in liberal number
an.d splcnd Ld style. With pretiident
and vice president both ~vay, M.r. McGilvrey
preside.cl. Mr. Davey asked
help in the way of a place for a class
of 100 young men to recite s'hould the
'company bring them here. They
!
,would spen,d from 40,000
in the town. Mr. McGilvrey sai,d per- ,
haps provisions could be made at the
Normal college. There 1was a rous-
1
ing vote of thanks given the young
ladi~s tor their rendition of songs. \
Gold and Blue
Juniors, Seniors, College students,
All together, we
Shout aloud her glorious praises,
Hail to K. N. C!
CHORUS
KentState Normal, Kent State Normal,
K. N. C. for me;
She's the pride of all Ohio,
Hail to K. N. C I
Boost the college on the hilltop;
Loyal thru and thru;
Shout aloud her glorious praises,
Cheer the gold and blue.
"IN A FRIENDLY SORT 0' WAY"
When a man ain't got a cent, and he's
feeling kind o' blue,
An' the clouds hang dark an' heavy
and won't let the sunshine thru',
It's a great thing, 0 my brethren, for a
feller just to lay
His hand upon your shoulder in a
friendly sort o' way. -Riley.
Lots o' fellers here at College get to
feelin' just as blue;
Work piles up; they get discouraged till
they don't know what to do.
Tell you, boys, it's up to us to have a
word or two to say
To the chaps that get discouragedin
a friendly sort o' way.
"Rambles Round the Campus"
By Melvin Ryder.
MOULTON HALL LOWRY HALI.. MERRILL HALL
This view is ta~,•n from the front of the Auduorium. :\louhon Hall and Lowr)'
llall are dormitories for women
j
The campus as seen fro:n Main Street. showing Science Hall four hundred yards distant
i\lERRILL HALL AUDITORIUI\I AND LIRRARY SCIENCE HALL
This constitutes the group of buildings devoted to school work and is planned LO
meet the needs of 1500 students
I
LOWRY HALL
As seen from a point near the center of the campus. This dormitory accommodates 66 students
and includes the dining rooms for the student body. The rooms are arranged in
suites for four students with a common study room
MOUL TON HALL
This women's dormitory with rooms for 108 students includes large commodious social rooms
for use of students and faculty. There are single rooms, double rooms and rooms
arranged in suites for four or six students
MANUAL ARTS BUILDING
The heating plant with tunnel connections t'o all buildings, occupies the lower floor. The
upper floor is devoted to work in manual training
LOCATION
The city of Kent is situated almost in the center of the Northeastern Ohio Normal School
district, in Portage County, on the watershed from which the streams flow northward to Lake
Erie and southward to the Ohio River. A more beautiful or nealthful site could not be found.
From the wooded hill, surrounded by eighty-five acres of rolling campus. the buildings command
an uninterrupted view for many miles of the beautiful valley of the Cuyahoga River. These
ample grounds, half of which are covered with heavy woodland, within the edge of which the
buildings are located, bring the students close to nature and furnish an unequaled opportunity
for experimental work in gardening and agriculture and for field work in the natural sciences.
Kent is situated on the main lines of the Erie, the Wheeling & Lake Erie, and the Baltimore
& Ohio Railroads, with twenty-two trains a day. In addition to this, the C. A. & C. and
the C. & P. branches of the Pennsylvania System come within twenty minutes' ride by trolley.
The Northern Ohio Traction line gives half-hour service. Almost any part of the district can
be reached in four hours and the facilities for reaching Kent are such that students from many
parts of the district can travel to and from their homes daily with not more than an hour's ride.
I
II..
LECTURES AND ENTERTAINMENTS
Kent State Normal College because of its accessibility, large enrollment and splendid aud•
itorium has been able to command the best platform talent for its students. Few of the large
universities have equaled, and none can surpass, the standard set by the following numbers that
have appeared in the Kent State Normal College entertainment courses. This standard will be
maintained:
United States Marine Band
New York Philharmonic Orchestra
Hon. Will;am Howard Taft
Madame Ernestine Schumann-Heink
Stuart Walker Portmanteau Theater
The Coburn Players
The Ben Greet Players
John Kendrick Bangs
Lila Robeson of the Metropolitan Opera Company
Frances Alda of the Metropolitan Opera Company
Kitty Cheatham
President Henry Churchill King of Oberlin Coll~ge
President E. B. Bryan of Colgate University
President Charles Richmond of Union College
Dr. S. Parkes Cadman, of Brooklyn, N. Y.
Hans Kindler, Cellist, of the Philadelphia Orchestra
Reinald Werrenrath of the Metropolitan Opera Company
President W. 0. Thompson of Ohio State University
Dr. Charles juJd of the University of Chicago.
ENROLLMENT
Kent State Normal College, opened but six years ago, has reached the following enrollment
standards:
Regular Year ........................ •. • • • • • • · • • • • • · · · · · · . 614 students
Summer School.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......................... 1,812 students
Extension School.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............... 1,620 students
Graduating Class, 1917-1918 .... ................. • .... • • • • • .. • .209
Total number of graduates for the six Years . . ..... • • • • • • • • 734 .
These figures do not include the enrollment in the elementary school and the high school
This is a record unequaled by any other teacher's college. . .
In choosing a college the student will find it greatly to his advantage to enter a~ inst•·
tution that has shown such remarkable growth and vigor and that has so much promise for
the future.
For catalog or other information address
PRESI0E;>;T J. E. MCGILVREY
Kent, Ohio
I
COURSES OF STUDY
1. A two year course for teachers in the grades, leading to the elementary diploma.
2. A two year course for teachers in the rural schools, leading to the elementary diploma.
3. A four year course for high school teachers, superintendents and supervisors, leading
to the degree of Bachelor of Science in Education.
4. A one year course for college graduates, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science
in Education.
5. Two year courses, leading to diplomas and state life certificates in the special subjects,
are offered in Household Arts, Manual Training and Agriculture.
For students who wish special preparation for the teaching of Drawing, Music, Physical
Education or Kindergarten an opportunity will be given to elect one fourth of their wo
Shaanxi (China), view of Hua Shan mountain
View of Hua-shan, one of five sacred mountains of China.Image is included in the research conducted by Bailey Willis for the article: Among the Mountains of Shen-Si
Author(s): Bailey Willis
Source: Bulletin of the American Geographical Society, Vol. 38, No. 7 (1906), pp. 412-424
Published by: American Geographical Society
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/198944http://www.jstor.org/stable/198944Grayscal
My international career: Willis Shaner
Unpublished version.A memoir about Vicky and Willis Shaner's overseas experiences and Willis Shaner's career. Dr. Shaner is an emeritus professor in Mechanical Engineering
Orientation Week: Library Tour - Clare Willis
Librarian Clare Willis leads students on a tour of the library during Orientation Week 2015.https://scholarship.kentlaw.iit.edu/events_2015/1117/thumbnail.jp
Shaanxi (China), view of Qin Ling mountain range as the natural boundary
View of summits of the Ts'in-ling-shan barrier range of China. In A.G.S. Bulletin vol.38, 1906Image is included in the research condcuted by Bailey Willis for the article: Among the Mountains of Shen-Si
Author(s): Bailey Willis
Source: Bulletin of the American Geographical Society, Vol. 38, No. 7 (1906), pp. 412-424
Published by: American Geographical Society
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/198944http://www.jstor.org/stable/198944Grayscal
The Kent Quarterly, Fall 1957
https://kent-islandora.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/node/17240/87043-thumbnail.jpgPatrons/Donors/Sponsors/Advertisers- Triangle Service Station, Richard\u27s Flowers, Campus Supply, Lawrence Cleaners, Rainbow Restaurant, Dean Glen T. Nygreen
Contributors: Larry Parks, Joanne Ulrich, Marcia Smeyak, Arthur Smith, Robert Greenberger, John Rinehart Jr., Gaylord W. Willis, Paul Zimmer, Carol Sykora, Don Henderson, Pat Gingrich</p
Landscape, Settlement and Materiality: Aspects of Rural Life in Kent during the Roman Period
The Roman period is well represented in Kent’s long history of excavation and discovery and it has some prominent sites. Nevertheless, there has been relatively little in the way of up-to-date synthesis or the application of current theoretical approaches. In common with many other areas of the country, rural settlement, especially ‘non-villa’ settlement, has received scant attention, whilst even its villas are mostly poorly understood. Since the advent of PPG 16 many more such rural sites have been excavated and there has been a corresponding rise, both qualitative and quantitative, in associated data, much of which remains unpublished.
This thesis aims to reassess the Roman period of Kent from a rural standpoint, using a wide range of materials to construct a more nuanced and theoretically informed narrative.
The basis of the study is the Kent HER. The archaeological data are combined with a number of landscape resources in order to reveal the influence of Kent’s highly varied terrain and the ways in which it was understood and exploited. Aspects of building and settlement morphology are examined and the potential of artefactual and ecofactual data for adding refinement to our understanding is explored. In its use of unpublished (‘grey’) literature, it is in line with current research priorities at national level.
Results indicate that strongly patterned distributions of evidence were influenced both by Kent’s physical landscape and by human landscapes of tradition and culture. The county’s archaeological record has features that distinguish it from other southern counties and from the received trajectory of Roman Britain as a whole. This thesis places Romano-British Kent within its wider chronological and geographical context, noting its particular characteristics and finding that it is an eastern, rather than a southern county, following a trajectory very similar to that of northern Gaul
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