1,033 research outputs found

    Student Recital (1971)

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    Student Recital presented by BJC Music Department. Students: Jan Snortland, Roxanne Wanser, Deb Blanc, Leslee Watson, Clyde Bauman, Cathy Tello, Steve Hillesland, Randy Nicolai. Location: Chorus Room. Time 2:15 pm

    OTOH

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    Contains the essay “Unsettled Feelings". Funded by SSHRC Institutional Explore Grant. Design by Chloe Brumwell & Randy Lee Cutler.Unsettle

    Coat Cooke & Joe Poole | Coat Cooke & Rainer Wiens: Reviews

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    Coat Cooke album reviews by Randy Raine-Reusch. Coat Cooke (sax); Joe Poole (drums); Rainer Wiens (guitar)

    Interview with Randy Stoecker, author, Liberating Service Learning and the Rest of Higher Education Civic Engagement

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    It’s common for colleges in the U.S. to have service learning programs of one kind or another. These are sometimes criticized as being liberal or even radical endeavors — especially if “social justice” language is employed. But what if these are, in fact, conservative programs at their heart, ones that, in the context of the corporatized university, are furthering the neoliberal project and inhibiting the development of better social welfare policies? Listen to our interview with Randy Stoecker as he discusses his book, Liberating Service Learning and the Rest of Higher Education Civic Engagement (Temple University Press, 2016), for a first-hand critique as well as some thoughts on how we might all better serve our students — and the communities they would engage with

    Reflections 1979

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    The 1979 issue of Reflections is edited by Randy Waters with Michele Barale and Joyce Compton Brown serving as faculty advisers. Cover art and photography is by Les Brown. Author biographies are included on a contributors page at the conclusion of the issue. Award winners of the student literary context include: Randy Waters, Debbie Drayer, and Susan Sheilds.https://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/reflections/1005/thumbnail.jp

    Species suitability guide for Colorado

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    Compiled by Randy Moench, data from the Colorado State Forest Nursery, Fort Collins, Colorado

    Reconsidering Randy Shilts: examining the reportage of America's AIDS chronicler

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    2013 Fall.Includes bibliographical references.The role of openly-gay reporter and author Randy Shilts (1951-1994) is examined related to his use of journalistic practices and places him on a continuum of traditional reporting roles as considered in the context of twentieth century philosophers Walter Lippmann and John Dewey. Reporter functions demonstrated by Shilts are examined, including those dictated by expectations of either strong journalistic influence over society and media consumers, or those more aligned with democratic practices where education and participation emphasize strong roles for society and media consumers. Using a biographical approach including 17 primary source interviews of former colleagues, critics, sources and family/friends, the examination of Shilts work as both a reporter and noted author is presented as being heavily influenced by his forthcoming attitudes about disclosure of his sexual orientation from the start of his career and his desire to explain or unpack aspects of gay culture, and ultimately the AIDS crisis, to heterosexual audiences. Careful examination of the posthumous critique of Shilts' work - including his construction of Patient Zero - is undertaken. The study concludes that Shilts fully engaged a Lippmann-esque approach embodied in an authoritarian role for journalism that sought to change the world in which it was offered, and did so perhaps most influentially during the earliest days of the HIV/AIDS pandemic in America

    Review of \u3ci\u3e A Social Geography of Canada: Essays in Honour of J. Wreford Watson\u3c/i\u3e by Guy M. Robinson

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    As a graduate student at McMaster and Queen\u27s, I was made very aware of the contribution of J. Wreford Watson to Canadian geography. This is understandable since he was largely responsible for the establishment of geography departments at both these institutions as well as at Carleton. This collection of essays by former graduate students, friends, and colleagues on both sides of the Atlantic cover many of the themes of inquiry that interested Watson. The contents focus upon the changing character of Canadian landscapes and society, including dimensions of its historical development, its present spatial forms and current social issues. The essays are arranged into four different sections, each with an introduction by the editor who also provides an opening chapter discussing Watson\u27s history in Canada and his fascination with the social geography of this country, and a concluding appendix outlining his geographical writing with a full bibliography. Part One, a collection of articles on the cultural and ethnic mix of Canada, focuses on the historical competition between the two founding peoples over control of and access to political power, emphasizing that the existence of this competition is at the heart of Canadian society. At the same time, Pierre Camu, Jacques Bernier, and 1. David Wood recognize that alongside the fundamental dualism of the country, regionalism, pluralism, and the relationship with the United States play an important part in economic, political, and social organization. The emphasis on the historical-geographic contexts of dualism, plurality, and regionalism are designed to set the stage for subsequent sections which focus on urban, rural, and planning dimensions of Canadian society

    Kirby Family Reunion

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    Kirby Family Reunion at River Road Park in 2001. The two young men on the slide are Kenny Kirby (1976- ) and his brother Randy. The young woman in the center in the rose print dress is Cindy, Randy Kirby's wife. The older gentleman holding onto the railing is Joe Watson, Kenny and Randy Kirby's great-uncle
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