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A Norwegian grey zone: Knut Rød, Victor Lind and 'The crucial year, 1942'
This article uses Primo Levi’s concept of “the grey zone” to explore Knut Rød’s involvement in the transfer of 532 Norwegian Jews from Oslo to Auschwitz in 1942. Rød, the police chief in charge of the operation, was subsequently exonerated of any crime on the grounds that he had simultaneously used his position to help members of Milorg – the Norwegian Resistance. The legal and moral basis of this verdict has been questioned by the artist Victor Lind in a series of artworks, including his “countermonument” The Perpetrator (2005)
BPCQ-17-031.R3-Lind-Supplementary-File_Final_2 – Supplemental material for Low-Resource Digital Video: A Pedagogical Necessity for Modern Business Communication
Supplemental material, BPCQ-17-031.R3-Lind-Supplementary-File_Final_2 for Low-Resource Digital Video: A Pedagogical Necessity for Modern Business Communication by Stephen J. Lind in Business and Professional Communication Quarterly</p
Knute J. Lind Interview
Typed carbon copy of interview summary with Leonard Sackett concerning his father, John A. Lind, Bengt E. Sundberg who emigrated with John A. Lind from Sweden, Captain Donaldson, and Frank Kiene, all of whom were big farmers and landowners near Donaldson, Minn. Relates how Frank Kiene got the money to purchase farm land. Also includes "My own personal history," (1 leaf) Lind's own reminiscences about his life in America
Joshua Davis: Author of Spare Parts
Citation: K-State First (2016). Joshua Davis: Author of Spare Parts [Flier]. Manhattan, Kansas: K-State First.Flyer advertising Joshua Davis's author talk at Kansas State University
Interview with Daniel Lind (Class of 1991) with Marina Henke
Daniel Lind (\u2791) describes his path to Bowdoin from New York City. Lind recounts his adjustment to academics during his first years at the College, and how help from his dean gave him the confidence as a scholar to navigate coursework and his sense of place in the classroom. Speaking directly to his time at Bowdoin, Lind emphasizes the importance of having the African American Studies department so linked with the African-American Society, and how this bridging between academics and communal life was crucial for developing a sense of place on campus. Lind expresses concern about what he sees as the current divide between black student life and the Africana Studies department. Finally, he describes his own path to academia, and how his current position as professor of Ethnic Studies at Cypress College is still influenced by his experience at Bowdoin, particularly his admiration for professors like Dan Levine
Eric Lind Collection 1873-1983
The Eric Lind collection documents his involvement with numismatics and philately and his interests in the Holocaust and the fate of the Jews during World War II. Materials collected here cover topics such as Anti-Semitism, Holocaust, Nazis and Neo-Nazis, forgeries during WW II, stamps and currency, and the era of Kaiser Wilhelm II. The collection consists of printed materials, artifacts, paper money and coins, stamps, post cards, envelopes, correspondence, documents, and photographs.Eric Lind was born in 1920 in Augsburg, Bavaria. In 1936 he left on youth Aliyah for Palestine. He immigrated to the United States in 1948, where he worked as an insurance inspector. He died in 1983 in Detroit, Michigan.digitize
Letter of thanks for reciept of 25th Anniversary Library Booklet from Henry E. Becker of Florida to Judith Y. Lind, Director, Roseland Public Library, May 21, 1997
Transcript of letter written by Henry E. Becker of Florida to Judith Y. Lind, Director, Roseland Free Public Library thanking her for the 25th Anniversary Library Booklet, written on May 21, 1999
Kermit J. Lind Interview, 10 June 2013
Lind grew up in Kansas and, after college, attended graduate school at the University of Chicago. He taught at Cleveland State University and lived first on Cleveland\u27s near east side, then in Euclid before choosing Coventry Village in Cleveland Heights as an escape from the racial intolerance he felt characterized Cleveland\u27s suburbs in the early 1970s. Lind became active in testing compliance with fair housing laws and returned to school to earn a degree in law. In 1977 he assumed the directorship of the Cuyahoga Plan, a fair housing organization committed to eliminating racial steering in suburban Cleveland. Most of the interview explores the shifting contours of housing discrimination and efforts to ameliorate it
Kermit J. Lind Interview, 10 June 2013
Lind grew up in Kansas and, after college, attended graduate school at the University of Chicago. He taught at Cleveland State University and lived first on Cleveland\u27s near east side, then in Euclid before choosing Coventry Village in Cleveland Heights as an escape from the racial intolerance he felt characterized Cleveland\u27s suburbs in the early 1970s. Lind became active in testing compliance with fair housing laws and returned to school to earn a degree in law. In 1977 he assumed the directorship of the Cuyahoga Plan, a fair housing organization committed to eliminating racial steering in suburban Cleveland. Most of the interview explores the shifting contours of housing discrimination and efforts to ameliorate it
Steven Johnson Author Talk Poster
K-State Book NetworkA poster advertising an author talk by Steven Johnson at Kansas State University on September 3, 2014. Steven Johnson's book "The Ghost Map" was the 2014-2015 common book
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