3,944 research outputs found

    Neil K. Moran, Singers in Late Byzantine and Slavonic Painting

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    Darrouzès Jean. Neil K. Moran, Singers in Late Byzantine and Slavonic Painting. In: Revue des études byzantines, tome 45, 1987. pp. 261-262

    Neil K. Moran, Singers in Late Byzantine and Slavonic Painting

    No full text
    Darrouzès Jean. Neil K. Moran, Singers in Late Byzantine and Slavonic Painting. In: Revue des études byzantines, tome 45, 1987. pp. 261-262

    A Corpse by Any Other Name: A Stokes Moran Mystery

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    Fiction by Neil McGaughey Scribner (Hardcover; $22.00; ISBN: 0684197626, 3/1998) As Kyle Malachi prepares for impending fatherhood, his growing alienation toward his better known alter ego Stokes Moran leads him into a rash act―he decides to kill off his fictitious rival. Everything seems fine until an actual corpse turns up with Stokes Moran\u27s identity. And Kyle―to keep himself out of jail for a crime he didn\u27t commit―must put a name to the corpse. A name other than Stokes Moran. Any other name.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/mwp_books/1003/thumbnail.jp

    The Best Money Murder Can Buy: A Stokes Moran Mystery

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    A Novel by Neil McGaughey Scribner ($21.00, ISBN: 0684197618, 7/1996) A shocking discovery of a personal nature propels mystery critic/sleuth Stokes Moran in this third book in the series. When a man who is his mirror image appears at his home, Kyle Malachi (a.k.a. Stokes Moran) is suspicious and resentful. Later his twin turns up murdered, and Kyle decides to masquerade as the dead man in hopes of trapping the killer.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/mwp_books/1330/thumbnail.jp

    UMD Comes of Age: the First One Hundred Years

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    with the assistance of Doreen Hansen, Lucy Kragness, Jackie Moran, Mary Morse, and James ViletaMoran, Ken; Storch, Neil. (1996). UMD Comes of Age: the First One Hundred Years. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/185859

    The Right Light

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    How do theatre lighting designers decide what is 'the right light' for each moment of a production? What informs their choices? Why does the audience respond more strongly when the lighting feels 'right'? By interviewing nineteen prominent lighting designers and weaving their insights through his own narrative, Nick Moran aims to answer such questions. This book considers practice across different types of theatre, including opera, dance, musicals and drama. Rather than being a technical manual, it allows lighting designers to contribute contrasting and complementary ideas about how to approach lighting design. Moran argues that the best stage lighting is made with emotion, passion and soul, by creative artists willing to take risks. Includes interviews with: Neil Austin – Lucy Carter – Jon Clark – Natasha Chivers – Paule Constable – James Farncombe – Rick Fisher – Mark Henderson – David Howe – Michael Hulls – Mark Jonathan – Peter Mumford – Ben Ormerod – Bruno Poet – Paul Pyant – Nick Richings – Johanna Town – Hugh Vanstone – Katharine William

    Facing the Future: the Changing Shape of Academic Skills Support at Bournemouth University

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    This paper explores the potential impact of changes to higher education in England on student expectations, engagement, lifestyles and diversity, and outlines implications for the development of digital literacy within academic skills support at Bournemouth University (BU). We will investigate how tackling resource constraints with organisational change can also enable efficient, centralised provision of support materials that utilise networks to overcome the risk of fragmented support for digital literacy. We will also look at how changing delivery modes for support can accommodate changing student lifestyles whilst tackling a weakness of centralised support for digital literacy: that it can become detached from the student’s subject-focused academic practice. Finally we will explore how involving students in developing support can help us to face changes to student expectations and engagement whilst ensuring that materials are authentic and speak to learners in their own voice

    Why Privacy Matters: An Interview with Neil Richards

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    Professor Daniel J. Solove discusses the book \u27Why Privacy Matters\u27 and the future of privacy with the author, Professor Neil Richards
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