7,635 research outputs found
Joy Smith Oral History
Oral histories created by University of Kansas students, staff and faculty as part of the Religion in Kansas Project are archived at http://hdl.handle.net/1808/12524 in KU ScholarWorks, the digital repository of the University of Kansas.Oral history interview with Joy Smith conducted by Aspen Grender in Lawrence, Kansas, on April 21, 2016. This interview features Joy Smith, a Sunday school teacher, “bus captain”, and church pianist at the Heritage Baptist Church in Lawrence who has been on staff there since 1991. Smith discusses her experiences pertaining to growing up in a Christian family, teaching Bible studies at the Ladies Topeka Correctional Facility, her current involvement teaching at a retirement home, her mission trips abroad, and her plans to travel soon to Africa to spread the gospel.Friends of the Department of Religious Studie
Protean
Choreography: Joy Davis
Music: Bach, John Cage for Joan LaBarbara, Molly Drake, OJ Spooky, Nils Frahm, Jacaszek, Pamelia Kurstin, Mike Vargas, Jana Winderen. Edited by: Joy Davis
Lighting Design: Michael Wonson
Set Design: Alan Schneider and Dan Rist with Joy Davis
Costume Design: Emily Justice Dunn and Nancy Horn with Joy Davis
Performing Collaborators: Katie Aylward Brady, Shaina Cantina, Jessie Owens, Molly McBride, Ali Naranjo, Addison Reine, Kate Seethaler, Sabina Smith-Moreland, Danielle Tekut
Dramaturg: Robyn Coady
Note: This is a video of choreography and performance. It is part of the MFA Thesis Dance Concert The wolf pack
Joy with children
Joy Davis with her children, from left to right, Michael, Stephen and baby Annellen, being held by Joy, at Joy's sister Jean Shewring's wedding, Uniting Church, Smith Street, Darwin, NT, 7 July 1962.Davis, Joy
Joy committee and qualitative aspects of College Librarianship
A study of the report of the Expert Committee on College Libraries (1993) appointed by Government of Kerala under the chairmanship of V.P. Joy, IAS. Opines that it is the first of such attempts by any State Government in India Joy Committee considers that the successful performance of the college librarian demand a clear understanding of academic objectives, a significant level of academic expertise and working partnership with heads of teaching departments. Joy recommended that librarian should be brought under the definition of teacher and that the academic qualification of the library staff should be at par with those of the teachers in colleges. The recommendations include granting academic status and service conditions on par with teachers to the college librarians, amendments to purchase rules to enable acquisition of electronic documents, staff formulae based on user strength and levels, implementing mechanisms for participatory development of the system, and methods and procedures for qualitative development of the college library collections
Faculty recital by Joy Pottle-Lawrence Smith, piano-duo, April 7, 1964
This is the concert program of the Faculty Recital by Joy Pottle-Lawrence Smith, piano-duo on Tuesday, April 7, 1964 at 8:30 p.m., at the Concert Hall, 855 Commonwealth Avenue. Works performed were Hommage à Händel, Op. 92 by Ignaz Moscheles, Suite No. 2 by Sergei Rachmaninoff, Etudes in the form of a canon, Op. 56 by Robert Schumann/Debussy, and Fêtes from "Nocturnes" by Claude Debussy/Ravel. Digitization for Boston University Concert Programs was supported by the Boston University Humanities Library Endowed Fund
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Susan Smith Case Bibliography
African and African Diaspora Studie
Ed Smith Oral History
Oral histories created by University of Kansas students, staff and faculty as part of the Religion in Kansas Project are archived at http://hdl.handle.net/1808/12524 in KU ScholarWorks, the digital repository of the University of Kansas.Oral history with Ed Smith conducted by Nicki Joy Karstens in Lawrence, Kansas in November 2018. This interview is conducted with Ed Smith, a member of the Osage Nation. Smith discusses the impacts of colonialism, including removal and the boarding school system, on Osage spiritual practices as well as current language and cultural revitalization movements in the Osage Nation. This interview was conducted for the Religion in Kansas Project as part of semester-long internship with the University of Kansas Department of Religious Studies
Joy Smith Displays Grand Champion Hog
Joy Smith displays her grand champion hog at the Junior Livestock show. Virtus McConkie can be seen standing behind her
Ikogawa, Joy; 1998-10-05
Biography: Joy Kogawa is an award-winning author who became a member of the Order of Canada in 1986 and of the Order of British Columbia in 2006. She is recognized for her novels, poetry, essays, children\u27s stories, and social activism; she is best known for Obasan (1981), a semi-autobiographical novel about the internment of Japanese Canadians during World War II.
-Encyclopedia.com, Joy Ikogawa, 2020-09-1
Joy Smith With Grand Champion Hog
Joy Smith displays her grand champion hog she raised. It was purchased by Utah Livestock Commission. Virtus McConkie is also pictured
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