Sale! Iiattrhfatrr

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Sale! Iiattrhfatrr - r- • at* - MANCHESTER HERALD. Fri.. Dec. 10. 1982 Business dress and behavior The trend is toward conformity Pickets protest Clipping days UConnneeds warned that “young men and women who in­ least put up a wall between you and those you By LeRoy Pope sist on defying the trend will be taking grave are talking to.” . , .. „ ...♦ closing at Otis over for Shoor help in middle DPI Business Writer risks of being passed over for promotion or Emulating the boss may be drinking what _ even of being eased out of the company. he drinks. Otherwise, it’s a good rule of NEW YORK — A new age of conformity in thumb these days to drink Scotch or dress and behavior has descended on Knapp said the current code “is not nearly ...p a g e 4 ... page 11, . page 15 so rigid as the conformity requirements in wine rather than a Bloody Mary or bourbon. American business. The Confucian golden mean Involves round New York image consultant Frederick dress and behavior in American business in the 1920s and 1930s, not even as rigid as the as well as sight. If you don’t believe that 1 ^ Knapp says, “The free lifestyle image with up what the Chinese sage had to say arout the emphasis on self-expression that started in customs the young GI’s coming out of World War II had to accept when they entered significance of the music of the different the late 1950s and was so rampant in the provinces of China and music’s impact on tumultuous 1960s, began to ebb in the mid- business.” 1970s and now is dead.” Nor does it extend so much to social life as manners and customs. nineteenth century conformity codes did. The businessman today should learn to • “Men and women who want to climb the modulate his voice and acquire an articulate, . corporate ladder today had better emulate Remember the passage in one of J.P. Manchester, Conn. Marquand’s novels where the proper Bosto­ sensible vocabulary. If you indulge in double , the boss and the boss's boss in both dress and talk or gobbledegook, you may be dismissed • manner,” added Knapp, whose firm has nian looked out his window, saw a chap sit­ Partly sunny Saturday, Dec. 11. 1982 as a bureaucratic drone. given advice on personal imagemaking over ting on his porch in his shirtsleeves and by afternoon promptly put his house up for sale. , Penny Leigh said the conformity 2d Cents the years to 15,000 executives of blue chip requirements for women in clothes are much firms. But the code does cut both ways, Knapp — See page 2 iiattrhfatrr added, because current social attitudes are the same in style and tone as those for The trend is toward conservative clothes “no fashion extremes such as slit skirts,” she and the Confucian golden mean — moderation just as complicated and varied in business as elsewhere. “If your boss happens to be the said. “That kind of style accentuates — in behavior. “Resist the temptation to look frivolous glamour instead of projecting ef­ or behave differently,” is Knapp’s kind who seemingly pays no attention to his watchword for today’s young male clothes, it won’t pay you to be a spiffy or even ficiency and power.” 3 terriby careful dresser,” Knapp said. To which Knapp added; "Fem ales In executives. His associate. Penny Leigh, has business had better forget King Lear s exactly the same advice for the females But the main thing to remember is that Police say Sales tax hike urged scrambling upward in business. “Wear ef­ - “anything about your personal appearance or famous remark that a voice that is “8®"“® and low is an excellent thing in a woman.” A ficient looking suits or frocks, plain, substan­ your behavior that evokes special attention modern businesswoman must not sound tial shoes and go easy on makeup.” from other people may detract from your small cars Knapp said the trend to conformity has positive image,” Knapp said. “Don’t wear timid. She must speak for firmness and accelerated in the past three years, and dark glasses, lliey can suggest Mafia or at authority.” don't work Tax panel By Nancy Thompson Herald Reporter Medium-sized cars do not make Announcing suitable police vehicles, according I nixes levy to a memo from Capt. Henry R. Minor, head of the Police \ " Department’s administration divi­ sion. UPl photo In a memo to General Manager S I E FF E R T Robert B. Weiss, Minor RELAXING AT GROVE ISLE ON BISCAYNE BAY ^ T .| recommends that full-sized vehicles be used for police cars as long as an incame . luxury condos cost $250,000 to $750,000 they are available. CONSUMER ELECTRONIC Minor said an experiment was started a year ago in which two tax reform package to the medlum-si^ cars were designated By Mark A. Dupuis Legislature and O’Neill with no as police patrol cars in order to United Press International it's a buyer's market recommendation. compare them with full-sized ShcNW & Sale HARTFORD — A special state However, some of the income tax models. W study commission Friday rejected a |)roponents on the 27-member com­ Based on the results of that call to recommend adoption of a experience. Minor said he mission vowed to submit minority for condos in Florida state income tax and instead voted reports with the commission’s fin- recommends the town stay with full- to support extension of existing ding.s and to introduce income tax SATURDAY 10-5 sized cars. He gave several reasons. levies — mainly the sales tax — to legislation in the next legislative MIAMI (UPD-Looking real estate. Turnberry Isle, Towers of new areas. Last year, 48.5 percent of THE MEDllJM-sized cars were session. to purchase a new home — Quayside, Grove Isle and physically "too small to provide Herald photo by Pinto or maybe a secret little all housing sales in Dade Brickell Key are healthy. The Bipartisan Commission on Sen. Audrey Beck, D-Mansfield, DEC. 11, 1982 comfort for long periods of time,” State Tax Revenue and Related said flatly that a “significant and County went to foreign in­ weekend hideaway? Jan Yelen, a 27-year-old Minor said, adding that the smaller Well, if you have a spare vestors — mostly from attorney who just A kiss for Santa Fiscal Policy voted 15-10 to recom­ reasonable income tax bill’.' would South America. So far this You’ll meet the pro’s from MGA/MItsubIshI, door opening made it difficult for of­ mend that the state eliminate be raised in the tax-writing Finance, half million dollars or so purchased a luxury condo ficers to get In and Out of the car. and you simply can't do year, 43.9 percent of sales in Dade, said she chose it Fisher, Sanyo, RCA and Quasar ... and existing tax exemptions to bridge a llevenue and Bonding Committee have gone to foreigners. Difficulty was also encountered Five-year-old Laura Cataldl of 39 Norman St. fair Friday. Watching Is Kyle Bagnall, 6, of 36 budget gap now projected at nearly that she co-chairs. without sun. sand and salt over a house because it placing prisoners In the rear of the Cannon said the percen­ kisses Santa Claus, age unknown, of the Birch St. $300 million for the next fi.scal year. Senate Majority Leader Richard water, south Florida is the was “easier livirig.” you’ll see the largest display of video vehicles, even when the prisoners place. tage will keep declining un­ “ For a single person, it North Pole at the St. James Church holiday l^ressed by income tax opponents, Schneller. D-Essex, chairman of the til the world economy im­ equipment in Hartford County in action were cooperative, Minor said. the commission followed up later The result is a luxury is more secure than a Resistance by the prisoner In­ bipartisan commission and a propo­ condominium overlooking proves. home," she said. ‘There is with a 13-11 vote formally rejecting nent of tax reform, said he wasn’t creased the chance of injury a proposal for a comprehensive tax the Atlantic Ocean or Another phenomenon in no maintenance for me — 1 Doth the police officer and surprised by the commission’s deci­ Biscayne Bay. with the making is that buyers just call a repairman — reform package that would include a sion. arrested person, he said. personal state income tax. everything from Roman who in the past decade and the doorman helps me The larger, full-sized vehicles^Bonks hope new rate “ If there’s anything F’ve learned tubs, marble floors, wine have purchased con- with my groceries. It's operated more efficienUy in bad The commission’s recommen­ in eight years (as a legislator) it’s cellars, croquet courts, dominiiums rather than simpler living.” weather. Minor said. The lighter, dations, to be presented to Gov. how to count," Schneller said after health spas, art galleries, houses are changing their Plenty of other young medium-sized cars had a tendency William O’Neill and the Legislature, the commission adjourned its yachts that sail you to sale! preference. professionals are 'buying will center on the 7.5 percent sales meeting. quantities limited to hydroplane in wet weather and deluxe shopping malls, “They used to think a too. The typical owners are A sampling of our SATURDAY ONIY SALE SPECIALS had to be taken off the road during tax. the nation’s highest statewide Schneller also said adoption of an world-class restaurants to condominium was more will lure cash home between 35 and 45, are Sony Walkman II ..................
Recommended publications
  • Comic Strips and the American Family, 1930-1960 Dahnya Nicole Hernandez Pitzer College
    Claremont Colleges Scholarship @ Claremont Pitzer Senior Theses Pitzer Student Scholarship 2014 Funny Pages: Comic Strips and the American Family, 1930-1960 Dahnya Nicole Hernandez Pitzer College Recommended Citation Hernandez, Dahnya Nicole, "Funny Pages: Comic Strips and the American Family, 1930-1960" (2014). Pitzer Senior Theses. Paper 60. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/pitzer_theses/60 This Open Access Senior Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Pitzer Student Scholarship at Scholarship @ Claremont. It has been accepted for inclusion in Pitzer Senior Theses by an authorized administrator of Scholarship @ Claremont. For more information, please contact [email protected]. FUNNY PAGES COMIC STRIPS AND THE AMERICAN FAMILY, 1930-1960 BY DAHNYA HERNANDEZ-ROACH SUBMITTED TO PITZER COLLEGE IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE FIRST READER: PROFESSOR BILL ANTHES SECOND READER: PROFESSOR MATTHEW DELMONT APRIL 25, 2014 0 Table of Contents Acknowledgements...........................................................................................................................................2 Introduction.........................................................................................................................................................3 Chapter One: Blondie.....................................................................................................................................18 Chapter Two: Little Orphan Annie............................................................................................................35
    [Show full text]
  • Maple Syrup: a Sweet Sign of Early Spring by Paula Mchugh
    THE TM 911 Franklin Street Weekly Newspaper Michigan City, IN 46360 Volume 21, Number 8 Thursday, March 3, 2005 Maple Syrup: A Sweet Sign of Early Spring by Paula McHugh Maple sugaring time is when daytime temperatures rise above the 32 degree freezing mark, and then drop again below freezing during the nighttime. Which means that we are now heading into that time of year in early, early spring when the sap starts flowing. Hurray! Hurray for two reasons: who doesn’t look forward to the promise of warmer days ahead, and who doesn’t appreciate the sweetness of pure maple syrup dribbled over a stack of pancakes? Yet, how many of us are aware that we could be tapping our own maple trees about now–if we are fortunate enough to have maples on our property? A recent program about everything you ever wanted to know about maple sugar farming was recently presented at the Deep River County Park Visitor Center by Historic Programs Coordinator Joanna Shearer, and the Beacher was there to learn and pass on a few tips for maple sugaring wannabes. Let’s get the trivia out of the way and tell you right now that Vermont is NOT the number one state for maple sugar pro- duction. New York claims that title. But here in the Midwest, Michigan ranks high as a maple syrup producer. Parke County Indiana, home of the most covered bridges, is a large syrup-producing area. And locally, Deep River Park produced nearly 500 bottles of the sweet syrup last year.
    [Show full text]
  • JOSEPH SCHMIDT Musical Direction By: EMILY BENGELS Choreography By: KRISTIN SARBOUKH
    Bernards Township Parks & Recreation and Trilogy Repertory present... 2021 Produced by: JAYE BARRE Directed by: JOSEPH SCHMIDT Musical Direction by: EMILY BENGELS Choreography by: KRISTIN SARBOUKH Book by THOMAS MEEHAN Music by CHARLES STROUSE Lyrics by MARTIN CHARNIN Original Broadway production directed by MARTIN CHARNIN. Based on “Little Orphan Annie.” By permission of Tribune Content Agency, LLC. ANNIE is presented through special arrangement with Music Theatre International (MTI). All authorized performance materials are supplied by MTI. www.MTIShows.com This production is dedicated to the memory of beloved Trilogy Repertory member Chris Winans who gave of his time and spirit for many years and in many performances. Chris was a valued member of our Trilogy family and will be greatly missed. Summer, 2021 Dear Residents and Friends of the Community, Good evening and welcome to the Bernards Township Department of Parks and Recreation’s 34th season of Plays in the Park. So many of you enjoy and look forward to the plays year after year. I am excited that the Township brings this tradition free to the public for all to enjoy. Bernards Township proudly sponsors this event and substantially subsidizes the budget because we recognize the importance of keeping performing arts alive. It is truly wonderful that these productions are here, under the stars, in Pleasant Valley Park. Bernards Township offers many opportunities to enjoy family outings such as Plays In The Park. You can stay current on all our special events by visiting our website at www.bernards.org. There you will find information on the wide variety of programs we offer.
    [Show full text]
  • Taking Comics Seriously
    POP CULTURE clusively with daytime. The show features no gunfights or car chases; there are moments of leisurely, uneventful conversation between the younger and older generations. It is a curious inversion: Where once daytime TV fled prime time, prime time now copies daytime. The evidence is every- where, from the success of The Forsyte Saga and Upstairs Down- stairs (soap operas with extra starch) to major television serials like Rich Man Poor Man, Roots, and Captains and Kings. Spec- taculars aside, even a regular offering such as Family reflects a soap-opera sense of continuity. The major characters suffer. They have affairs, consider marriage, drop out of school, worry about mortality It goes too far to say that daytime dramas are genuinely realistic. The necessities of the form require too many brushes with the kinds of crises that most families would suffer only a few times in a generation. But both soaps and game shows have certainly tried to move television closer to what Paddy Chayefsky called "the marvelous world of the ordinary." What daytime TV has given prime time is the possibility of exploring characters not through the prism of fantasy, but through a focus closer to the way most of us spend our lives. And that is no mean contribution. TAKING COMICS SERIOUSLY by Arthur Asa Berger New art forms are often greeted with derision. Attic tragedy was denounced by conservative Greeks, impressionism by high- brow Parisians. Americans, too, have snubbed new, indigenous art forms. The comics, for example, like jazz music, are a home- grown American product; and like jazz, they were long ignored by "serious" critics.
    [Show full text]
  • The Inventory of the Harold Gray Collection #100
    The Inventory of the Harold Gray Collection #100 Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center Gray, Harold #100 Gifts of Mrs. Harold Gray and others, 1966-1992 Box 1 Folder 1 I. Correspondence. A. Reader mail. 1. Fan mail re: “Little Orphan Annie.” a. 1937. b. 1938. c. 1939. d. Undated (1930s). Folder 2 e. 1940-1943. Folder 3 f. 1944. Folder 4 g. 1945. Folder 5 h. 1946. Folder 6 i. 1947. Folder 7 j. 1948. Folder 8 k. 1949. 2 Box 1 cont’d. Folder 9 l. Undated (1940s). Folder 10 m. 1950. Folder 11 n. 1951. Folder 12 o. 1952. Folder 13 p. 1953-1955. Folder 14 q. 1957-1959. Folder 15 r. Undated (1950s). Folder 16 s. 1960. Folder 17 t. 1961. Folder 18 u. 1962. Folder 19 v. 1963. 3 Box 1 cont’d. Folder 20 w. 1964. Folder 21 x. 1965. Folder 22 y. 1966. Folder 23 z. 1967. Folder 24 aa. 1968. Folder 25 bb. Undated (1960s). Folder 26 2. Reader comments, criticisms and complaints. a. TLS re: depiction of social work in “Annie,” Mar. 3, 1937. Folder 27 b. Letters re: “Annie” character names, 1938-1966. Folder 28 c. Re: “Annie”’s dress and appearance, 1941-1952. Folder 29 d. Protests re: African-American character in “Annie,” 1942; includes: (i) “Maw Green” comic strip. 4 Box 1 cont’d. (ii) TL from HG to R. B. Chandler, publisher of the Mobile Press Register, explaining his choice to draw a black character, asking for understanding, and stating his personal stance on issue of the “color barrier,” Aug.
    [Show full text]
  • Companions, Most Excellent Jim Smith Is
    Companions, ! e-mail e-mail e-mail ! DID YOU KNOW? One character in Most Excellent Jim Smith is conducting Would you like to receive the trestleboard “Little Orphan Annie” created by Brother Royal Arch schools on the 4th Wednesday via e-mail rather then “snail mail”? If so, Commitment to H. L. Gray was the fabulously wealthy of each month at Cherrydale. If you are let me know with an e-mail request to “Daddy Warbucks”. Once Little Orphan free that night please try to attend. The [email protected] Mankind Annie said that Daddy had been to the schools are an excellent way to fellowship Or see us on-line at: East many times to check on his fortune, with Royal Arch Masons, learn more www.VAYorkRite.org and then “he says one time he traveled to about Royal Arch Masonry, and prepare Scroll down to Royal Arch and the East, but didn’t make a dime, meant to take part in the degrees. there we are! more to him than all th’ other trips he’ll Please join us at our stated ever make-I don’t get it-do you?” convocation on February 8 for an Other District 1 Chapters Fifty Year Members Source: Lee Lodge # 209, Waynesboro, interesting presentation by our own Right Homer G. Bauserman1 1948 Va. Trestleboard Nov 2003 Excellent John W. Bullach on the subject Mount Vernon #14 John P. Funkhouser 1949 of "What Means This Word". Some of First Tuesday David H. Graham 1950 these words are only to be said in certain George Washington Masonic National Elgin B.
    [Show full text]
  • JOSEPH Baby on Board! P
    Alan Rhodes, 3ɀɆ * Fuzz Buzz, 3ɁɁ * Free Will Astrology, 3Ƀɂ cascadia REPORTING FROM THE HEART OF CASCADIA WHATCOM *SKAGIT*ISLAND*LOWER B.C. {12.17.14}{#51}{V.09}{FREE} DOWN THE CHIMNEY Rental inspections sort naughty from nice, P.08 MARY AND JOSEPH Baby on board! P. 16 BELLINGHAM FOLK FESTIVAL Music and education at BUF, P.22 WEDNESDAY [12.17.14] Bob’s Your Elf: 7:30pm, Anacortes Community Theatre 38 ONSTAGE Home for the Holidays: 8pm and 10pm, Upfront Shoe Me the Funny: 9pm, Horseshoe Cafe Theatre FOOD FOOD cascadia MUSIC DANCE MVHS Choirs: 4pm and 7pm, McIntyre Hall, Saving Christmas Town: 2pm and 7pm, Belling- 32 Mount Vernon ham High School John Hanson Trio: 7pm, the Majestic Dancing for Joy’s Nativity: 6:30pm, Mount Baker Theatre B-BOARD B-BOARD VISUAL ARTS Winter Wonderland: 7pm, Blaine Performing Allied Arts Holiday Festival: 10am-6pm, 4145 Arts Center A glance at what’s happening this week Meridian St. The Nutcracker: 7:30pm, McIntyre Hall, Mount 26 Vernon FILM THURSDAY [12.18.14] MUSIC Bellingham Folk Festival: 10am-9pm, Belling- ONSTAGE ham Unitarian Fellowship 22 Mary and Joseph: 7:30pm, iDiOM Theater Christmas Carols and Lunch: 12pm, Haynie Bob’s Your Elf: 7:30pm, Anacortes Community Grange, Lynden MUSIC Theatre Celtic Christmas Celebration: 4:30pm and Good, Bad, Ugly: 8pm, Upfront Theatre 7:30pm, Port of Anacortes Event Center The Project: 10pm, Upfront Theatre Not So Silent Night: 7pm, downtown Bellingham 18 Christmas Concert: 7pm, Bethel Christian ART DANCE Reformed Church, Lynden Violinist Saving Christmas Town: 7pm,
    [Show full text]
  • Copyright by Avi Santo 2006
    Copyright by Avi Santo 2006 The Dissertation Committee for Avi Dan Santo Certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: Transmedia Brand Licensing Prior to Conglomeration: George Trendle and the Lone Ranger and Green Hornet Brands, 1933-1966 Committee: ______________________________ Thomas Schatz, Co-Supervisor ______________________________ Michael Kackman, Co-Supervisor ______________________________ Mary Kearney ______________________________ Janet Staiger ______________________________ John Downing Transmedia Brand Licensing Prior to Conglomeration: George Trendle and the Lone Ranger and Green Hornet Brands, 1933-1966 by Avi Dan Santo, B.F.A., M.A. Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Texas at Austin August 2006 Acknowledgements The support I have received from family, friends, colleagues and strangers while writing this dissertation has been wonderful and inspiring. Particular thanks go out to my dissertation group -- Kyle Barnett, Christopher Lucas, Afsheen Nomai, Allison Perlman, and Jennifer Petersen – who read many early drafts of this project and always offered constructive feedback and enthusiastic encouragement. I would also like to thank Hector Amaya, Mary Beltran, Geoff Betts, Marnie Binfield, Alexis Carreiro, Marian Clarke, Caroline Frick, Hollis Griffin, Karen Gustafson, Sharon Shahaf, Yaron Shemer, and David Uskovich for their generosity of time and patience in reading drafts and listening to my concerns without ever making these feel like impositions. A special thank you to Joan Miller, who made this past year more than bearable and brought tremendous joy and calm into my life. Without you, this project would have been a far more painful experience and my life a lot less pleasurable.
    [Show full text]
  • Misleading and Misrepresenting the American Youth: “Little Orphan Annie” and the Orphan Myth in the Twentieth Century ___
    MISLEADING AND MISREPRESENTING THE AMERICAN YOUTH: “LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE” AND THE ORPHAN MYTH IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY ________________ A Senior Honors Thesis Presented to The Faculty of the Department of The Honors College University of Houston ________________ In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts _______________ By Amanda G. Beck May 2020 MISLEADING AND MISREPRESENTING THE AMERICAN YOUTH: “LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE” AND THE ORPHAN MYTH IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY _______________________________________ Amanda G. Beck APPROVED: _______________________________________ Marina Trninic, Visiting Assistant Professor Honors College Thesis Director ______________________________________ Douglas Erwing, Lecturer Honors College Second Reader _____________________________________ Robert Cremins, Lecturer Honors College Honors Reader _______________________________ William Monroe Dean of the Honors College ! MISLEADING AND MISREPRESENTING THE AMERICAN YOUTH: “LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE” AND THE ORPHAN MYTH IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY ________________ An Abstract of a Senior Honors Thesis Presented to The Faculty of the Department of The Honors College University of Houston ________________ In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts _______________ By Amanda G. Beck May 2020 ! Abstract ____________________________ This interdisciplinary thesis examines the myth of the orphan in twentieth-century America as exemplified through the recurring story of “Little Orphan Annie,” an iconic American figure of independence, resilience, and optimism. By providing historical context and literary analysis for each of Annie’s crucial moments in the twentieth century, this thesis shows how the character has advanced a misguided perception of orphan and youth agency. While evolving to represent different decades of American society in the twentieth century through different mediums, Annie has further misled Americans in their perception of orphan and youth agency.
    [Show full text]
  • Lanthorn, Vol. 24, No. 09, October 25, 1989 Grand Valley State University
    Grand Valley State University ScholarWorks@GVSU Volume 24 Lanthorn, 1968-2001 10-25-1989 Lanthorn, vol. 24, no. 09, October 25, 1989 Grand Valley State University Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/lanthorn_vol24 Part of the Archival Science Commons, Education Commons, and the History Commons Recommended Citation Grand Valley State University, "Lanthorn, vol. 24, no. 09, October 25, 1989" (1989). Volume 24. 9. http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/lanthorn_vol24/9 This Issue is brought to you for free and open access by the Lanthorn, 1968-2001 at ScholarWorks@GVSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Volume 24 by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@GVSU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. C Inside: \ Opinion........................p.4 Sports Campus Lif e ...............p.7 Campus Life Fbatures......................p. 10 Homecomminq celebration brin to AHenda Sports.......... ................p.13 Football team clinches last GLIAC title. S o c d d . 8-9 Classified Ad s ..........p. 15 See p. 13 Lanthorn WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25,1989 GRAND VALLEY STATE UNIVERSITY VOLUME 24 ISSUE 9 PRSSA Handles Senate Polls Students About Exam Schedule NutraSweet By Kimberly Valade “Although 350 students aren’t percent of the votes and had Fri­ 12 percent of the students polled, Staff Writer an extremely representative day | s a reading day with two while the remaining three percent Cam paign sample of the student body as a hour exams on Monday through chose “other.” Tim Dowker At its Thursday meeting, the whole, it is the best we could do Friday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • MODERN LETTERS Te P¯U Tahi Tuhi Auaha O Te Ao
    INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MODERN LETTERS Te P¯u tahi Tuhi Auaha o te Ao Newsletter – 8 December 2006 This is the 99th in a series of occasional newsletters from the Victoria University centre of the International Institute of Modern Letters. For more information about any of the items, please email [email protected] 1. Rugby script wins Embassy Trust Prize............................................................. 1 2. More scripting success......................................................................................... 2 3. Writing workshops (1): Short Fiction................................................................. 2 4. Writing workshops (2): Creative Non­Fiction.................................................... 2 5. Other lives............................................................................................................ 3 6. The loss of Oz Lit?............................................................................................... 3 7. The next half dozen.............................................................................................. 4 8. ‘Tis the season to be jolly (1) ............................................................................... 4 9. ‘Tis the season to be jolly (2) ............................................................................... 5 10. But wait, there’s more ....................................................................................... 5 11. Last call for Evil Advice!..................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Modern Charity: Morality, Politics, and Mid-Twentieth Century US Writing
    University of Kentucky UKnowledge Theses and Dissertations--English English 2019 Modern Charity: Morality, Politics, and Mid-Twentieth Century US Writing Matt Bryant Cheney University of Kentucky, [email protected] Author ORCID Identifier: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8237-6295 Digital Object Identifier: https://doi.org/10.13023/etd.2020.027 Right click to open a feedback form in a new tab to let us know how this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Bryant Cheney, Matt, "Modern Charity: Morality, Politics, and Mid-Twentieth Century US Writing" (2019). Theses and Dissertations--English. 101. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/english_etds/101 This Doctoral Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the English at UKnowledge. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations--English 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 needed written permission statement(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) which will be submitted to UKnowledge as Additional File. I hereby grant to The University of Kentucky and its agents the irrevocable, non-exclusive, and royalty-free license to archive and make accessible my work in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known.
    [Show full text]