13,042 research outputs found
Neil Swift collection of Australian and New Zealand booksellers tickets, plus various bookplates.
Album of book-labels created using a Sands & McDougall "Returns" ledger, purchased from John Dean 28th June 2004. Neil Swift was a bookseller in Footscray. These are predominately bookseller's labels.A bookplate is a small print or decorative label added to a book, usually the inside front cover, to indicate the book's owner
Small step led to reluctant hero : little-known insights about UC’s most famous, most humble professor, Neil Armstrong
See online issue at magazine.uc.edu/issues/0413.html.See article pages 18-21, "Small step led to reluctant hero : little-known insights about UC’s most famous, most humble professor, Neil Armstrong," by Deborah Rieselman
Facing the Future: the Changing Shape of Academic Skills Support at Bournemouth University
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
Professor Daniel J. Solove discusses the book \u27Why Privacy Matters\u27 and the future of privacy with the author, Professor Neil Richards
I know you'll be wanting me some day [music] /
For voice and piano. Includes parts for violin and cornet B-flat.; Caption title.; "Introduced in Fuller's gorgeous pantomime 'Babes in the wood' musical director Reginald De Talworth"--Cover.; "Sung by Nellie Kolle"--At top of cover.; Cover bears port. of Nellie Kolle at middle of cover and small ports. of Ben. J. Fuller, John Fuller and F. Neil, Producer.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-vn5806890
Interview with AntipodeFoundation.org: “Much More Than You Think: The Spatialities of Italian Autonomy” – Interview with Neil Gray, author of “Beyond the Right to the City: Territorial Autogestion and the Take over the City Movement in 1970s Italy”
No abstract available
Jere Nash Interview with Neil McMillen (Part 2 of 2)
Interview conducted by author Jere Nash with University of Southern Mississippi history professor Neil R. McMillen in the process of writing Mississippi Politics: The Struggle for Power, 1976-2006. Topics discussed include Aaron Henry; race relations after the civil rights movement; and William Winter
515-517 West 23rd Street
HL23, right, Highline 519, left, detail of tops of the buildings; Neil Denari's firm is known as NMDA (Neil M. Denari Architects), based in Los Angeles. Marc I. Rosenbaum was a collaborating architect. HL23 is a 14 floor luxury condominium tower that responds to a challenging site directly adjacent to the High Line at 23rd street in New York's West Chelsea Arts district. Partially impacted by a spur from the elevated (former) tracks that make up the High Line superstructure, the site is 40' x 99' at the ground floor. Denari calls this "small footprint vertical urbanism." There are glass curtain walls facing north and south and a 3D stainless steel panel facade on the east facing the High Line (which has been developed as a 1 mile linear pedestrian park). Source: Wikipedia; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page (accessed 7/8/2012
Neil Hollander Literacy
The writer, film director and producer, journalist and
sailor, Neil Hollander has a career that continues over a span of more than 60
years. Born on July 9, 1939, in Brooklyn, New York City, Hollander had a chance
to live his life his in many different countries such as Costa Rica, Thailand,
and France.
Led by his adventurous spirit and passion for sailing the
ocean, in 1984 he went on a three-year trip across the Pacific, sailing the
open sea in a small sailboat with no engine. During this voyage he visited many
distant sea ports, witnessing the process of vanishing of the sailors who were
still making a leaving from the sea, relying solely on the old traditions. In
order to capture the spirit of that long gone time, and share some of the
stories, this trip was documented in a relatively short book The Last Sailors:
The Final Days of Working Sail, and later he filmed a 2.5 hour video story
documentary, narrated by Orson Welles.
On his blog at Metaliteracy, Neil Hollander regularly
posts his memories from those times, completed with stories of today’s process
of evolving regarding the documentary and feature films.</p
Memo Seven
A project for Very Small Kitchen. New covers are designed for all the books cited by Italo Calvino in Six Memos for the Next Millennium, London: Penguin 2009
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