SCIENTECH CLUB LECTURES Date Speaker Topic 1920 6-Aug W.A
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Elegies for Cello and Piano by Bridge, Britten and Delius: a Study of Traditions and Influences
University of Kentucky UKnowledge Theses and Dissertations--Music Music 2012 Elegies for Cello and Piano by Bridge, Britten and Delius: A Study of Traditions and Influences Sara Gardner Birnbaum University of Kentucky, [email protected] Right click to open a feedback form in a new tab to let us know how this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Birnbaum, Sara Gardner, "Elegies for Cello and Piano by Bridge, Britten and Delius: A Study of Traditions and Influences" (2012). Theses and Dissertations--Music. 7. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/music_etds/7 This Doctoral Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Music at UKnowledge. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations--Music by an authorized administrator of UKnowledge. For more information, please contact [email protected]. STUDENT AGREEMENT: I represent that my thesis or dissertation and abstract are my original work. Proper attribution has been given to all outside sources. I understand that I am solely responsible for obtaining any needed copyright permissions. I have obtained and attached hereto needed written permission statements(s) from the owner(s) of each third-party copyrighted matter to be included in my work, allowing electronic distribution (if such use is not permitted by the fair use doctrine). I hereby grant to The University of Kentucky and its agents the non-exclusive license to archive and make accessible my work in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I agree that the document mentioned above may be made available immediately for worldwide access unless a preapproved embargo applies. -
May Harrison Biografie
Harrison, May May Harrison Biografie * 23. August 1890 in Roorkäa, Indien May Harrison wurde am 28. August 1890 als erste von † 8. Juni 1959 in South Nutfield (Surrey), England insgesamt vier Kindern geboren. Der Vater, J. H. C. Har- rison, war zu dieser Zeit als Colonel der Royal Engineers Violinistin, Solistin, Kammermusikerin, Dozentin für in Roorkäa, Indien, stationiert. Als May Harrison zwei Violine, Klavierbegleiterin, Konzertveranstalterin, Jahre alt war, kehrte die Familie nach England zurück. Komponistin (?) Die Mutter Anne Harrison war Sängerin und Pianistin und sorgte für eine fundierte musikalische Ausbildung ih- „Miss Harrison plays with a confidence and decision rer Töchter, von denen drei professionelle Musikerinnen which carries her audience with her from the very first. wurden: May Harrison und Margaret Harrison (geb. She has the orator’s instinct for taking captive the sympa- 1899) als Violinistinnen und Klavierbegleiterinnen, Beat- thies of those whom she is addressing. But she does not rice Harrison (geb. 1892) als Cellistin. Von klein auf er- allow herself to be carried away. Her performance is accu- hielt May Harrison Unterricht in Violine und Klavier und rate and conscientious.” gewann bereits im Alter von 10 Jahren die „Associated „Miss Harrison spielt mit einem Selbstvertrauen und ei- Board’s gold medal“ in der „Senior Devision“, wobei sie ner Entschiedenheit, die das Publikum vom ersten Mo- sich gegen 3000 Mitbewerber durchsetzte. Ein Jahr spä- ment an trägt. Sie hat ein Gespür dafür, die Aufmerksam- ter, mit 11 Jahren, wurde May Harrison am Londoner keit jener zu fesseln, an die sie sich wendet. Sie selbst läs- Royal College of Music aufgenommen, erhielt ein Stipen- st sich dabei nicht gehen. -
January 1878
-J \ \ _^0 n^;^^ Polite ^^}tttt^ [ Published by Authority. ] This Gazette is published for Police information only, and the Police throughout the Colony are instructed to make themselves thoroughly acquainted with the contents, i M. 8. SMITH, Superintendent of Police. No. 1.] WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2. [1878. Stealing in Dwellings, from the On the night of the 1st ult., from the residence of James Dearing, Irwin,—one pair white blankets, 3 Person, &c. cotton shirts (dark stripes), one night dress, one On the 25th ult., from the person of James Devine, light print skirt, 9 yards grey alpaca, 3 yards dark while asleep at Beard's boarding house, York,—One linsey, one chest tea, and a quantity of flour, the pro cheque on W.A. Bank for £4^, dated 24th Dec, 1877, perty of James Dearing.—CI. 9. drawn by S. E. Burges, Sen. in favor of Anthony Devine. James McDonald, exp., late 9511, strongly On the 15th ult., from the trousers pocket of John suspected. —CI. 1. Cox, which were hanging on a cart wheel on the On the night of the 26tb nit., from John Bryar-^'s Geraldton and Northampton Eoad,—one shilling in stable, St. George's Terrace, Perth,—1 sack, contain silver. George AUett, free, committed this robbeiy.— C.L 10. ing 40 lbs. of chaff, 62 marked on i ick. Identifiable. —C.I. 2. •- On the night on the 29th ult., from the premises On the 22nd ult., from a tool chesi: at the back of of Mrs. Hillsley, Murray Street, Perth,—3 fowls the Invalid Depot, Fremantle,—1 mason's hammer, (common breed). -
Life Near the Fast Lane
Life near the fast lane Villagers recall time spent living minutes from Indianapolis Motor Speedway The Villages Daily Sun Saturday, May 25, 2013 By Keith Pearlman Quick, in what city is the Indianapolis 500 held? If, like most people, you offer the obvious answer of Indianapolis, you would be incorrect. The “Greatest Spectacle in Racing” is actually held every Memorial Day weekend in Speedway, Ind. The 97th running is set for Sunday at the world-famous Indianapolis Motor Speedway, which is located in the town of about 12,000 residents that was incorporated in 1926. Speedway is an enclave of Indianapolis with its own government, police and fire departments, and school system. Villagers Elaine Harrold and Jane Routte cringe a little when they hear the race called the Indianapolis 500. They both lived in Speedway and are proud of the town’s racing heritage. “Everybody in town hates it being called the Indianapolis 500,” Harrold said. “They all believe it should be the Speedway 500. Route agrees. “The old-timers really resent it being called the Indianapolis 500,” she said. “Speedway is a separate town with a separate identity.” Harrold, of the Village of Pennecamp, moved to the town with her family as a child in 1954. She graduated from Speedway High School in 1965 and was later married and gave birth to her own children in the town. “I’m proud to say I grew up in Speedway,” Harrold said. “We lived three blocks from the famed oval. The grandstands along the front stretch towered over our backyard.” Routte, who lives in the Village of Summerhill, moved to Speedway with her husband, Steven, in 1988. -
From Social Welfare to Social Control: Federal War in American Cities, 1968-1988
From Social Welfare to Social Control: Federal War in American Cities, 1968-1988 Elizabeth Kai Hinton Submitted in partial fulfillment of requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2013 © 2012 Elizabeth Kai Hinton All rights reserved ABSTRACT From Social Welfare to Social Control: Federal War in American Cities, 1968-1988 Elizabeth Hinton The first historical account of federal crime control policy, “From Social Welfare to Social Control” contextualizes the mass incarceration of marginalized Americans by illuminating the process that gave rise to the modern carceral state in the decades after the Civil Rights Movement. The dissertation examines the development of the national law enforcement program during its initial two decades, from the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, which established the block grant system and a massive federal investment into penal and juridical agencies, to the Omnibus Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988, which set sentencing guidelines that ensured historic incarceration rates. During this critical period, Presidential Administrations, State Departments, and Congress refocused the domestic agenda from social programs to crime and punishment. To challenge our understanding of the liberal welfare state and the rise of modern conservatism, “From Social Welfare to Social Control” emphasizes the bipartisan dimensions of punitive policy and situates crime control as the dominant federal response to the social and demographic transformations brought about by mass protest and the decline of domestic manufacturing. The federal government’s decision to manage the material consequences of rising unemployment, subpar school systems, and poverty in American cities as they manifested through crime reinforced violence within the communities national law enforcement legislation targeted with billions of dollars in grant funds from 1968 onwards. -
Newton County Mississippi Marriage Records 1872
Newton County, Mississippi, FROM: Marriage Records 1872-1952 38917 (2nd Ed.)Company MS AVAILABLE Compiled and Edited RESERVED. PublishingCarrollton,By VERSION [email protected] William408; Harold Graham, Ed. Pioneer PRINT Box PO (662)237-6010 COPYRIGHT/ALL FROM: 38917 CompanyMS AVAILABLE RESERVED. PublishingCarrollton, VERSION [email protected] RIGHTS 408; Copyright © 2013Pioneer by William Harold Graham, Ed. PRINTAll rights reserved. ThisBox book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the author except for the use of brief quotations in a book review. Authorized copies are available from the author, Dr. Harold Graham, 17222 Highway 503, Decatur, MS 39301.PO (662)237-6010ISBN-10: 1-885480-52-0 COPYRIGHT/ALL Dedication This publication is dedicated to Martha Waltman, who stood at my elbow on many occasions and helped me feed quarters into the photocopy machine, to Myrtis Craft for her polite coercion to finish a project started in 1991, to J. P. and Floy Hurst for explaining the difference between a DOL and DOM, and not the least, to my wife Nancy for tolerating an absentee husband on those many visits to the courthouse. FROM: 38917 Company MS AVAILABLE RESERVED. Publishing Carrollton, VERSION [email protected] 408; Pioneer PRINT Box PO (662)237-6010 COPYRIGHT/ALL Acknowledgements Many of the names in this publication are enhanced to compensate for their scanty recording in the original marriage documents. The compiler has depended on the resources of a number of other researchers and published records to make possible this enhancement process. -
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD— Extensions of Remarks E1183 HON
August 28, 2018 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — Extensions of Remarks E1183 Awards—one of only five school boards to be Although he was a Chicago native, Pro- Stewart T. Cobine, which educated thousands selected across Texas. fessor Jegen was a long time Hoosier, dedi- of lawyers and accountants from 1994 to The five Honor Boards are selected by a cating more than five decades of service to In- 2010. committee made up of distinguished school diana University (IU) and his law students. A A testament to an outstanding career, Pro- superintendents. Their selection decisions 1956 graduate of Beloit College, Professor fessor Jegen was honored with numerous were based on a specific educational criterion, Jegen earned a Bachelor of Arts in philosophy awards and accolades. He was awarded the including maintaining harmonious and sup- and literature. He later attended the University President’s Distinguished Teaching Award portive relationships amongst board members, of Michigan receiving his Juris Doctor in 1959 from IU President John Ryan in 1987 and the support for educational improvement projects, and a Masters of Business Administration in Teaching Excellence Recognition Award from a commitment to a code of ethics and support accounting in 1960. His passion for knowledge the IU Board of Trustees in 1997. He notably for continuous educational development. The led him to New York University, where he re- received the Thomas Hart Benton Mural Me- Lamar CISD Board was chosen by Super- ceived a Master of Laws (LL.M) in taxation in dallion twice, the highest award given by IU. intendent Dr. Thomas Randle, who said the 1963. -
ED\Vj~RD JESSUP
ED\Vj~RD JESSUP OF WEST FARMS, WESTCHESTER CO., NEW YORK, AND HIS DESCEKDANTS. Bitb an Jfnttoburtion anb an ~ppmbix : THE LATTER CONTAINING RECORDS OF OTHER AMERICAN FAMILIES OF THE NAME, WITH SOME ADDITIONAL MEMORANDA. BY REV. HENRY GRISWOLD JESUP. I set the people after their families. NEHl!MIAH iv. 13. CAMBRIDGE: l!rfbattlp llrfntcb for t)lt Su~ot, BY JOHN WILSON AND SO!i. Copyricht, 188'7, BY lbtv. HENRY Gl!.ISWOLD JESUP. ,_ , Ir - ?· 17r. TO MORRIS K. JESUP, AT WHOSE SUGGESTION THE WORK WAS UNDERTAKEN, AND \\.HOSE UNFAILING INTEREST HAS FOLLOWED IT TO . ITS COMPLETION, THIS HISTORY AND RECORD OF THE LIFE AND THE DESCENDANTS OF HIS AMERICAN ANCESTOR PREFACE. HE present work was begun in 1879 at the solicita T tion of MORRIS K. JESUP, EsQ., of New York city, and has been prosecuted during intervals of leisure up to the date of publication, a period of nearly eight years. The amount of time and labor involved can be justly estimated only by those who have been engaged in simi lar undertakings. The materials have been drawn from a great variety of sources, and their collection and arrange ment, the harmonizing of discrepancies, and, in extreme cases, the judicious guessz'ng at probabilities, have in volved more of perplexity than the ordinary reader would suppose. Records of every description, and almost with out number, have been examined either personally or through the officials having them in charge, and in one case as distant as Cape Town in South Africa,- records of families, churches, parishes, towns, counties, in foreign lands as well as in the United States; land records and probate records, cemetery inscriptions, local histories, and general histories, wherever accessible. -
Digital Commons @ Butler University Opus (1951)
Butler University Digital Commons @ Butler University Jordan Conservatory of Music Yearbooks University Special Collections 1951 Opus (1951) Jordan College of Music Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/opus Part of the Other History Commons Recommended Citation Jordan College of Music, "Opus (1951)" (1951). Jordan Conservatory of Music Yearbooks. 11. https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/opus/11 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the University Special Collections at Digital Commons @ Butler University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Jordan Conservatory of Music Yearbooks by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Butler University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2010 with funding from Lyrasis IVIembers and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/opus11unde o p u s 11 19 5 1 Preseiifcd by The Publications Department of ^/orJon (College oj \l Hiis'ic Indianapolis, Indiana Tot^u/ota. We who are represented in this book have seen the world pass from war to peace and again to war. The relatively peaceful years of our lives thus far have been spent in college, a fact which makes the record of these years more valuable to us. Therefore, the Publications Staff presents Opus 1 1 in the hope that memories of these times will be recalled more vividly and more happily, whatever the years to come may hold. The Editors liodtd oh Ttu6te^6 Hilton U. Brown, Chairnia H. FosiER Ceippinger Bernard R. Batty Emsley W. Johnson Fermor S. Cannon Thomas H. Kayior Evan Wat ker Lyedicdtlon We wish to dedicate this book to the graduating Seniors of 1951. -
Statewide Enrollment Patterns: Higher Educational Opportunities in Indiana. INSTITUTION Indiana Univ., Bloomington
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 052 681 HE 002 284 AUTHOR Waggaman, John S. TITLE Statewide Enrollment Patterns: Higher Educational Opportunities in Indiana. INSTITUTION Indiana Univ., Bloomington. PUB DATE May 71 NOTE 18p. EDRS PRICE EDRS Price MF-$0.65 HC-$3.29 DESCRIPTORS *Enrollment, *Enrollment Projections, *Enrollment Trends, *Higher Education IDENTIFIERS *Indiana ABSTRACT Enrollment in institutions of higher education in Indiana has been leveling off since 1970. This is mainly due to: (1) an expansion of technical and vocational education programs; (2) increases in tuition;(3) reduced federal support and high interest rates on borrowed money; (4)a general disillusionment with a college education on the part of the young; and (5) fear of campus riots on the part of the parents. The overall effect may be a diminution in the number of 18-year-olds enrolled in Indianac's public and private colleges and universities. This report discusses and presents tabular information on:(1) statewide enrollment trends as related to births in the years of 1944 through 1952; (2) institutional trends between 1967 and 1970 in (a)public, (b) private liberal arts,(c) special private, and (d)other institutions of higher education; (3) new policy developments affecting enrollment; and (4) enrollment projections. (AF) STATEWIDE ENROLLMENT PATTERNS: HIGHER EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES IN INDIANA John S. Waggaman Assistant Director International Development Research Center FL OF rAEAcr U.S.DEPARTMENT&WELFARE EDUCATIONEDUCATIONEPRO- OFFICE OFHASBEEN FROM DOCUMENT RECEIVEDORIG- THIS AS EXACTLYORGANIZATIONOR OPIN- DUCEDPERSON OR OF VIEW THE IT. POINTS NECESSARILYEDU- INATING DO NOTOFFICE OF STATED IONS OFFICIALPOLICY. REPRESENTPOSITION OR CATION May 1971 Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana STATEWIDE ENROLLMENT PATTERNS: HIGHER EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES IN INDIANA Contents and Tables Contents: A. -
Merit Selection in Indiana: the Foundation for a Fair and Impartial Appellate Judiciary
MERIT SELECTION IN INDIANA: THE FOUNDATION FOR A FAIR AND IMPARTIAL APPELLATE JUDICIARY EDWARD W. NAJAM, JR.* INTRODUCTION Forty years ago the people of Indiana amended their constitution to provide for the merit selection and retention of appellate judges.1 After 120 years of partisan judicial elections, the amendment to article 7 of the Indiana Constitution was a significant, if not radical, departure. Under the Constitution of 1852, virtually all Indiana judges were elected on a partisan ballot, and appellate judges were swept in to office and out of office on political tides that had nothing to do with their judicial qualifications or performance. The Indiana Law Review has invited us to reflect upon Indiana’s forty years of experience with merit selection and to consider whether merit selection in practice has achieved its promise to remove appellate judges from partisan politics, to secure and retain able jurists, and to maintain a fair and impartial appellate judiciary. This Article will consider (1) the national judicial reform movement that led to Indiana’s revised Judicial Article, (2) the work of the Judicial Study Commission which recommended merit selection, (3) the debate in the Indiana General Assembly over adoption of the amendment to article 7 of the Indiana Constitution, (4) the campaign for ratification of the amendment, and (5) Indiana’s experience with merit selection, including a brief comparison with judicial elections in other states. The proper role of the courts has been an important topic since the earliest days of the republic. In Democracy in America, Alexis de Toqueville concluded, “Scarcely any question arises in the United States which does not become, sooner or later, a subject of judicial debate . -
The Howey Political Report Is Published by Newslink Have, but the Results Have Been Kept Close to the Vest
Thursday, April 29, 2004 Volume 10, Number 36 Page 1 of 9 he Daniels expected to T win over Eric, but... Howey No polling in a state with an upset past By BRIAN A. HOWEY in Indianapolis The gubernatorial race that wasn't – Mitch Daniels vs. Eric Miller – ends next Tuesday under the cloak of con- Political ventional wisdom. It was such a foregone conclusion that not a single Indiana news media outlet polled the GOP primary race, Report though Kernan vs. Daniels polling has taken place on several occasions since February. Certainly the two GOP campaigns The Howey Political Report is published by NewsLink have, but the results have been kept close to the vest. Inc. Founded in 1994, The Howey Political Report is Daniels has repeatedly told the media and party an independent, non-partisan newsletter analyzing the political process in Indiana. faithful that he would not fulfill the old Nixon game plan of running to the right in the primary, and to the center come Brian A. Howey, publisher fall. Instead, Daniels has taken his campaign for a “come- Mark Schoeff Jr., Washington writer back” to all Hoosiers and not just those on the right. Jack E. Howey, editor Eric Miller, it seems, hasn't been given any chance to win this primary. The Howey Political Report Office: 317-254-1533 PO Box 40265 Fax: 317-968-0487 And yet, there have been some tell-tale signs that Indianapolis, IN 46240-0265 Mobile: 317-506-0883 have provided angst among some Republicans. While [email protected] Daniels’ TV media has been almost brilliant thus far this www.howeypolitics.com year, there was the Dick Lugar endorsement ad, which is something you normally see in the waning days of the fall Washington office: 202-775-3242; Business Office: 317-254-0535.