3,425 research outputs found

    Commemorating Connolly: contexts, comparisons and Celtic connections

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    Gerry Fitt: Ulster Politician

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    Senior Recital, Jack Tierney, guitar

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    Senior RecitalJack Tierney, guitarwith Griffin Sisk, alto saxophone; Chet Frierson, tenor saxophone; James Joyner, bass; Bryan Connolly, drumsSaturday, April 27, 2019 at 8pmRecital Hall / James W. Black Music Center1015 Grove Avenue / Richmond, Va.The presentation of this Senior Recital will fulfill in part the requirements for the Bachelor of Music degree in Jazz Studies. Jack Tierney studies guitar with Mike Ess

    10.2 Epistemology / 20th Anniversary – Part 1

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    Richard Kostelanetz, Umberto Eco, Fernando Aguiar, Philippe Sollers, Sandra Birdsell, W.M. Sutherland, Spencer Selby, Louis Dudek, Frank Davey, Dennis Oppenheim, Brion Gysin, George Bowering, Jim McCrary on William Burroughs, Mel Freilicher on Kathy Acker, Helen Lovekin, Karen MacCormack, Steve McCaffery, Peter Jaeger, Taylor Brady, Christine Germain, Paul Dutton, Mark Laliberte, Sheila E. Murphy, Colin Morton, Paget Norton, Sam Patterson, Norman Lock, George Swede, Craig Foltz, Carole A. Turner, Linda Kivi, Lee Henderson, Mark Kerwin, Antonio Gomez, A. Connolly, Maggie Helwig, Joellie Ethier, Gary Barwin, Frank Sauers, Henry Ferris, David King, Jaqueline W. Turner, Paul Vermeersch, Chris Belsito, k ripp, Barry Butson, Denis Robillard, Brian D. Johnston, Irving Weiss, Kateri Akiwenzie-Damm, Alootook Ipellie, Rolland Nadjiwon, William George, Antanas Sileika, Fausto Bedoya, Andrew Palcic. Cover Art: Francisco Aliseda

    The Cowl - v.11 - n.13 - Mar 02, 1949

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    The Cowl - student newspaper of Providence College. Volume 11, Number 12 - March 2, 1949. 6 pages

    The Cowl - v.11 - n.19 - May 02, 1949

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    The Cowl - student newspaper of Providence College. Volume 11, Number 19 - May 2, 1949. 2 pages

    Connolly, Nancy oral history interview

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    Nancy Connolly was born on February 8, 1948 in Marstown, New Jersey. She attended the University of Maine at Orono for two years and the University of Southern Maine for two years. She was active with Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and worked for Model Cities in Portland on the Crime and Juvenile Delinquency Task Force. After college graduation, she worked for St. Elizabeth’s Child Care Program, then with Head Start. She married Larry Connolly in the early 1970s, who worked for Model Cities and later was a state legislator for 16 years, beginning in 1972. After her husband’s death in 1988, she was granted a fellowship from the Muskie School of Public Service. After earning her master’s degree, she did consulting work, and in 1995 became the executive director for the Y.W.C.A. At the time of this interview she was working for the public service research arm of the Muskie School

    After conflict - placing the Sinn FĂ©in party in a comparative politics context

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    Sinn FĂ©in, the party most associated with the in public discourse with the term ‘republican’ in Ireland, is a party undergoing a process of development. It has been suggested that its recent electoral success would result in Sinn FĂ©in moving to the centre and abandoning the civic republican focus on equality, political participation/activism and a national political project with a strong internationalist context – with which it has identified. However while aspects of Sinn FĂ©in policy remain fluid and can lack clarity the evidence surveyed for this paper suggests that the party is not moving to the political centre on issues of social and economic equality, but is retaining a strong leftist, pro-equality agenda. Post Good Friday Agreement Sinn FĂ©in is in its rhetoric keeping the issue of Irish unity strongly to the fore, in its manifestos both North and South. In an era of globalisation it has placed itself with the anti-corporate globalisation groupings and against right-wing nationalist parties with an anti-immigration platform. Finally, in an era of media-politics it is retaining its traditional focus on high levels of activism and participation among party members

    Collective Leadership in Contemporary Irish Nationalism: The Writing of Gerry Adams

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    Tracing its origins to Theobald Wolfe Tone\u27s United Irishmen, founded in Belfast on October 18, 1791, Irish Republicanism has evolved from its original anti-sectarian, Lockean principles as represented by Tone1 to a modern movement encompassing national self-determination, antisectarianism, cultural nationalism, radical social policies, the politics of electoralism, as well as support for the armed struggle dedicated to British withdrawal from Northern Ireland and a united Ireland. Today, the modern Irish Republican movement is best represented by the political party Sinn Fein. The party\u27s present leadership, headed by its president Gerry Adams, has changed the politics and strategies of Sinn Fein and the entire Republican movement
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