University of Cincinnati News Record. Friday, October 24, 1969. Vol. LVII
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University of Cincinnati News Record. Friday, February 2, 1968. Vol. LV
\LI T , Vjb, i ;-/ Cineinneti, Ohio; Fr~day, February 2, 1968' No. 26 Tickets. For Mead Lectilres ..". liM,ore.ea. H' d''Sj·.L~SSI., .' F"eet...-< II Cru~cialGame.~ Gr~atestNeed'Of Young; Comments -MargQret Mead Are Ava'ilab'le by Alter Peerless '\... that the U.S. was fighting an evil Even before the Bearcatsget enemy, but now-people can see "In the, past fifty years there a chance to recover from the'" for themselves that in' war both has been too much use of feet, sides kill and mutilate other peo- _ shell shock of two conference and not enough use' of heads," ple. road loses in a row, tihey baY~,to -said Dr: Margaret Mead, inter- Another reason this generation play 'the most 'Crucial' game' of nationally kn'own· anthropologist, is unhappy is because the num- in her lecture at the YMCA.'last bers involved are smaller. In the yea!,~at Louisville. Tuesday., . Wednesday n i gh t's Bradley World War II, the Americans had Dr. Mead .spoke on "College no sympathy for war victims. game goes down as' a wasted ef- Students' Disillusionment: Viet- They could not comprehend the fort. Looking strong at the begin- nam War and National Service." fact that six' .million Jews were· ningthe 'Cats faded in the final She said that this is not the first ' killed, or that an entire city was period when 'young people have wiped out. The horror of World minutes, missing several shots. , demonstrated for 'good causes. Jim Ard played welleonsidering War II was so great, America There have' been peace marches, could not react to it. -
University of Cincinnati News Record. Thursday, January 26, 1967. Vol
State· Affiliation Proposed; ,UC: To Benefit Financially by Peter Franklin "The UC students.would be bene- fitted because of Iower fees coup- A plan proposin-g state affilia- led' with broader graduate and tion for UC has 'received the sup- professional offerings. The bene- port of the Ohio Board of Regents. fit to' the University would come The University would continue I from the acquisition ,of a broader under local control and retain its fina~cial base without the loss of' municipal status, but the accept- local ties and support." ance of the- proposal would result Dr.: Langsam explained that in greatly expanded financial aid ' "the City of Cincinnati would reap or the University. benefit from the proposal because l:owerTu.itlonFees of \ the lower instructional fees The most immediate benefit. to made available to its citizens as . ,,', . i '. .~'i 1...b .•...;;0. i " 'U\e uc student would be a drop in well as the millions of new -dollars that would flow into the. city ec- ,ordie Beats AII-Ameri~ci1" es:JtO?M~~~;sa~:6~iOcr.i~~i~~n.a:~:onomy., The city also would bene- r- G ,-, " . \i ~~- ~~ commenting on the proposed - fit from having a University that _ --"" " " ....• . •..•• plan Dr. Walter G. Langsam, UC was - better able to respond to f '" .. - '._, .' . ': '.~ . President, explained that the plan community. needs for 'expanded Later Drops No ..2..Lou. vOre ,. for state affiliation would-benefit and newprograms." , the students, the university, the "The state itself also would by Mike Kelly city and -the state. benefit because it means imple- University of Louisville's Cardi- menting the Regents' master plan nals could, take a tip from the in Southwestern Ohio at consider- Pinkerton police agency: the ,way F~iday/s Concert ably less expense than the· es- to cover Gordie Smith is to put tablishment of a new state uni- three men on him. -
Lazaroff, Remer in Runoff Gilbert, Bayne Frosh
vol. 13 no.ll stony brook, yv. i :friday, o«*i. 24-, 969 pri , 10 I credit Robert Cbew and Robert WeHo-fie Lazaroff, Remer In Runoff Gilbert,LartyRee rl fc an Bayne Frosh Victors Larry Remer will face Danny Judiciary were also elected on Lazaroff in a run-off iginally intended. election Wednesday, as were 18 senators. next Friday for the position Five residential colleges will rentions are available for junior of Polity treasure. None of the lace run-offs Friday for seats representative and commuter candidates was able to receive on the -Senate. representative to the the necessary majority of votes Top vote-getters in the Union; resident representative in the Polity election held Wed- Judiciary race' were on the Peter Union Governing nesday. A third candidate, Harry Adams, with Board will also 1533, and George Danny Larry Renor Brett polled about 25%of the vots Locker with 1214. be voted for Nov. 3, but 4 and was eliminated. Approxi- petitions are closed. mately 2100 students, one-third The Petitions for of those eligible, voted. Governing Board elections were postponed offices may be obtained in the In other results, Holly Bayne after a "comedy of errors" Polity office and are returnable beat Eileen Lieberman in the day. Mr. Giolito, misinterpreting to a member of the election race for freshman class presi- election board rules, board by October 30. dent. The vote was 266-218. Irene was disqualified for hav- Gilbert was elected freshman ing too many flyers up. Miss representative over Arthur Behrman was disqualified the morning Charo by a 275-205 vote. -
Omer Avital Ed Palermo René Urtreger Michael Brecker
JANUARY 2015—ISSUE 153 YOUR FREE GUIDE TO THE NYC JAZZ SCENE NYCJAZZRECORD.COM special feature BEST 2014OF ICP ORCHESTRA not clowning around OMER ED RENÉ MICHAEL AVITAL PALERMO URTREGER BRECKER Managing Editor: Laurence Donohue-Greene Editorial Director & Production Manager: Andrey Henkin To Contact: The New York City Jazz Record 116 Pinehurst Avenue, Ste. J41 JANUARY 2015—ISSUE 153 New York, NY 10033 United States New York@Night 4 Laurence Donohue-Greene: [email protected] Interview : Omer Avital by brian charette Andrey Henkin: 6 [email protected] General Inquiries: Artist Feature : Ed Palermo 7 by ken dryden [email protected] Advertising: On The Cover : ICP Orchestra 8 by clifford allen [email protected] Editorial: [email protected] Encore : René Urtreger 10 by ken waxman Calendar: [email protected] Lest We Forget : Michael Brecker 10 by alex henderson VOXNews: [email protected] Letters to the Editor: LAbel Spotlight : Smoke Sessions 11 by marcia hillman [email protected] VOXNEWS 11 by katie bull US Subscription rates: 12 issues, $35 International Subscription rates: 12 issues, $45 For subscription assistance, send check, cash or money order to the address above In Memoriam 12 by andrey henkin or email [email protected] Festival Report Staff Writers 13 David R. Adler, Clifford Allen, Fred Bouchard, Stuart Broomer, CD Reviews 14 Katie Bull, Tom Conrad, Ken Dryden, Donald Elfman, Brad Farberman, Sean Fitzell, Special Feature: Best Of 2014 28 Kurt Gottschalk, Tom Greenland, Alex Henderson, Marcia Hillman, Miscellany Terrell Holmes, Robert Iannapollo, 43 Suzanne Lorge, Marc Medwin, Robert Milburn, Russ Musto, Event Calendar 44 Sean J. O’Connell, Joel Roberts, John Sharpe, Elliott Simon, Andrew Vélez, Ken Waxman As a society, we are obsessed with the notion of “Best”. -
Memphis State: Quite a Commitment
Memphis State: quite a commitment By Zack McMillin Sunday, March 30, 2003 Larry Finch could flat shoot the cover off a basketball. Dirty Red, as they called him over in Orange Mound, had hands strong as a bricklayer's, a barrel chest and arms built sturdy in the old- fashioned way, by play and by work and by nature. Nobody ever accused him of explosive leaping ability, but Finch could hover longer than one might imagine. Because of his strength and his gift for judging trajectory, every time Larry Finch took a shot, it had a chance. "He put more spin on the ball," says Larry Kenon, one of his famous teammates, "than anybody I ever played with." So when Ronnie Robinson tipped the ball to him on the late fall evening of Dec. 1, 1970, Finch took four dribbles, eyed the basket 25 feet away, rose up, pointed his right elbow at the rim and loaded the basketball with backspin. History does not tell us if the 7,123 at the Mid-South Coliseum that night made like a Melrose crowd and let out a collective "whoosh!" when Finch shot. Newspaper accounts do tell us what happened next. The ball ripped into the cotton netting, and the Coliseum exploded with joy that had been bottled up too long. Six seconds into his first varsity game for the Memphis State Tigers basketball team, Larry Finch had the first two points of a career that would produce 1,869 points in only three seasons. He finished with 24 that night against California-Davis, and, in the first game for charismatic new coach Gene Bartow, the Tigers scored more points -- 99 -- than they had in any game of the previous five seasons. -
City, University of London Institutional Repository
City Research Online City, University of London Institutional Repository Citation: Berköz, Levent Donat (2012). A gendered musicological study of the work of four leading female singer-songwriters: Laura Nyro, Joni Mitchell, Kate Bush, and Tori Amos. (Unpublished Doctoral thesis, City University London) This is the unspecified version of the paper. This version of the publication may differ from the final published version. Permanent repository link: https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/1235/ Link to published version: Copyright: City Research Online aims to make research outputs of City, University of London available to a wider audience. Copyright and Moral Rights remain with the author(s) and/or copyright holders. URLs from City Research Online may be freely distributed and linked to. Reuse: Copies of full items can be used for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-profit purposes without prior permission or charge. Provided that the authors, title and full bibliographic details are credited, a hyperlink and/or URL is given for the original metadata page and the content is not changed in any way. City Research Online: http://openaccess.city.ac.uk/ [email protected] A Gendered Musicological Study of the Work of Four Leading Female Singer-Songwriters: Laura Nyro, Joni Mitchell, Kate Bush, and Tori Amos Levent Donat Berköz Thesis Submitted in Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy City University London Centre for Music Studies June 2012 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS ………………………………………………………… 2 LIST OF FIGURES ……………………………………………………………… 5 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ……………………………………………………… 7 DECLARATION ………………………………………………………………… 9 ABSTRACT ……………………………………………………………………… 10 INTRODUCTION ……………………………………………………………….. 11 Aim of the thesis…………………………………………………………………. -
At WICHITA STATE(6-3, 2-1 American)
SHOCKER BASKETBALL W I CH I TA STATE Bryan Holmgren, Director of Communications | e: [email protected] | w: 316-978-5535 | c: 316-841-6206 Game No. 10 CINCINNATI WICHITA STATE CINCINNATI (3-6, 1-3 American) at WICHITA STATE (6-3, 2-1 American) D-I Rank* Total Team Stats Total D-I Rank* Sunday, Jan. 10, 2020 • 3:30 p.m. CT • Wichita, Kan. • Charles Koch Arena (15% capacity; 1,575) 242 69.0 Offense 73.6 152 TV: ESPN2 (Streaming via the ESPN App); Kevin Brown (pbp) & Jon Crispen (analyst) have the call. 194 71.2 Defense 67.8 120 Radio: KEYN (103.7 FM in Wichita; streaming at goshockers.com/Listen); Shane Dennis, Mike Kennedy & Dave Dahl describe the action. T-241 -2.2 Scoring Margin 5.8 135 Tickets: Unavailable // Live Stats: shockerstats.com // Social: Follow @GoShockersMBB & @GoShockers on facebook, twitter, instagram. T-129 2.6 Rebound Margin -0.3 216 85 15.2 Assists 12.6 T-227 Record 3-6 6-3 Record T-124 3.6 Blocks 3.7 T-110 American 1-3 2-1, Lost 1 American T-208 6.1 Steals 6.0 T-213 Home 2-3, Lost 2 3-2, Won 2 Home 232 -1.4 Turnover Margin 1.6 T-114 Away 1-3, Won 1 3-1, Lost 1 Away 152 1.01 A:TO Ratio 1.07 124 Neutral 0-0 vs 0-0 Neutral 217 43.1 FG % 40.3 296 Streak Won 1 Lost 1 Streak 267 45.3 FG% Defense 38.9 35 AP / Coaches - / - -/- AP / Coaches T-272 6.0 3-Point FG 7.8 T-125 NET* 122 65 NET* 307 28.1 3-Point % 32.1 T-212 KenPom* 78 83 KenPom* 248 66.9 FT% 68.7 207 T-252 33.3 Winning % 66.7 T-102 The Series: CIN leads 24-12 (10-8 in Wichita) // Last Meeting: Feb. -
University of Cincinnati News Record. Tuesday, February 20, 1968. Vol. LV, No
", II' ~ '~_~-'Ii!:~:IIIb' I D'• ' 68 I ~ _ . i 'Cincinnati, Ohio, Tuesday, February 20, 1967 No.-31 'No' Peace UntiJAfter War,' -~Artis,tl LeRoi Jones, Tells Block History Week Group by Bernie Rubin He said Blacks can't even con- "There .must be a reality in ceive of a .nation until they le~rn . _ to deal WIthout crackers tellmg which we are strong; where we Blacks what to do. "We must are the. mast~rs. We have to control our own resources and get ~ mov: WIth .the idea that each one the, spirit together. We all must .of us constitutes an army: We all! be brought --before the' altar, of want peace.» But there won't be blackness." peace until there ~s"war, unless After having 'said this several the cra~k~rs submit, people in the audience stood up . LeROl ~ones, the,Black national- and began chanting and whistling. ist addressed these words to a When quiet was restored Jones predominately Black audience at continued s t a't i n g nationalism "~ilson AUditoriu~ on Friday must have a reason "and purpose. - night, He came, SImply dressed He said that ,aU ideas from Blacks with, his hair cut in.' the Black will coincide with the Black so- militant fashion, But his' words' ciety. "We will be the judge (of had a dynamic and stimulating society). We have to bring the, effect upon part of the audience. beauty- back to the nation- that Advocating a militant revolt doesn't exist now.": ~ against "crackers'" (whites) for LeRoi Jones ended his speech' . -
Sharonhate Murdered
"All the News Orange County That's Fit to Print" $eUr $xmt$ Edition Wtit ftork SE CT ION ONE 10 CENTS VOL.11....No.21.000 NEW YORK.THURSDAY.JANUARY 15,1970 Famous Actress Slain SHARON HATE MURDERED Drugs Suspected in Bizarre Slaying of Movie Queen and Friends £*0f Hv CLARK KENT Special to the New York Ti me s IRVINE - Three notablemem- use baggies to carry their mari- His mens' hair styles have be- bers of the Irvine community juana. come famous throughout the were savagely and brutelymur- Sharon Hate who in her last world and his business nowmak- dered early this morning in the movie, "Rosary's Beads," also es well over a million dollars 2nd floor commons. They are: died a tragic death, has left per year. No family could be Sharon Hate, star of "Rosary's Hollywood in the same violence. reached for comment but Mr. Beads," AbigailChoice, heiress Sharon's closest friend,Melanie Bruce's partner, Ralph Sport, to the Tasters Choice coffee dy- Haber, told reporters that Sha- said, "Mr. Bruce wouldn't hurt nasty and Mr. Bruce,notedNew- ron had no enemies and that a fly," and also, "America has port Beach hair stylies and bon "the lights have gone out on a lost one of its truly great hair vivant. A spokesman for UCI po- great career." stylists." Mr. Bruce's death lice said "at this time there are Sharon came to Newport from comes at a time immediately no clues to the tragic murder. El Paso two years ago to be a before he was to go into wo- waitress at the famous Denny's men's styles. -
All-Time Roster
ALL-TIME ROSTER All-Time Roster Brad Daugherty was a five-time NBA All-Star and remains the only Cavalier to ever average 20 points and 10 rebounds in a single season (1990-91, 1991-92, 1992-93). Cavaliers All-Time Roster DENG ADEL Height: 6’7” Weight: 200” Born: February 1, 1997 (Louisville ‘18) Signed a Two-Way contract on January 15, 2019. YEAR GP MIN FGM FGA FG% FTM FTA FT% OR DR TR AST PF-D STL BLK PTS PPG 2018-19 19 194 11 36 .306 4 4 1.000 3 16 19 5 13-0 1 4 32 1.7 Three-point field goals: 6-23 (.261) GARY ALEXANDER Height: 6’7” Weight: 240 Born: November 1, 1969 (South Florida ’92) Signed as a free agent, March 23, 1994. YEAR GP MINS FGM FGA FG% FTM FTA FT% OR DR TR AST PF-D STL BS PTS PPG 1993-94 7 43 7 12 .583 3 7 .429 6 6 12 1 7-0 3 0 17 2.4 LANCE ALLRED Height: 6’11” Weight: 250 Born: February 2, 1981 (Weber State ‘05) Signed as a free agent by the Cavaliers on April 4, 2008 and signed 10-day contracts on March 13 and March 25, 2008. YEAR GP MINS FGM FGA FG% FTM FTA FT% OR DR TR AST PF-D STL BS PTS PPG 2007-08 3 10 1 4 .250 1 2 .500 0 1 1 0 1-0 0 0 3 1.0 JOHN AMAECHI Height: 6’10” Weight: 270 Born: November 26, 1970 (Penn State ’95) Signed as a free agent, October 5, 1995. -
New York City: Musically Speaking
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 294 293 CS 506 165 AUTHOR Alex, Nola Kortner TITLE New York City: Musically Speaking. PUB DATE Apr 85 NOTE 16p.; Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Culture Association (7th, Louisville, KY, April 3-7, 1985). PUB TYPE Speeches/Conference Papers (150) Viewpoints (120) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC01 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Audiodisks; *Musical Composition; Music Appreciation; *Popular Culture; Singing; *Songs; Urban Culture; Urban Environment IDENTIFIERS Lyrics; Music Composers; *New York (New York); *Popular Music; Rock Music ABSTRACT New York City as a subject has fascinated generations of artists, writers, and musicians. However, the glamorous image of the city has changed over the years, and in the 1960s, popular music, in particular, began to reflect a utopia/dystopia dichotomy in relation to New York. During the past twenty years, six popular singer-songwriters who have produced record albums destined for mass market consumption and specifically dealing with the concept of the city are (1) Laura Nyro--"New 7ork Tendaberry" (1969); (2) Bruce Springsteen--"The Wild, the Innocent, and the E-Street Shuffle" (1973); (3) Neil Diamond--"Beautiful Noise" (1976); (4) Billy Joel--"52nd Street" (1978); (5) Joe Jackson--"Night and Day" (1982) and "Body and Soul" (1984); and (6) Bryan Ferry (Rory Music)--"Avalon" (1982). Although the six musicians all project different visions of New York City, such is the city's diversity that each sucfmeding portrayal seems as valid as the previous one. Each artist uses the city in his or her own way, either as background or as foreground for particular preoccupations; some of them present realistic pictures of the city, while others go out of their way to avoid realism. -
Lighter Side
LAURA NYRO: New York Tendaberry. Have Gone to Pieces; Teardrops on Laura Nyro, vocals and piano; Jimmie Your Letter; five more.) Elektra EKS J Haskell, arr. and cond. (Gibsom Street; 74050. $4.98. Save the Country; Sweet Lovin' Baby; LONNIE MACK: Glad I'm in the Band. eight more.) Columbia KCS 9737, Lonnie Mack, vocals and guitar; in- $5.98. Tape: WO HC 1122, 33/4 ips, f strumental accompaniment. (Why; Save $6.98; 40 1810 0692, $6.98. Your Money; Old House; Too Much Trouble; Let Them Talk; Roberta; five Singer /pianist /composer Laura Nyro is more.) Elektra EKS 74040, $4.98. not a product of rock, though she exists within it. She is a product of nothing I didn't review Glad I'm in the Band except her own incredible intensity and when it was first released. Although I the one deepest talents played the of the you'll ever album constantly, I couldn't hear. Once the music is studied, it's decide whether my reaction was just a lighter difficult to believe she's in her early quirk -it might have touched some per- twenties. She has what is called "an old sonal chord -or whether the record de- soul." served all the praise I heaped on it when Technique is the least of Miss Nyro's friends asked, "Heard anything good side pertinence, yet it's quite sound in an lately ?" I knew Mack to be an excellent unlikely way. Most people don't realize guitarist, but I was afraid that I might how powerfully she plays piano, but be responding too strongly to the dra- she can hold a large audience breathless matic qualities of his singing and not reviewed by all by herself on stage.