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A very British bacchanalia : classical themes in the works of Joe Orton /Sanfilippo, Danielle J. January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Undergraduate honors paper--Mount Holyoke College, 2009. Dept. of English. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 70-71).
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Joe Henderson an analysis of harmony in selected compositions and improvisations /White, Arthur Lynn. January 1900 (has links)
Dissertation (D.M.A.)--The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 2008. / Directed by Steven Stusek; submitted to the School of Music. Title from PDF t.p. (viewed Sep. 4, 2009). Includes bibliographical references (p. 100-101).
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From a small centre: Joe Friday's contemporary art collection /Rose, Amy Dawn, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.) - Carleton University, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 146-152). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
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Food safety risk: consumer food purchase modelsYeung, Ruth Mo Wah 07 1900 (has links)
Recent high profile food safety incidents in the United Kingdom have shaken
consumer confidence in food products. Consumer perception of risk is seen to be
very relevant to food safety issues. The impact of this perceived risk on purchase
behaviour is also critical to the development of risk management strategies by
authorities responsible for public health and the food industry. Focusing on fresh
chicken meat products, this study explored the relationship between food risk
characteristics, consumer perception of food safety related risk, consumer purchase
behaviour and actions that can be taken to reduce the exposure to food risk.
Following an extensive literature review, an exploratory study in the form of face-toface
interviews was carried out to clarify the main concerns of food hazards, and to
identify the items of perceived consequent loss and risk reducing strategies adopted
by consumers. The findings were verified through a quantitative survey of 200
respondents. The data was presented in the form of Structural Equation Modelling,
and analysed by the LISREL 8.30 statistical package. The results showed that
consumer risk perception was affected by a range of risk characteristics, such as
consumer concern about the severity of the food risk, and the potential long-term
adverse effect on future generation and environment. The main elements of perceived
loss associated with food safety were health, financial, time, lifestyle and taste losses,
and these were shown to have a negative effect on purchase likelihood. Two other
risk characteristics namely, perceived knowledge and own control of the food risk
were found to be linked directly and positively to consumer purchase likelihood. Risk
reducing strategies such as branded product, product quality assurance and product
information adopted by consumers were identified and found to be consistent with the
marketing strategies used by the food industry. These risk-reducing strategies have a
negative relationship with consumer risk perception.
This study presented empirical evidence for characterising types of food risks and
explains how food risks and risk reducing strategies affect consumer risk perception
as well as purchase likelihood. Consequently, two quantitative consumer food
purchase models were developed. These models can help the government and the food
industry to identify key factors to develop systematic strategies for risk management
and risk communication in order to allocate resources efficiently and effectively. They
can also use these models to measure the effectiveness of their risk management
policy in the times of concern about food safety.
This study recommends further research to apply these models in other types of food
products and other types of risk, such as chemical risk, and technological risk, in
particular for those risks which are beyond the control of consumers. The differences
in risk perception between cultures and socio-economic groupings should be explored
further. This is a valid topic for further research and provides potential benefits for
consumers and food industry as a whole.
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ForewordOlson, Ted 07 April 2017 (has links)
Book Summary: Joe Wilson served for twenty-eight years as executive director of the National Folk Festival and National Council for Traditional Arts. Throughout his impressive career, Wilson wrote extensively and colorfully about many facets of vernacular music in North America, including works on major folk instruments, as well as on characteristic musical styles, especially old-time, bluegrass, modern country, blues, cowboy, a cappella gospel, and others. This volume, a companion to Lucky Joe's Namesake: The Extraordinary Life and Observations of Joe Wilson, compiles Wilson's best writings on musical topics, including some previously unpublished works.With wry humor, Wilson covers the origins of roots music in eighteenth-century America and its subsequent dispersion through races, classes, ethnic groups, and newly settled regions. Wilson knew, worked with, and wrote about many iconic artists of the twentieth century, including Willie Nelson, Doc Watson, Clarence Ashley, the Stanley Brothers, Kenny Baker, Cephas & Wiggins, John Jackson, and members of the Hill Billies - the band whose name came to signify an entire genre of the earliest recorded roots music. This carefully curated volume is comprised of works previously scattered in liner notes, small-circulation magazines, tour booklets, and unpublished manuscripts, all collected here and organized by theme.The writings of this legendary, internationally recognized figure will be indispensable to roots music fans and will delight readers and students interested in the traditional arts and dedicated to preserving historic folkways.
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An analysis of Joe Lovano's tenor saxophone improvisation on Misterioso by Thelonius Monk an exercise in multi-dimensional thematicism /Dahlke, Andrew Richard. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (D.M.A.)--University of North Texas, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references and discography.
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Self-inscriptions : ethnic, indigenous, linguistic and female identity constructions in Canadian minority life writing. A comparison of Apolonja Kojder's "Marynia, Don't Cry" and Rita Joe's "Song of Rita Joe"Kordus, Joanna 11 1900 (has links)
Despite Canada’s official policy of multiculturalism, until recently, the perspectives of the
country’s lesser-known, marginalized writers have not been usually taken into
consideration in mainstream discussions on the nature of Canadian identity and its socio
cultural mosaic. Specifically, minority life writing narratives had generally received little
critical attention in Canada. This paper aims to fill this slowly-decreasing gap through the
exploration of two texts whose female writers negotiate their distinct ethnic and national
selves within the cultural dominant of Canada. The essay compares Apolonja Kojder’s
Polish-Canadian memoir, Marynia, Don’t Cry, to Rita Joe’s Mi’kmaq-Canadian
autobiography, Song of Rita Joe. The analysis of these texts sets the Polish and Aboriginal
communities into conversation, and yields a discussion on the nature of cultural, national,
linguistic and female identity. It argues that identity is political, relational and always in process.
Since much of the personal narrative writers’ identity struggle in an alien land
and language often unravels as a translation of the self into another world, the two
personal narratives add nuance to our understanding of the contradictions found in
institutional policies. The study creates awareness of the literary and discursive strategies
by which writers of disadvantaged communities challenge and subvert cultural oppression,
identity misconstructions, and the exclusion of ethnic and women’s histories from within
mainstream society. However, through the textual hybridization of cultures, languages,
histories and life experiences, Kojder’s and Joe’s intention is to facilitate understanding
across groups, create respect for diversity, propel social participation and induce socio
political transformation. This paper means to shed light on the Canadian experience in its
unique variations, and to add to life writing studies on ethnic and national individuals’
personal encounters with and within the Canadian socio- cultural and political milieu.
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An analysis of Joe Lovano's tenor saxophone improvisation on Misterioso by Thelonius Monk an exercise in multi-dimensional thematicism /Dahlke, Andrew Richard. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (D.M.A.)--University of North Texas, 2003. / Accompanied by 4 recitals, recorded Apr. 23, 2001, Nov. 19, 2001, Apr. 15, 2002, and Apr. 24, 2003. Includes bibliographical references and discography (p. 89-99).
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Self-inscriptions : ethnic, indigenous, linguistic and female identity constructions in Canadian minority life writing. A comparison of Apolonja Kojder's "Marynia, Don't Cry" and Rita Joe's "Song of Rita Joe"Kordus, Joanna 11 1900 (has links)
Despite Canada’s official policy of multiculturalism, until recently, the perspectives of the
country’s lesser-known, marginalized writers have not been usually taken into
consideration in mainstream discussions on the nature of Canadian identity and its socio
cultural mosaic. Specifically, minority life writing narratives had generally received little
critical attention in Canada. This paper aims to fill this slowly-decreasing gap through the
exploration of two texts whose female writers negotiate their distinct ethnic and national
selves within the cultural dominant of Canada. The essay compares Apolonja Kojder’s
Polish-Canadian memoir, Marynia, Don’t Cry, to Rita Joe’s Mi’kmaq-Canadian
autobiography, Song of Rita Joe. The analysis of these texts sets the Polish and Aboriginal
communities into conversation, and yields a discussion on the nature of cultural, national,
linguistic and female identity. It argues that identity is political, relational and always in process.
Since much of the personal narrative writers’ identity struggle in an alien land
and language often unravels as a translation of the self into another world, the two
personal narratives add nuance to our understanding of the contradictions found in
institutional policies. The study creates awareness of the literary and discursive strategies
by which writers of disadvantaged communities challenge and subvert cultural oppression,
identity misconstructions, and the exclusion of ethnic and women’s histories from within
mainstream society. However, through the textual hybridization of cultures, languages,
histories and life experiences, Kojder’s and Joe’s intention is to facilitate understanding
across groups, create respect for diversity, propel social participation and induce socio
political transformation. This paper means to shed light on the Canadian experience in its
unique variations, and to add to life writing studies on ethnic and national individuals’
personal encounters with and within the Canadian socio- cultural and political milieu.
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The Effects of a Jaw-Opening Exercise on Submental Muscles and Hyoid Movement During Swallowing in Healthy AdultsDavies, Sarah Elyse January 2012 (has links)
Objective: Traditionally, swallowing rehabilitation has involved the use of muscle strengthening exercises, such as the head-lift manoeuvre (Shaker et al., 1997), to strengthen the floor of mouth muscles. Clinical reasoning suggests that this particular exercise may be problematic for patients with cervical spine injuries or increased frailty. Recently, Bauer and Huckabee (2010) attempted to determine the efficacy of an alternative exercise for the floor of mouth muscles in healthy adults. The present study aims to expand on this work in a larger population of healthy adults.
Study design: Controlled trial; participants matched for age and sex.
Participants: 23 healthy adults with no history of neurological or muscular impairment.
Method: Participants were assigned into one of two groups: jaw opening exercise (JOE; n = 12) and sham exercise (SE; n = 11). Groups were matched for age and gender. Participants performed their respective exercises three times per day, five days per week, over a six week period. At three times during this period, measures of submental 2-D cross-sectional area and anterior hyoid movement were taken via ultrasound. Additionally, measures of submental muscle myoelectrical activity were taken via surface electromyography. Pre- and post-treatment comparisons, as well as inter-group comparisons, were undertaken.
Results: No significant differences were observed between groups on measures of muscle size, anterior hyoid movement, or myoelectrical activity over time. However, this study has contributed to the future development of an alternative exercise to target the submental muscle group.
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