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comment nos diplômés en sciences sociales ont-ils bâti leur carrière? | How our social sciences alumni built their career
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I had a fabulous night out with my dear friend Andrew,
We did Hitchcock's all-you-can-eat vegetarian restaurant to start the evening, before heading to Prince's Avenue where Hoi had a karaoke night on.
I sang 2 songs! To start with, The Beautiful South - Don't Marry Her, then my karaoke go-to song Mika - Grace Kelly.
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I went out with my lovely friend Rebekah and we went into town round a few of the bars and pubs.
The day started for me at Piccolo for an amazing breakfast.
After that I popped down to see my Sister who whowed me the awesome and creepy birthday present they had got for my Niece - a couple of creepy dolls on a see-saw. Brilliant!
The evening, Rebekah and I went to The Star to begin with before heading across to the Freedom Quarter, where we saw some great live acts at Monroe's and finished the night in a new bar, Zinnia. It was a great night!
Some great live acts on in Monroe's.
“Campus Comments” was the campus newspaper published monthly at Mitchell College, in Statesville, North Carolina. An article in The Statesville Daily on Aug. 20, 1941, p. 3, gave a description of the local junior college newspaper. “The Comments used to be amimeographed, and last year it was a small, four-page paper that looked more like a grammar grade gazette than anything else.”
The Daily went on to say that, “They’re putting out a “Welcome to Mitchell” edition September 10th that will be big and good in comparison with other junior college newspapers and with pass editions of Campus Comments.” The September and October 1941 issues of Campus Comments are part of the Local History collection at the Iredell County Public Library and have been digitized made available for viewing on our Flickr site.
The September 1941 issue describes itself as the, “Liveliest Junior College Newspaper In North Carolina” and states, “We believe that this issue is unique in the fact that it is the first of its kind to be published in North Carolina.”
This ambitious campus newspaper publication is made possible by the talents of the paper’s student staff. The editor of the paper in 1941 is Louis Estell Laffoon (1923-2013) from Elkin, N.C. where her father Harvey Franklin Laffoon (1897-1978) is editor of the Elkin Tribune, and president of the Midwestern Press Association.
Other notable members of the papers staff include Statesville native Bill Powell (who graduated from Mitchell, served in WWII, and then returned to N.C. where he became known as William Stevens Powell (1919-2015), author and Professor of History at UNC-Chapel Hill and N.C.’s most distinguished historian. By May 1941, Powell’s younger sister, Frances Elizabeth Powell Gainor (1922-1996) was the papers editor.
Handling features and ads for the paper was Statesville native, Max Bailey Tharpe (1920-2010), who also after returning from WWII, would become one of N.C.’s most prominent newspaper and commercial photographers. The Max Tharpe Photograph Collection is a part of the Local History collection at the Iredell County Public Library and digitized photographs of his work can be found here on the library’s Flickr page under the “Max Tharpe Photograph Collection.”
Mitchell Community College was started by the Concord Presbytery in 1852 and opened at Concord Presbyterian Female College in the fall of 1856. Following the Civil War, the Presbytery suffered economically and in 1872 they sold the college to a local Statesville businessman Robert Falls Simonton (1827-1876). Simonton changed the name of the college to Simonton Female College.
In 1904 the Concord Presbytery once again took control of Mitchell College. In 1917 the college was renamed Mitchell College in honor of Eliza Mitchell Grant and Margaret Eliot Mitchell who were longtime teachers and administrators at the college. The two sisters began at the college in 1875 and were the daughters of Professor Elisha Mitchell for whom Mount Mitchell is named.
In 1924 the college changed from a four-year to a two-year college. In 1932 the college opened admittance to men and in 1959 the Mitchell College Foundation took control of the college over from the Presbytery and operated it as an independent junior college. In 1973, Mitchell College became a part of the North Carolina Community College system and the name was changed to Mitchell Community College.
Joel Reese, Local History Librarian
Iredell County Public Library
July 26, 2021
“Campus Comments” was the campus newspaper published monthly at Mitchell College, in Statesville, North Carolina. An article in The Statesville Daily on Aug. 20, 1941, p. 3, gave a description of the local junior college newspaper. “The Comments used to be amimeographed, and last year it was a small, four-page paper that looked more like a grammar grade gazette than anything else.”
The Daily went on to say that, “They’re putting out a “Welcome to Mitchell” edition September 10th that will be big and good in comparison with other junior college newspapers and with pass editions of Campus Comments.” The September and October 1941 issues of Campus Comments are part of the Local History collection at the Iredell County Public Library and have been digitized made available for viewing on our Flickr site.
The September 1941 issue describes itself as the, “Liveliest Junior College Newspaper In North Carolina” and states, “We believe that this issue is unique in the fact that it is the first of its kind to be published in North Carolina.”
This ambitious campus newspaper publication is made possible by the talents of the paper’s student staff. The editor of the paper in 1941 is Louis Estell Laffoon (1923-2013) from Elkin, N.C. where her father Harvey Franklin Laffoon (1897-1978) is editor of the Elkin Tribune, and president of the Midwestern Press Association.
Other notable members of the papers staff include Statesville native Bill Powell (who graduated from Mitchell, served in WWII, and then returned to N.C. where he became known as William Stevens Powell (1919-2015), author and Professor of History at UNC-Chapel Hill and N.C.’s most distinguished historian. By May 1941, Powell’s younger sister, Frances Elizabeth Powell Gainor (1922-1996) was the papers editor.
Handling features and ads for the paper was Statesville native, Max Bailey Tharpe (1920-2010), who also after returning from WWII, would become one of N.C.’s most prominent newspaper and commercial photographers. The Max Tharpe Photograph Collection is a part of the Local History collection at the Iredell County Public Library and digitized photographs of his work can be found here on the library’s Flickr page under the “Max Tharpe Photograph Collection.”
Mitchell Community College was started by the Concord Presbytery in 1852 and opened at Concord Presbyterian Female College in the fall of 1856. Following the Civil War, the Presbytery suffered economically and in 1872 they sold the college to a local Statesville businessman Robert Falls Simonton (1827-1876). Simonton changed the name of the college to Simonton Female College.
In 1904 the Concord Presbytery once again took control of Mitchell College. In 1917 the college was renamed Mitchell College in honor of Eliza Mitchell Grant and Margaret Eliot Mitchell who were longtime teachers and administrators at the college. The two sisters began at the college in 1875 and were the daughters of Professor Elisha Mitchell for whom Mount Mitchell is named.
In 1924 the college changed from a four-year to a two-year college. In 1932 the college opened admittance to men and in 1959 the Mitchell College Foundation took control of the college over from the Presbytery and operated it as an independent junior college. In 1973, Mitchell College became a part of the North Carolina Community College system and the name was changed to Mitchell Community College.
Joel Reese, Local History Librarian
Iredell County Public Library
July 26, 2021
Participants in workshop sessions for Gadget Day were given a chance to provide feedback. A complete set of the day's comments can be found at wic.library.upenn.edu/multimedia/docs/gadget-day-feedback...
ringrazio Stefanopa per essere stato il fotografo ufficiale della festa! non s'è perso niente.... ma proprio niente!
Vernissage le mercredi 4 juin à 19h
Comment j'ai inventé Édith Scob, suite...Hélène Delprat en collaboration avec Benoît Pfauwadel.
À la Maison d’Art Bernard Anthonioz, Hélène Delprat poursuit le travail qu’elle a amorcé à l’occasion de l’atelier de création radiophonique que lui avait confié France Culture en octobre dernier. Jeux de masques et de vérité, jeu de rôle autour du personnage d’Edith Scob, récit d’une rencontre mis en exposition, représentation d’un échange, journal à deux qui ouvre une nouvelle scène avec cette fois des images qui se plaquent sur les sons, les mots, les récits. Au croisement du cinéma et de ses monstres, du théâtre, de ses décors et de ses oripeaux, Hélène Delprat déballe son « vrac » fantastique et burlesque : automates, peintures, masques, silhouettes, vidéos, découpages...Et maintenant : Fermez les yeux, ouvrez les yeux, fermez...
Tous les jours, sauf les mardis et les jours fériés, de 12h à 18h, en entrée libre.
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This illustrated comment in the Visitors' Book in St Mary's church, Rotherhithe, caught my eye and was, I felt, worth reproducing, especially in the light of the current conflicts, particularly in the Middle East. If only the world could return to the harmonies of medieval Cordoba, when Muslims, Jews and Christians worked together in peace for the common good. They proved that it can be done.
See comment below and here for more information.
From the Doors Open Oshawa website:
The museum, built in the 1920’s and established in 1961, is located in a former car dealership. There are approximately 65 vehicles dating from 1898 to 1981, showcasing the development of the automobile. The building contains its original freight elevator.
Oshawa, Ontario.
Image via "" by justlego1O1 flickr.com/photos/103739566@N06/19627414508 is licensed under CC BY-SA
Original: readwriterespond.com/c/2017/comment-more