1,556 research outputs found
Abby Cowan Hackett, John Armstrong and Richard Pratt, 1994
John Armstrong and Abby Cowan Hackett, First year Bachelor of Applied Science students at Mooroolbark and winners of the Richard Pratt scholarship. Left: John Armstrong, right Abby Cowan Hackett with Richard Pratt, Chancellor. Refer to Swinburne Staff News 17 February 1994
Focus: Banking & Finance commentary piece
Focus: Banking & Finance commentary piece by Richard Hackett and Lori Desjardins, attorneys at Pierce Atwood LLP in Portland. Maine\u27s new predatory lending law imposes complex and difficult restrictions on local banks looking to issue refinance loans to consumers for their subprime mortgage loans. Banks refinancing a loan must prove that the loan provided a tangible net benefit to the consumer. New rules for subprime lending create more uncertainty, prohibiting a lender from extending a subprime loan unless the borrower has the ability to make the scheduled payments and the lender can prove it. Pending federal legislation in predatory lending may create yet another new set of rules for Maine banks to follow
Student Teaching Internship, Monsignor John R. Hackett High School
6 p.The author describes her experience as a high school student teacher.Monsignor John R. Hackett High School. Kalamazoo, Michigan
Richard Pratt Scholarship Winners 1994
Left to right: Johannes Meyer, Abby Cowan Hackett, Richard Pratt, Chancellor; John Armstrong and Danielle Murphy. The four first-year Bachelor of Applied Sciences students at Mooroolbark are 1994 winners of the Richard Pratt Scholarships. Swinburne Staff News 17 February 1994
Highlights in Jazz Concert 053 - Bobby Hackett Memorial Concert
Jack Kleinsinger presents Highlights in Jazz. The concert was held at NYU Loeb Student Center, Thursday, May 17th, 1979 at 8:00pm in association with NYU program board. Jack served as producer and master of ceremonies for the series of concerts. Artists for the concert include Jimmy McPartland, Phil Bodner, Vic Dickenson, Norman Simmons, Major Holley, Richard Sudhalter, Ernie Hackett, and Jackie Williams. Special guests: George Masso, Larry Weiss and Helen Humes.https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/kleinsinger/1051/thumbnail.jp
Scattered across time: Wagner's influence on the contemporary lyric in musical theatre
Musical theory is a well-researched area of study which includes thematic devices such as leitmotivs, unfinished melodies, harmonic structure and many more in this vein. While he did not invent these concepts of musical theory, Richard Wagner’s creative advances and contributions to ‘Music Drama’ have greatly influenced musical theatre as we know it today. Wagner’s innovations in this area have led me to theorise that such musical devices can be applicable to the little studied area of lyrics. In order to explore this concept I have done a case study of Stephen Sondheim’s Into the Woods as well as experimented with the theories Wagner composed (in essays) by writing lyrics to two musicals: one an adaptation of Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night and another of my own devising via collaboration, Gesamtkunstwerk. By exploring an established lyricist's work, together with my own it is my purpose to demonstrate that lyrics can be studied from both a theoretical and a creative perspective and therefore can be respected by scholars and audiences alike
14th annual John Perkins Lecture
Dr. John Perkins returns to campus Tuesday, April 30, 11 a.m., at First Free Methodist Church, for the 14th annual John Perkins Lecture Series. This year’s morning event features Erna Kim Hackett, executive pastor at The Way Berkeley. Later that day, Hackett and Dr. Perkins will continue the morning’s topic, “Words Have Power,” at 7:30 p.m., also in First Free Methodist Church.
John Perkins is one of the leading evangelical voices to come out of the American civil rights movement and an internationally known author, speaker, and teacher. His is the co-founder of SPU’s John Perkins Center for Reconciliation, Leadership Training, and Community Development and the author of the new book One Blood: Parting Words to the Church on Race and Love. Erna Kim Hackett served with InterVarsity for 18 years in Black Ministries and Urban Programs. She is a preacher, pastor, writer, activist, and singer
Contributors to the January Issue/Notes
Notes by John J. Killen, James H. Neu, John W. Hackett, Jr., James E. Diver, James C. Daner, Richard F. Swisher, and Leo L. Linck
2007 - biennial review - 2009
Reporting period: July 1, 2007-June 30, 2009.Assembled and reviewed by: Reagan Waskom, Nancy Grice, Zach Hittle, Kevin Hackett
2019 Purdue Road School Transportation Conference and Expo Luncheon
Jim Hackett is president and chief executive officer, Ford Motor Company, effective May 22, 2017. He also is a member of the company’s board of directors.
Under Hackett’s leadership, together with Bill Ford, Ford Motor Company is committed to becoming the world’s most trusted company, designing smart vehicles for a smart world that help people move more safely, confidently and freely.
Prior to serving in this role, Hackett was named chairman of Ford Smart Mobility LLC in 2016, a subsidiary of Ford formed to accelerate the company’s plans to design, build, grow and invest in emerging mobility services. Before joining Ford Smart Mobility, he was a member of the Ford Motor Company Board of Directors from 2013-2016.
Hackett was vice chairman of Steelcase, the global leader in the office furniture industry, from 2014 to 2015. He retired as CEO of Steelcase in February 2014, after having spent 20 years leading the Grand Rapids-based office furniture company.
As a consumer-focused visionary in the office furniture industry, Hackett is credited with guiding Steelcase to becoming a global leader. During his 30 years there, he helped transform the office furniture company from traditional manufacturer to industry innovator. Having spent his career focused on the evolving needs of consumers, Hackett is recognized for predicting that the office landscape would shift away from cubicles to an open space environment, giving employees the flexibility to work where they want.
He was interim director of athletics at the University of Michigan from October 31, 2014 to March 11, 2016 where he led the search for a permanent athletic director appointed in January 2016. He played center on the University of Michigan football team prior to graduating from the university with a bachelor’s degree in 1977.
Mitchell E. Daniels, Jr. is the 12th president of Purdue University and the former governor of Indiana. He was elected Indiana’s 49th governor in 2004 in his first bid for any elected office, and then re-elected in 2008 with more votes than any governor in the state\u27s history. During his tenure, Indiana went from bankruptcy to a AAA credit rating, led the nation in infrastructure building, and passed sweeping ethics and healthcare reforms. After a series of transformations, which included the biggest tax cut in state history, the nation’s most sweeping deregulation of the telecommunications industry and a host of other reforms aimed at strengthening the state’s economy, Indiana’s business climate is now rated among the nation’s best.
At Purdue, Daniels has prioritized student affordability and reinvestment in the university’s strengths. Breaking with a 36-year trend, Purdue has held tuition unchanged from 2012 through at least the 2019-20 academic year. Simultaneously, room rates have remained steady, meal plan rates have fallen 10 percent, and student borrowing has dropped 31 percent while investments in student success and STEM research have undergone unprecedented growth. It is less expensive to attend Purdue today than it was in 2012, even without adjusting for inflation.
In recognition of his leadership as both a governor and a university president, Daniels was named among the Top 50 World Leaders by Fortune Magazine in March 2015.
Prior to becoming governor, Daniels served as chief of staff to Senator Richard Lugar, senior advisor to President Ronald Reagan, and Director of the Office of Management and Budget under President George W. Bush. He also was the CEO of the Hudson Institute, a major contract research organization. During an 11-year career at Eli Lilly and Company, he held a number of top executive posts including president of Eli Lilly’s North American pharmaceutical operations.
Daniels earned a bachelor\u27s degree from Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs and a law degree from Georgetown. He is the author of three books and a contributing columnist in the Washington Post, and his writings are regularly featured in other publications
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