3,142 research outputs found

    Interview with Mike Levine, 2019.

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    This oral history interview was conducted by Gregory Peek as part of The Joe Anthony Project. Summary of the interview by Gregory Peek: "Mike Levine is the bassist and keyboardist for the rock band Triumph. Formed in 1975, Triumph are a Canadian hard and progressive rock band from the Toronto suburb of Mississauga, Ontario. The band’s 1976 self-titled debut, particularly the final track “Blinding Light Show/Moonchild,” grew a passionate San Antonio fan base thanks to repeated play by DJs Joe Anthony and Lou Roney. The band’s first San Antonio tour date came in 1977 for a concert promoted by Joe Miller’s Jam Productions. Triumph filled in as headliner after a last-minute cancellation by Sammy Hagar. Mike Levine credits that show as a turning point for the band’s later success in the United States.

    Profile of Mike Levine, a high school theater teacher in Sacopee Valley and head

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    Profile of Mike Levine, a high school theater teacher in Sacopee Valley and head of Acorn Productions. Levine is the force behind the third Maine Playwrights Festival, which is being presented at the Portland Stage Studio Theater, Jan. 29 through Feb. 1. The festival features 11 plays by nine local playwrights, performed by 17 actors, with three directors

    Mike Levine

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    AbstractMike Levine is at the University of California, Berkeley where he is co-Director of the newly formed Center for Integrative Genomics. He obtained his Ph.D. from Yale University with Alan Garen studying steroid-regulated gene expression in Drosophila larvae. As a Jane Coffin Childs fellow he did postdoctoral research with Walter Gehring at the University of Basel in 1982. After a second short postdoctoral stint with Gerry Rubin he started his own lab at Columbia University in 1984. He subsequently moved his lab to UCSD in 1991 and to UC Berkeley in 1996. During the past 20 years the Levine lab has studied gene regulation in the early Drosophila embryo, including the analysis of stripe 2 enhancer of the segmentation gene eve-skipped (eve), and the mechanisms underlying gradient thresholds of gene expression produced by Dorsal, a maternal morphogen. Levine was awarded the Monsanto Prize in Molecular Biology from the National Academy of Sciences in 1996 and was elected into the Academy in 1998

    Mike Levine

    No full text
    AbstractMike Levine is at the University of California, Berkeley where he is co-Director of the newly formed Center for Integrative Genomics. He obtained his Ph.D. from Yale University with Alan Garen studying steroid-regulated gene expression in Drosophila larvae. As a Jane Coffin Childs fellow he did postdoctoral research with Walter Gehring at the University of Basel in 1982. After a second short postdoctoral stint with Gerry Rubin he started his own lab at Columbia University in 1984. He subsequently moved his lab to UCSD in 1991 and to UC Berkeley in 1996. During the past 20 years the Levine lab has studied gene regulation in the early Drosophila embryo, including the analysis of stripe 2 enhancer of the segmentation gene eve-skipped (eve), and the mechanisms underlying gradient thresholds of gene expression produced by Dorsal, a maternal morphogen. Levine was awarded the Monsanto Prize in Molecular Biology from the National Academy of Sciences in 1996 and was elected into the Academy in 1998

    Mike Olszewski Interview, 2009

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    Mike Olszewski is a newscaster for WKSU-FM and a professor of communications at Kent State University and the University of Akron, as well as the author of several books. He was born in Cleveland in 1953. The interview discusses his childhood, racial issues, music, and the media

    Mike Olszewski Interview, 2009

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    Mike Olszewski is a newscaster for WKSU-FM and a professor of communications at Kent State University and the University of Akron, as well as the author of several books. He was born in Cleveland in 1953. The interview discusses his childhood, racial issues, music, and the media

    Dr. Mike Davison – Faculty Author Interview

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    Dr. Mike Davison, Professor of Music, discusses his documentary film, Cuba: Rhythm in Motion. This dynamic film captures the joy of making music in Cuba, an island that Dr. Davison has visited numerous times with his students. The contrasting yet intertwined histories of Cuban and American music are traced and illustrated with extensive performance footage. A DVD of Cuba: Rhythm in Motion is available in Parsons Music Library

    Mike Nichols Oral History

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    Oral histories created by University of Kansas students, staff and faculty as part of the Religion in Kansas Project are archived at http://hdl.handle.net/1808/12524 in KU ScholarWorks, the digital repository of the University of Kansas.Oral history interview with Mike Nichols conducted by Diana Brown at the Latte Land coffee shop in Kansas City, Kansas, on July 6, 2014. Mike is the author of The Witches’ Sabbats, taught classes on Paganism for decades, and owned The Magic Lantern occult book shop in Kansas City in the 1980s; this interview discusses those experiences. This interview was conducted for the Religion in Kansas Project as part of a summer fieldwork internship funded by the Friends of the Department of Religious Studies.Friends of the Department of Religious Studie

    Mike Ladd: Invisible mending

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    An Author event presented by The Friends of the University of Adelaide Library, recorded in the Ira Raymond Room, Barr Smith Library, 18 May 2017.Mike Ladd's new collection, Invisible Mending ranges across genres including essay, memoir, short story and poetry. Based loosely on the ideas of scarring and healing, Invisible Mending extends from family intimacies to connection and disconnection in the Australian community, environmental damage and repair. It also has an international view. Parts of it were written at an artist's residency in Malaysia and while travelling through South America

    Portrait of Australian theatre expert, Mr David Addenbrooke [picture] /

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    Title from inscription on reverse.; Condition good.; Inscriptions: "Australian theatre expert Mr David Addenbrooke readily admits that he is an author by accident. A thesis he wrote for amaster's degree is now a book, 'The Royal Shakespeare Company' ... Mr Addenbrooke at his home in Perth, Western Australia. Australian Information Service photograph by Mike Brown, 24/7/75/6, P75/591" --printed on reverse
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