4,651 research outputs found

    Neil and Jan Mailing, 1974

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    Neil Mailing, Lecturer, Faculty of Art, with wife Jan, at the farewell for Ken Goodman. See the 'Swinburne Newsletter', 24th April 1974

    Ken Friedenreich Interview

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    This interview is an oral history conducted by Linfield College student Camille Weber with Ken Friedenreich. The interview took place at the Jereld R. Nicholson Library at Linfield College on October 16, 2015. Ken Friedenreich is an author who has written about Oregon wine and its history. The interview includes how he got interested in wine, what it\u27s like to write about wine for a living, the effects that prohibition had on Oregon, and advice for people new to wine

    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

    ACE research briefing paper 007 : Ken Talbot - an entrepreneur's contribution to the growth of the Australian Mining Industry

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    Ken Talbot was one of Australian mining’s most successful entrepreneurs and rose to the top of his industry to become one of Australia’s wealthiest men. Although the nation’s resources industry is synonymous with global names such as Xstrata, BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto, Ken was an individual who made a big impact on the development and growth of the sector. This case study examines Ken’s achievements, his transition from employee to entrepreneur, and the qualities that enabled him to succeed at such a high level. In particular, it focuses on his Jellinbah and Coppabella mining developments that directly led to the creation of Macarthur Coal and the Talbot Group. By the time of his premature death in an African plane crash in 2010, Ken had amassed a fortune estimated at almost $1 billion and was aged just 59. The last publically available Talbot Group annual report for calendar year 2009 showed that the investment portfolio of the group returned 113 per cent that year. Even throughout the global financial crisis the portfolio made a positive return on investment of no less than 10 per cent. Ken’s sense of mateship and his tremendous people skills were keys to his success in the mining industry and the wider community. In addition to excelling in business, he is also remembered for his philanthropy and leaving 30 per cent of his estate to charity through the Talbot Family Foundation

    Research-Teaching Linkages Enhancing Graduate Attributes: Creative and Cultural Practice

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    This report was commissioned by the QAA for the Scottish Enhancement Themes work on Research-Teaching Linkages. The report comprises: a collation of presentations given by colleagues at the Creative and Cultural Practice sectoral event for the Theme; a preface and foreword by the Director of the QAA and the Chair of the Enhancement Theme; and a critical analysis of the context, outcomes and significance of the Theme for CCP discplines by Sector Lead, Dr Ken Neil of The Glasgow School of Art

    Event Invitation: An Evening with Dr. Ken Robinson

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    Invitation: Guest speaker, Dr. Ken Robinson, author of “Out of Our Minds: Learning to be Creative, ” will speak on the importance of arts, the development of creativity, education, and the economy. And, introducing the inaugural DaVinci Scholars Awards program

    Dr. Kenneth Ozmon and Neil Morley at Athletic Awards, 1997

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    b&w photographVery good conditionDr. Ken Ozmon (right, SMU President 1979-2000) presents football athlete Neil Morley with the President's Award at the Athletic Awards banquet

    Artist Ken Fandell in Conversation with Dr. Deborah Barkun Ph.D.

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    Artist Ken Fandell discusses his work in the context of the Berman Museum of Art exhibition Science Fiction. This exhibition features the work of international artists who were all born in the 1960s and 70s, when the line between science and fiction seemed to blur in unprecedented ways: satellites routinely orbited the earth and began to send data back to scientists about the mysterious expanses of the universe, the Space Race was in full swing, and, in 1969, Neil Armstrong became the first person to set foot on the surface of the moon. Today, this line seems to blur once again as science and technology relentlessly reach into new territories. Consideration of the relationship between the arts and sciences, and between fact and fiction, are particularly timely today. Science Fiction strives to recognize and analyze the dynamic relationship between fact and fiction, as well as the critical role that art and science play in the future of our planet.https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/berman_conversations/1006/thumbnail.jp

    Oral history interview with Ken Hada

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    Ken Hada, author and professor, talks about his upbringing as a minister's son and shares how he became interested in writing and in poetry. He recalls submitting his first two poems for publication and having them accepted. Hada explains his creative process, the challenge of self-identifying as a writer, and co-founding the Scissortail Creative Writing Festival in Ada, Oklahoma. He also discusses a few of his projects, including writing vignettes to go along with his brother's paintings of the Arkansas River and his book Bring an Extry Mule.The Deep Roots: Oklahoma Authors Collection is a series of interviews with authors who discuss their lives, work, and creative processes

    Ken Knight

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    Photograph - Ken Knight at Nancy Appleby's home, Christmas 1986. Athabasca, Albert
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