Summit Herald, Summit
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
New-Church Messenger
7L NEW-CHURCH MESSENGER March 3, 1956 rThe Best is Yet to Be THE PARTIAL LIST PUBLISHERS & NEW-CHURCH OF CHURCHES DIRECTORY OF MESSENGER BOOK ROOMS BALTIMORE, MD. Official organ of The General Convention THE NEW-CHURCH PRESS Calvert Street, near Chase of the New Jerusalem In the United States (Hoard of Publication) of America. Convention founded in 1817. BATH, ME. 108 Clark Street. Brooklyn 1, N. Y. (Swedenborslon) Middle and Winter Streets American and foreign publications of • BOSTON, MASS. all New-Church Publishing Houses. Re Bowdoin Street, opp. State House ligious and Children's books of other Member of the Associated Church Press BIIIDGEWATER, MASS. publishers. • Central Square Convention service books & The Mes Published bi-weekly at 153 South Jeffer senger. BROCKTON, MASS. son Street, Berne, Indiana, by The New 34 Crescent Street, near Main NEW-CHURCH BOOK CENTER Church Press, 108 Clark St., Brooklyn, American New-Church Tract & Pub. New York. CAMBRIDGE, MASS. Quincy Street, corner Klrkland Society, 2129 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Entered as second-class matter at the Pa. CHICAGO. ILL. Post Office, Berne, Ind., under Act of New-Church collateral. Our Daily Bread. Kenwood, 3710 So. Woodlawn Ave. Congress of March 3, 1879. Acceptance Book Room. for mailing at special rate of postage Northslde Parish. 912 W. Sheridan provided for in Section 1103. Act of Oc CINCINNATI. OHIO MASSACHUSETTS NEW-CHURCH tober 3, 1917, authorized on July 30, 1918. Oak Street and Winslow Avenue UNION 134 Bowdoin St., Boston, Mass. • CLEVELAND, OHIO 12600 Euclid Avenue, E. Cleveland New-Church Publications. Convention Subscription $3.00 a year; foreign pos Journal. -
Brooklyn College Magazine, Fall 2007
Fall 2007 Goodbye, Ms. Chips 10 The Boys of Summer Remembered 14 Special Scholar for Brooklyn 26 From Brooklyn College students… to successful citizens of the world A journey made possible by your support of the Annual Fund. Your gift to the Brooklyn College Annual Fund For more information please contact finances academic scholarships for deserving Stephanie Ehrlich, associate director, students, faculty research grants, improved Annual Fund for the Brooklyn College campus facilities, advanced classroom Foundation, at (718) 951-5074 or technologies, and support for the library and [email protected]. academic departments. By giving to the Annual Fund today, you are helping to transform Brooklyn College students into the next generation of successful Brooklyn College alumni FOUNDATION in the world. Contentstable of Vol. XXI • No. 2 • Fall 2007 14 Day of Infamy Redux 16 Stand and Deliver 26 Brooklyn on Her Mind It is now fifty years since the BC’s School of Education has a Gretchen Maneval, the recently Dodgers abandoned Brooklyn, lot to teach the rest of America appointed director of the but borough historian Ron about training the next Center for the Study of Schweiger, ’70, still bleeds generation of teachers. Brooklyn, sees a major new role Dodger blue. for the center, and the College, in Brooklyn’s continued revival. DEPARTMENTS Editor in Chief Art Director Brooklyn College Magazine John P.Hamill Joe Loguirato is published by the Office of Communications 2 From Our Readers Senior Designer Managing Editor Brooklyn College Lisa Panazzolo 4 College News Tom Quinn 2900 Bedford Avenue Production Assistant Brooklyn, New York 11210-2889. -
Ernest Martin Hopkins '01 President, Emeritus
Ernest Martin Hopkins ‘01 President, Emeritus An interview conducted by Edward Connery Lathem ‘51 Hanover, NH Manset, Maine April 6, 1962 – May 21, 1964 Reels 23-33 Rauner Special Collections Library Dartmouth College Hanover, NH Ernest Martin Hopkins Interview Reel #23a Lathem: This is a scrapbook session being held in Baker Library on Friday, April 6, 1962, continuing the tape recording of President Hopkinsʼ memoirs, a scrapbook session starting with events in the year 1933. [Pause] Hopkins: Well, sometime around the 4th. I don't know exactly when. I want to go somewhere before commencement. [Laughter] I don't know just where. Lathem: I can understand that. Did you get over to Montpelier? Hopkins: Yes, I was there yesterday. Lathem: Ah. Howʼs Mr. Davis? Hopkins: Heʼs fine. Honors coming thick and fast. Heʼs written… Named insurance man of the year by the insurance companies and he has just been made, I donʼt know whether an officer or not, but a member of the Vermont Bankers Association. [Laughter] Lathem: My goodness. They are coming thick and fast. Hopkins: Yeah. It just caught my eye. [inaudible] good for the United States. I want to know where I got that idea. [Laughter] Lathem: Is this going to work out all right? Can you see the clippings well enough at that angle? Hopkins: Yes, I can see fine, thank you. Lathem: This is a… I thought weʼd go on with a scrapbook for a while, at least. We left off at this point, quite some time ago. Youʼd spoken about Horace P. Taft of the Taft School and this clipping, which is dated April 1933, headed Depression Good for the U.S. -
Ernest Martin Hopkins ‘01
Ernest Martin Hopkins ‘01 President, Emeritus An interview conducted by Edward Connery Lathem ‘51 Hanover, NH March 28, 1958 – April 4, 1959 Reels 10-22 Rauner Special Collections Library Dartmouth College Hanover, NH Ernest Martin Hopkins Interview Reel #10a Lathem: This afternoon we are recording Mr. Hopkinsʼ reminiscences in Baker Library in the office of the Director of Special Collections. The date is March 28, the time is 2 P.M. Hopkins: Well, Iʼll be very glad. I regret more and more that I wasnʼt a diary keeper. All sorts of personal things come up that I canʼt identify within five or ten years. Lathem: Yes…Yes… I wonder if you…before we get into this if youʼve thought of anything that you particularly want to put on the record. We were talking the other afternoon when we met on the street about one matter that I think very appropriately should get in. Hopkins: Yeah. I think I can…I would like to put in very much indeed the…I think the basis of one of my strong convictions in regard to college administration came to me not from any academic life at all but from my experience with the Western Electric Company where, when I went out there, I found that somewhere between thirty and forty thousand–nearer forty thousand, I think—employees going out at night were met at every entrance by soap-box orators: pretty specious and pretty fallacious in many cases. And yet, this training group that I was in charge of who were all college graduates, were very much impressed by these people. -
Notes on Musicarnival's Production Years, 1954-65
NotesUnder on Musicarnival’s the Production TentYears, 1954-65 UnderNotes on Musicarnival’s the Production Years,Tent 1954-65 * * Written by Bill Rudman and Rebecca Paller To accompany audio restorations produced by The Musical Theater Project The Lt. Col. Robert “Jim” Price Musicarnival Audio Archive is part of the John L. Price, Jr. Musicarnival Archives Copyright © 2017 by The Musical Theater Project except entries written by Rebecca Paller, Barbara Perris, Stanley Green and Ken Bloom Cover design by Steven Schultz Photos courtesy of the John L. Price, Jr. Musicarnival Archives, Cleveland Public Library -ii- The Partnership CLEVELAND PUBLIC LIBRARY serves four million patrons annually at 28 branches across the city, lending more than 6.5 million items from a collection of more than 10 million. CPL’s library services are also available at the Public Administration Library in City Hall; “The People’s University on Wheels” bookmobile; Ohio Library for the Blind and Physically Disabled; and the “On the Road to Reading” literacy van. CPL is the home for the Ohio Center for the Book, CLEVNET library cooperation, and KnowItNow24x7 virtual reference service. For more information, visit www.cpl.org. Dedicated to preserving the rich legacy of the art form, Goodspeed Musicals’ SCHERER LIBRARY OF MUSICAL THEATRE carefully maintains a comprehensive collection of scores, sheet music, scripts, original cast recordings, programs, photographs and theater memorabilia on the Goodspeed campus in East Haddam, Connecticut. These reference tools are utilized by the musical theater community across the nation in the re-creation and revitalization of period musicals and in the creation and development of new works.