6,227 research outputs found

    Junior Recital, Kenneth Travis, saxophone

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    Junior RecitalKenneth Travis, tenor saxophoneRussell Wilson, piano accompanistFriday, April 15, 7:00 p.m.Recital HallJames W. Black Music Center1015 Grove Avenue | Richmond, Virginia The presentation of this junior recital will fulfill in part the requirements for the Bachelor of Music degree in Music Education. Kenneth Travis studies tenor saxophone with Dr. Matt Evans

    Interview with Kenneth Sprunt

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    Kenneth Sprunt was born in Wilmington in 1920, the third son of James Lawrence Sprunt. The Sprunts have a long history in and around Wilimington. His grandfather was a cotton merchant in the area and his great-great Uncle is the man for whom James Sprunt Community College is named for as well as the author of Chronicles of the Lower Cape Fear. Mr. Kenneth Sprunt relates his family history both before his birth and after. He spent three years in the Coast Guard during WWII primarily working on anti-submarine warfare in small boats

    Memorandum from Kenneth Iyeko

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    Memorandum from Kenneth Iyeko regarding establishment and support of the Japanese American Citizens' League at incarceration camps operated by War Relocation Authority.Personal correspondence, organizational records, government documents, publications, and other papers created or collected by Joseph R. Goodman documenting the forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, as well as organized resistance to incarceration. Included in the collection are records of the Japanese Young Men's Christian Association and the Japanese American Citizens' League in San Francisco, including papers of the Japanese YMCA's executive secretary Lincoln Kanai; Sakai family papers; Goodman's correspondence to and from Japanese American incarcerees, organizations opposing forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans, the War Relocation Authority, and others; publications, photographs, and ephemera from the Topaz Relocation Center, where Goodman taught high school; War Relocation Authority records and publications; and newspaper clippings, pamphlets, and reports about forced removal and incarceration created by various government, religious, and civic organizations, in California and nationwide

    Chronicles of Oklahoma

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    Article describes the beauty and history of Benson Park near Shawnee, Oklahoma. Kenneth R. Bain, Rob Phillips, and Paul D. Travis explore its attraction as a recreational area and the many leisure activities that were possible there until its eventual decline in the face of industry

    Jackson R. Bryer éd. — « The Theatre We Worked For». The Letters of Eugene O'Neill to Kenneth Macgowan, with introductory essays by Travis Bogard

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    Puech Micheline. Jackson R. Bryer éd. — « The Theatre We Worked For». The Letters of Eugene O'Neill to Kenneth Macgowan, with introductory essays by Travis Bogard. In: Revue Française d'Etudes Américaines, N°17, mai 1983. Écrivains américains 1870-1914. pp. 357-358

    A Review by Kenneth Atkinson of Alexandria and Qumran: Back to the Beginning, by Kenneth Silver

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    Kenneth Silver (a.k.a. Kenneth A. K. Lönnqvist), is a historian and professional archaeologist, who has lived and worked for decades in the Near East. With extensive publications on Hellenistic and Roman archaeology, history, and numismatics, Silver is the director of a survey and mapping project in Northern Mesopotamia studying the border zone between the late Roman/ Byzantine Empires and Persia. Author of numerous publications on Qumran and related topics, Silver’s lengthy monograph proposes that the documents and type of library found at Qumran were based on models derived from Egypt. The main thesis of the volume is that Pythagorean philosophy is the core and basis for the beliefs reflected in the non-Biblical texts found at Qumran

    Patterning of chorion proteins in the drosophila eggshell

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    M.S.Includes bibliographical referencesby Kenneth Ki

    Peter Travis working on sculpture, 1971 [picture] /

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    Title devised by cataloguer based on information from inscription on verso.; Part of the collection: Australian cultural personalities, landscape and town scenes, 1950-1975.; Inscriptions: "Peter Travis 1971"--In pencil on verso; Photographer's copyright stamp on verso; Signed by photographer lower right.; Also available in electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4925591; Purchased from the photographer, 2010.; Published in: Australian pottery / by Kenneth Hood and Wanda Garnsey, photographs by Douglas Thompson. South Melbourne, Vic. : Macmillan, 1972, p. 160

    How can Communities be Policed in an Age of Austerity: Vigilantism?

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    Although It has been argued that the political responses to crime have effectively become indistinguishable over the last twenty years or so as New Labour had sought to occupy the territory normally associated with the Conservative party{Downes and Morgan 2007], the new coalition government has, in its strategy to reduce the national deficit, made some notable changes in the direction of criminal justice policy. One significant example, following the Comprehensive Spending Review on the 20th October 2010, is the intention to reduce the prison population by 3000 and promote a ‘rehabilitation revolution’[ Travis and Hirsch 2010]. However judging by the new Home Secretary’s first interview in spring this year, it maybe possible to identify an equally significant but relatively less well noted development: the promotion of a law which could be a vigilante’s charter
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