4,139 research outputs found

    Beyond Stephens Issue 2 Spring/Summer 2012

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    FROM DIANNE Stephens President Dianne Lynch guides you through your magazine. A CLOSER LOOK A numerical view of everything Stephens! A STEPHENS SNAPSHOT Golf makes a return to Stephens College after more than 24 years. DIGGING DEEP WITH PAULA ZAHN News veteran Paula Zahn ‘78 is On The Case in the Investigation Discovery Channel series. THE SCIENCE OF PERFUME Biology students create scents inspired by the Ten Ideals. EYE FOR TALENT Judy Doyen Taylor ’73, senior vice president of casting and talent relations for The Disney Channel, assists in launching the careers of young Hollywood stars. RALLY FOR READING Stephens alumnae support the New York-based Books for Kids foundation. A & E Stephens film professor Chad Freidrichs garners top honors for his film The Pruitt-Igoe Myth. Casey Baltes ’01 “maps out” the footprint of New York’s Tribeca Film Festival. POINT OF VIEW Fulbright Scholar Dr. Tara Giblin shares her experiences from her three months in Nepal. STYLE Beijing Bound: Monica McMurry ’82, dean of Stephens’ School of Fashion and Design, presents her original designs on an international stage. TRAVEL Get away to Okoboji Summer Theatre in Spirit Lake, Iowa. Maggie Sewall Barbour ’60 gives you a peek into the wonders of Alaska. ENTERTAINING Primed perfection from World Champion B-B-Qers. NEWS & NOTES Milestones * National Volunteer Award for Neel Stallings ’67 * Faculty Publication

    Beyond Stephens Issue 1 Fall/Winter 2011

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    FROM DIANNE Stephens President Dianne Lynch guides you through your new magazine. A closer look A numerical view of Stephens today A STEPHENS SNAPSHOT From finger bowls and five-course meals to hard hats and s’mores, it’s just another day in the life of Stephens students. Beyond Stephens Six Stephens Women, new graduates and seniors alike, share their internship experiences in the worlds of high fashion, theatre, marketing and equestrian. True to the Red, White & Blue Julie Dennison Reiser ’92 is co-founder and president of MADE IN USA CERTIFIED®. historic gem Brianna Taylor Firestone ’01 is helping to raise money to restore historic Elitch Theatre, the nation’s first and oldest summer stock theatre. A&E Go behind the scenes with Carey Len Smith ’89, post-production supervisor on the hit movie The Social Network, winner of the 2011 Golden Globe for Best Picture. Travel Catch a glimpse of Spain with Joyce McClure ’69 and Sara Jane Johnson ’56. Entertaining Chocolate City: The Candy Factory shares secrets for creating holiday chocolates. Health American Bone Health spokesperson Anne Appleby ’81 helps you bone up on bone health. Style Open a window into the world of in-demand interior designer Amy Lau ’91. News & Notes Milestones * Magic Moments Fund * Aviation Memories * Remembrance

    Harbinger, 2023

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    Harbinger is a student-edited and designed magazine published each spring since 1980.FICTION: Stockholm in Indigo by Baylee Johnson; The Bubble by Em Louraine; Work of a Body by Zoe London; Candy by Darden Taylor; Dairy Dream Burgers Exposed by Abbey Heller; A GIrl Walks Home Alone at Night by Ruby Hewerdine; Lifeless Matter by Jessamin McSwain; Patients by Julie Wiley; Coming Home by Jack Hayes; Genesis by Jessamin McSwain; Dear Reader by Abbey Heller; Space Oddity by Em Louraine. NONFICTION: No Curtain Call by Zoe London. POETRY: Ferguson Protests, 2014 and Mercy, by Jordan Davis; Uneducated Tryptych on the Mundanity of God by Jack Hayes; Tar by Ruby Hewerdine; Accismus, Riposte, and Howl by Zoe London. INTERVIEW: A Conversation with Scott Garson, Editor of "Wigleaf"; A Conversation with Morgan Kail-Ackerman, Designer of "They Call Us"; A Conversation with Kate McIntyre, Editor of "hex". ART FEATURE: Luminaries of Female Literature by Baylee Johnson

    Karen Stephens Taylor, organ

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    Johann Sebastian BachDieterich BuxtehudeJan Pieterszoon SweelinckGiovanni de MacqueGirolamo FrescobaldiJ.P. LempkeNed RoremThierry PallescoJosef Rheinberge

    Dorthy Stephens interview, 2023 November 27

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    Oral history documenting the life of tenet advisor, nonprofit director, and therapist Dorthy Stephens, who discusses her childhood in segregated Georgia, John Fitzgerald Kennedy and Martin Luther King's assassinations, being one of the first Black students to attend the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, her work with the Chattanooga Housing Authority, Girls Incorporated, and the Fortwood Center, and Chattanooga's struggles with gentrification, poverty, and food insecurity

    Dorthy Stephens interview, 2023 November 27

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    Oral history documenting the life of tenet advisor, nonprofit director, and therapist Dorthy Stephens, who discusses her childhood in segregated Georgia, John Fitzgerald Kennedy and Martin Luther King's assassinations, being one of the first Black students to attend the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, her work with the Chattanooga Housing Authority, Girls Incorporated, and the Fortwood Center, and Chattanooga's struggles with gentrification, poverty, and food insecurity

    Panel 4: The Business of Battle: Law, National Security, and the Global Marketplace

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    Battlefields, Boardrooms, and Backyards: The New Face of National Security Law Moderator: Dr. Christopher Swift, J.D., Ph.D., Adjunct Professor of National Security Studies, Georgetown University School of Foreign Service Mr. Christopher Taylor, Chairman and CEO of Novitas Group Mr. Ron Reed, Director, National Security Law, Microsoft Corporation Mr. Jay Stephens, Sr. Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary, Office of the General Counsel, Raytheon Compan

    Vivid Spaces: The Settings of Virginia Woolf and Edith Wharton

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    This paper is an investigation of architectural settings that are evoked through description, occupation and transformation by the narrative structure of the novel. It begins by exploring the notion of vividness as an authentic presence of that which is narrated, and the presence of a pictorial representation in the reader. Invoked in the imagination these narrative spaces are discussed through fragments, settings and places for conversations.\ud \ud Two case studies are used to discuss the various ways in which spaces are made vivid by their incompleteness, and consequently exist in the imagination of the reader. The first is a novel by Virginia Woolf, the second a novel by Edith Wharton. In each text episodes and themes are used to explore the interconnectedness between aspect, room and encounter. It further discusses how in engaging vividness architectural descriptions are transposed into metaphors for character descriptions in a fluid manner. Particular examples from the case studies highlight gendered constructions of a setting, furnishing and decorating; and how rooms have spatial attachment to an occasion, and how conversely revisiting a setting in the narrative engages the temporal.\ud \ud The paper concludes by proposing another way of seeing architecture that is outside the traditional canon

    Stephens County Courthouse, Toccoa, GA

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    The former Stephens County courthouse is located in Toccoa, Georgia. It was built in 1908 in the Neoclassical Revival architectural style and was designed by H.L. Lewman. This building was in use as a courthouse until 2000. It is currently used for county offices. This is on the National Register of Historic Places (NRIS #80001232).https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/historical_architecture_main/2951/thumbnail.jp
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