177,371 research outputs found

    Roy Assaf Trio, jazz (Estados Unidos)

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    Para Roy Assaf Trio, el repertorio a interpretar en cada concierto es solo una guía, un bosquejo sobre el que empiezan a crear improvisaciones libres, que evolucionan en canciones en el momento en el que se enfrentan a su audiencia. Nunca planean completamente sus presentaciones; éstas siempre son diferentes y novedosas. Tampoco se imponen limitaciones, pueden navegar cerca o lejos de la forma y en ocasiones utilizar solo parte de una composición, lo que posibilita la transformación de cada pieza en un estilo diferente. Los tres músicos presentan su nuevo ‘estilo’ colectivamente. A pesar de llamarse ‘Roy Assaf Trio’, Roy, Raviv y Ronen lideran el grupo conjuntamente e introducen una perspectiva que nunca antes se había visto en un trío de piano. Todo esto y más se crea de manera orgánica en cada concierto en vivo. Mediante una muestra de su proceso, le explican su concepto al público e invitan a los oyentes a hacer un viaje que nunca olvidarán

    Roy Y. Nakatani: interview on January 12, 1988

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    Transcript (typescript, 73 pages) of an interview with Roy Y. Nakatani, a Japanese-American living in Utah in 1988. Mr. Nakatani (b. 1916) discusses the immigration experiences of family members, his education in the San Francisco, California, school system, and his pre-World War II radio repair business in California. He also relates the experience of his family at the Camp Amache, Colorado, relocation center and his postwar business in Ogden, Uta

    Autonomistas, radicales y mitristas : el orden oligárquico en la provincia de Buenos Aires, 1880-1912

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    Fil: Hora, Roy. Universidad Nacional de Quilmes; ArgentinaFil: Hora, Roy. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentin

    Camilo José Cela y Roy Campbell

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    Camilo José Cela y Roy CampbellCopia digital. Madrid : Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte. Subdirección General de Coordinación Bibliotecaria, 201

    Nonparametric Identification of Latent Competing Risks and Roy Duration Models

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    This paper considers nonparametric identification of ``latent'' competing risks and Roy duration models in which one does not know which process has been observed. It is shown that these models are identifiable without the usual conditional independence and exclusion restrictions

    Sider, Roy Y.

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    #028: Roy Y. Sider, 1977 Christian Holiness Association Convention speaker. #053: Roy Y. Sider (lived at Skerkston, Ontario)https://place.asburyseminary.edu/holinessphotos/1603/thumbnail.jp

    Sider, Roy Y.

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    #028: Roy Y. Sider, 1977 Christian Holiness Association Convention speaker. #053: Roy Y. Sider (lived at Skerkston, Ontario)https://place.asburyseminary.edu/holinessphotos/1601/thumbnail.jp

    Sider, Roy Y.

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    #028: Roy Y. Sider, 1977 Christian Holiness Association Convention speaker. #053: Roy Y. Sider (lived at Skerkston, Ontario)https://place.asburyseminary.edu/holinessphotos/1604/thumbnail.jp

    Sider, Roy Y.

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    #028: Roy Y. Sider, 1977 Christian Holiness Association Convention speaker. #053: Roy Y. Sider (lived at Skerkston, Ontario)https://place.asburyseminary.edu/holinessphotos/1602/thumbnail.jp

    Spain in the European Union: the first twenty-five years (1986-2011)

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    “Spain is the problem. Europe is the solution”. In this fashion Ortega y Gasset once dramatized the need to “Europeanize” Spain. The results over the first twenty five years of EU membership have been truly impressive. When Spain became a member of the EC, some of the best and brightest of Spain’s governmental cadres and universities joined the expanded European institutions, taking on positions of responsibility. The most prominent chaired the European Court of Justice (Gil-Carlos Rodríguez Iglesias) and the Parliament (Enrique Barón, José-María Gil Robles, and Josep Borrell), holding key positions in the Commission, and filling the newly created position of High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy (Javier Solana). Spain, in sum, “was not different”, contrary to what old-fashion tourist publicity for the country used to say. It was a European country like any other that was returning to its natural home after a long exile. Spain, in turn, received considerable benefits from EU membership through funds for regional investment policies, agriculture and rural development, and the modernisation of national infrastructure. From an index of 60 percent of the European average in 1986, today Spain’s income per head is in the range of 105 percent, with some regions surpassing 125 percent. From being a country that was a net receiver from the EU budget, Spain today is a net contributor. Reflecting this development, the present volume examines different dimensions of the deepening relationship between Spain and the rest of Europe through membership of the EU (its history, and its impact on policy development on economic growth and on relations with third countries)
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