1,093,002 research outputs found

    A tribute to Professor Roger Voisin, Trumpet, April 30, 1998

    Full text link
    This is the concert program of the A Tribute to Professor Roger Voisin, Trumpet performance on Thursday, April 30, 1998 at 7:00 p.m., at the Tsai Performance Center, 685 Commonwealth Avenue. Works performed were Fanfare for Voisin by Mel Broiles, Fanfare for Roger by Lukas Foss, Fanfare for Roger "à la Voisin" by Joseph Foley, and Concerto for Seven Trumpets and Timoani by Johann Ernst Altenberg. Digitization for Boston University Concert Programs was supported by the Boston University Humanities Library Endowed Fund

    Quiet City, trumpet manuscript

    Full text link
    Trumpet part for Aaron Copland's "Quiet City", copied out and annotated by Roger Voisin for use in performance. Top right corner signed by Copland: "For Roger Voisin who plays this like a dream. A Copland 1957"

    Four Poems

    Get PDF
    Poetry by Roger Nas

    Roger CPA Review

    Get PDF

    Keeping Gifted Education on the Agenda: Interview with Professor Roger Moltzen

    Get PDF
    Interview with Professor Roger Moltzen by Deborah Fraser

    The Experts Weigh In: Why You Should Pay Attention to Roger

    Get PDF
    History and legal experts debate the merits of Roger Williams’s work and legacy

    Letters to Roger Voisin

    Get PDF
    Letters to Voisin praising a performance by the Boston Symphony Orchestra in Reykjavik, Iceland in 1955. One is from Russell L. Riley, Director of the International Education Exchange Service, Department of State; and the other is from Naomi Huber, Cultural Affairs Officer, United States Foreign Service

    Roger CPA Review Questions

    Get PDF

    Roger Williams, The Founder of Providence – The Pioneer of Religious Liberty

    Get PDF
    By Amasa M. Eaton, A.M., LL.B. With Suggestions for Study in Schools by Clara E. Craig. Department of Education, State of Rhode Island. Rhode Island Education Circulars, Historical Series II – 1908. A biography of Roger Williams first delivered as an address before the Rhode Island Historical Society on October 2, 1906, on the unveiling of the tablets placed by the state to mark the site of the spring where the settlers first landed and on the site the Roger Williams Home Lot.https://digitalcommons.providence.edu/ri_history/1013/thumbnail.jp
    corecore