User:Roger A. Lohmann/sandbox
"There isn't anything fun to do. Let's go play in the sandbox."
- Anon. (Age 8)
Article Ideas, Fragments, etc
ARNOVA
Association for Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action
The Association for Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action (ARNOVA) was established in 1989 in a re-organization and broadening of the mission of the Association of Voluntary Action Scholars. The association has more than 1,000 members from more than two dozen disciplines and professions and is the sponsor of the peer-reviewed academic journal Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly. The association headquarters are in Indianapolis, Indiana on the campus of IUPUI.
Activities
Presidents
See Also
References
External Links
Association of Voluntary Action Scholars
The Association of Voluntary Action Scholars was established in 1972 by David Horton Smith and a number of colleagues. The Journal of Voluntary Action Research (1973-1988) was the official journal of the association.
Modern House
"Modern House" refers to a residential dwelling or structure incorporating some or all of a number of "modern" features, including any or all of the following incorporated into the original design and construction:
- Electrical wiring and outlets
- internet connectivity/local area networks
- Small and large appliances
- Indoor plumbing, particularly running water and sewage service for the removal of human and household wastes
- Piped in 'natural gas' for cooking or heating
- Central heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC)
- Modern kitchen facilities such as electric or gas stoves for cooking, ovens, refrigeration and freezers for food storage
- Garages or carports designed for automobiles
- "Open plan" design features, such as:
- - Absence of walls between functional areas
- - Curtain (non-load bearing) walls
- - Archways, pass throughs and counters
- - More and larger windows and glass expanses (including window walls)
- - "Family rooms", dens or recreation rooms
Modern houses are also characterized by the absence of certain characteristics, including:
- Horse barns or stables.
- Servant's quarters or rooms.
Modern houses also use new or innovative building materials including:
- Concrete
- Plywood and various processed (kiln-dried, chemically treated, pre-stressed, et. al.) wood products
- Plastics and synthetic materials for pipes, counters, insulation and waterproofing foundations and many other features
- Wall board rather than lathe and plaster walls
- Latex paints
Modern houses also tend to use innovative construction techniques including:
- Flat pitched roofs with wider overhangs
- Cantilevered porches
- Single-story designs emphasizing horizontal
- Eight foot to three meter ceiling heights rather than higher (12 foot to 4 meter) ceilings
To incorporate or retrofit any of these modern features into an older house (e.g., to bring running water, indoor plumbing, or electricity into an older farm house) is frequently referred to as "modernizing" it.
Individual modern houses may also be part of larger multi-house complexes built simultaneously, concurrently or sequentially, known as estates, tracts, developments, suburbs, or subdivisions. Sometimes such developments are derisively called "mass produced" housing.
Modern houses also tend to be characterized by the absence of certain features such as:
- Carriage houses or barns for horses
- Hitching posts
- Porte corcheres
- Separate rooms or wings for "live in" servants or employees
- Parlors and specialized rooms for "receiving" guests
Origins of The Modern House
Architecturally, the international origins of the modern house can be traced to a variety of influences, notably two architects the American Frank Lloyd Wright and the French architect Charles-Édouard Jeanneret-Gris, better known as Le Corbusier and a host of less celebrated architects of the Bauhaus, Prairie School, and International Style
Major Contributors to Third Sector Studies
- Helmut Anheier: German-American sociologist, administrator and civil society researcher who is founding co-editor of Voluntas and editor of The Encyclopedia of Civil Society. [e]
- Edith Archambault: Add brief definition or description
- David Billis: Add brief definition or description
- Thomasina Borkman: Add brief definition or description
- L. David Brown: Add brief definition or description
- Dwight Burlingame: Add brief definition or description
- Adelbert Evers: Add brief definition or description
- Peter Dobkin Hall: (1946-2015) Cultural historian, archivist and an early leader of the Program on Nonprofit Organizations (PONPO) at Harvard University, Professor of History and Theory in the School of Public Affairs, Baruch College, City University of New York, and Senior Research Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School's Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations. His best known book is Inventing the Nonprofit Sector. [e]
- David Hammack: Add brief definition or description
- Margaret Harris: Add brief definition or description
- Gabor Hegyesi: Add brief definition or description
- Robert D. Herman: Add brief definition or description
- Ralph Kramer: (1921-2020) Professor of social welfare at the University of California, Berkeley, national and international recognized for his contributions to understanding the role of nonprofit voluntary social service organizations within the welfare state. [e]
- Vic Murray: Add brief definition or description
- John McNutt: Add brief definition or description
- Felice Davidson Perlmutter: (1933-2020) Professor of social work at Temple University, and founder of the Theories, Issues and Boundaries Section of ARNOVA, remembered for her pioneering studies of the transition of social workers from direct service roles into management. [e]
- Jack Quarter: (1942-2019) Professor at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE) of the University of Toronto for 47 years, where he led research and edited and published widely on co-operatives and the social economy. [e]
- Michael O'Neill: Add brief definition or description
- Susan Ostrander: Add brief definition or description
- Mark Rosenman: Add brief definition or description
- Judith Saidel: Add brief definition or description
- Lester Salamon: Add brief definition or description
- Harold Saunders: Add brief definition or description
- Helmut Schmidt: Add brief definition or description
- David Horton Smith: Add brief definition or description
- John Palmer Smith: Add brief definition or description
- Darwin Stapleton: Add brief definition or description
- Rich Sundeen: Add brief definition or description
- Rajesh Tandon: Add brief definition or description
- Marilyn Taylor: Add brief definition or description
- Gene Temple: Add brief definition or description
- Jon Van Til: A pioneer in nonprofit organization research and education and the third sector, with particular interests in voluntary action, civil society and theories of the third sector, Editor of the Journal of Voluntary Action Research and Editor, Nonprofit and Voluntary Action Quarterly. [e]
- Antonin Wagner: Add brief definition or description
- Arthur Williamson: Add brief definition or description
- Dennis Young: Add brief definition or description
Jon Van Til
Jon Van Til is one of the pioneers in nonprofit organization research and education and the third sector, with particular interests in voluntary action, civil society and theories of the third sector. Dr. Van Til is Professor Emeritus of Urban Studies and Community Planning at Rutgers University, Camden.
He was born in 1939 in Columbus OH to Professor William Van Til and Beatrice (Blaha) Van Til. He is married to Agnes Kover-Van Til; and has two children from an earlier marriage: Ross Van Til of Louisville, Colorado and Claire Van Til of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Van Til received a BA (High Honors; Phi Beta Kappa) from Swarthmore College in Political Science in 1961 and an MA in Sociology from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill in 1963. He earned a Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of California, Berkeley in 1970. His dissertation title is “Becoming Participants: Dynamics of Access Among the Welfare Poor”. (Robert Blauner, advisor)
Recent Work
His recent writings on social movements in Hungary are reported in two co-edited books and in contributed articles in the Huffington Post. Van Til divides his time between homes in Seelyville, Indiana and Budapest. He is married to Agnes Kover, the Hungarian human rights lawyer and sociologist.
Van Til is the past director of the Pennsylvania Law and Justice Institute (1972–1974), and served as Editor-in-Chief of Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly from 1989-1992 (formerly the Journal of Voluntary Action Research from 1978 through 1989. He was twice elected President of the Association of Voluntary Action Scholars, and is the founding Board Chair of the Center for Nonprofit Corporations (Trenton, New Jersey). Van Til has also served as a Trustee of the George H. Gallup International Institute. Among the national clients of Van Til's consulting in the area of voluntary and nonprofit action have been the National Service Secretariat, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, Health Visions Inc., the University of Colorado, the University of Pennsylvania, and the United Way of Central Indiana.
In 1991 he was recognized as "Creative Teacher of the Year" at Rutgers for developing his campus' program in Citizenship and Service Education. In 1994, he received the Career Award for Distinguished Research and Service from the Association for Research in Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action.
Van Til was named Fulbright Distinguished Professor at the University of Ulster during the Spring term, 2004, serving in the Magee College’s INCORE and Centre for Voluntary Action Studies. In the academic year 2005–6 he served as Fulbright Senior Specialist at INCORE.
Van Til served as Fulbright Specialist to Hungary's ELTE University for the academic year 2010–11, and at the Budapest University of Jewish Studies in 2014. He continues at that university at present, serving as visiting senior scholar and an active pracademic in the Budapest community. He also serves as senior visiting scholar at the Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy.
Van Til also served as President of the Philadelphia/Delaware Valley Chapter of the Fulbright Association, and as Anna Deane Carlson Distinguished Visiting Chair in Social Science at West Virginia University from 2003–05. His biography has been included in Who's Who in America after 2006.
Bibliography
Books
His twelve books include Van Til, Jon (2008). Breaching Derry's Walls. Growing Civil Society (2008, 2000), Mapping the Third Sector: Voluntarism in a Changing Social Economy; (1988), and Living With Energy Shortfall (1982).
Edited books
The Hungarian Patient co-edited with Peter Krasztev. Budapest and New York: Central European University Press. 2015.
Tarka Ellenallas. (The Colors Revolution), co-edited with Peter Krasztev. Budapest: Napvilag Kiadonal, 2013.
Resolving Community Conflicts and Problems: Public Deliberation and Sustained Dialogue. Columbia University Press, 2011 (co-edited with Roger A. Lohmann).
Gabor Hegyesi ’60—A Festschrift (co-edited with Andras Kelen). Budapest College of Management Press, 2008
Nonprofit Boards of Directors. co-edited with Robert Herman (Transaction Press, 1988)
Shifting the Debate: Public/Private Sector Relations in the Modern Welfare State. co-edited with Susan Ostrander and Stuart Langton (Transaction Press, 1987)
Leaders and Followers: Challenges for the Future., co-edited with Trudy Heller and Louis Zurcher (JAI Press, 1986.)
International Perspectives on Voluntary Action Research, co-edited with David Horton Smith. (University Press of America, 1982).
Encyclopedia and major handbook articles
“Grassroots Social Movements and the Shaping of History”, with Gabor Hegyesi and Jennifer Eschweiler. Ch. 23 in Ram Cnaan and Carl Milofsky, eds., Handbook of Community Movements and Local Organizations. New York: Springer. pp. 362–377. 2006.
"Civil Society", with Timothy Peterson. In Philanthropy in America: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia, Dwight F. Burlingame, Editor. ABC-Clio. 2004.
"Utopian Thought in Philanthropy." In Philanthropy in America: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia, Dwight F. Burlingame, Editor. ABC-Clio.
"Nonprofit Organizations and Social Institutions." Ch. 2 in Robert Herman, ed., The Jossey-Bass Handbook of Nonprofit Leadership and Management. second edition (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass). pp. 39–62.2002
"Voluntary Associations", with Arthur P. Williamson. In International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences. Elsevier Science Ltd. 2001
“Change Leadership or Change Management?” With David A. Pettrone Swalve. Ch. 3 in Tracy Daniel Connors, ed., The Nonprofit Management Handbook: Management. Third edition (New York: Wiley). pp. 65–83.
"Metaphors and Visions for the Voluntary Sector." Ch. 1 in Tracy Daniel Connors, ed., The Volunteer Management Handbook. (New York: Wiley). 1995. pp. 3–11.
"National Service: Twenty Questions and Some Answers." Ch. 18 in Tracy Daniel Connors, ed., The Volunteer Management Handbook. (New York: Wiley). pp. 361–378. 1994
"Nonprofit Organizations and Social Institutions." Ch. 2 in Robert Herman, ed., The Jossey-Bass Handbook of Nonprofit Leadership and Management. (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass). pp. 44–64.
References
Who's Who in America. 2015. 69th Edition (pub. 2014)
Who's Who in American Education - 2004-2005, 6th Edition (pub. 2003)
Who's Who in the East - 1989-1990, 22nd Edition (pub. 1988)
Other Article Stubs
W.G. Sebald
Winfried Georg Sebald (usually identified as W.G. Sebald) was born May 18, 1944 in Wertach, Allegau, Germany and died December 14, 2001 in Norfolk, England.
The following list are for articles that need to be written by someone:
List of Communitarians
(One of the things that unites nearly all communitarians is that they deny that's what they are! The label is attributed by others).
List of Neoconservatives
- William Kristol: Add brief definition or description
- Irving Kristol: Add brief definition or description
- Paul Wolfowitz: Add brief definition or description
- L. Paul Bremer: Add brief definition or description
- Charles Krauthammer: Add brief definition or description
- Francis Fukuyama: Add brief definition or description
- Donald Kagan: Add brief definition or description
- Robert Kagan: Add brief definition or description
- Frederick Kagan: Add brief definition or description
- Kimberly Kagan: Add brief definition or description
- John Podhoretz: Add brief definition or description
- Bret Stephens: Add brief definition or description
- Midge Decter: Add brief definition or description
- Richard Perle: Add brief definition or description
- Norman Podhoretz: Add brief definition or description
- John Podhoretz: Add brief definition or description
- Elliott Abrams: Add brief definition or description
- Rachel Abrams: Add brief definition or description
- Patrick Buchanan: Add brief definition or description
- Douglas Feith: Add brief definition or description
- Scooter Libby: Add brief definition or description
- Clifford May: Add brief definition or description
- Max Boot: Add brief definition or description
- Randy Scheunemann: Add brief definition or description
- Gary Schmitt: Add brief definition or description
- Danielle Pletka: Add brief definition or description
- Jamie Fly: Add brief definition or description
- Justin Väisse: Add brief definition or description
- Daniel Patrick Moynihan: Add brief definition or description
- Jeane Kirkpatrick: Add brief definition or description
- John Bolton: Add brief definition or description
- David Frum: Add brief definition or description
- Joshua Muravchik: Add brief definition or description
- Daniel Senor: Add brief definition or description
- Kimberly Kessler: Add brief definition or description
- Liz Cheney: Add brief definition or description
- Dick Cheney: Add brief definition or description
Needed Articles
- Pittsburgh Survey: Add brief definition or description
- American Museum of Natural History: Add brief definition or description
- John James Audubon: Add brief definition or description
- Henry Burgh: Add brief definition or description
- Thomas Mayne Reid: Add brief definition or description
- Robert B. Roosevelt: Add brief definition or description
- John Burroughs: Add brief definition or description
- Frank Chapman: Add brief definition or description
- George Bird Grinnell: Add brief definition or description
- National Wildlife Refuge System: Add brief definition or description
- U.S. Forest Service: Add brief definition or description
- Hetch Hetchy Valley: Add brief definition or description
- Yosemite Valley: Add brief definition or description
- Yosemite National Park: Add brief definition or description
- Mariposa Grove: Add brief definition or description
- Street: Add brief definition or description
- Arrondissement: Add brief definition or description
- Lionel Trilling: Add brief definition or description
- David Riesman: Add brief definition or description
- The New Freeman: Add brief definition or description
- Commentary: Add brief definition or description
- The Menorah Journal: Add brief definition or description
- International Herald Tribune: Add brief definition or description
- Nicholas Murray Butler: Add brief definition or description
- American Jewish Committee: Add brief definition or description
- Paris Review: Add brief definition or description
Theater
Title | Composer/Librettist | Setting | Main Characters | Date First Produced |
Date Movie |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Annie Get Your Gun | Irving Berlin | Annie Oakley, "Buffalo Bill" Cody | 1946 | 1950 | |
Aspects of Love | Andrew Lloyd Webber | 1948 | 1948 | 1948 | |
Cats | Andrew Lloyd Webber | 1900 | 1900 | ||
Evita | Andrew Lloyd Webber | Argentina | 1900 | ||
Meet Me In St. Louis | Irving Brecker/Fred Finklehoffe | Worlds Fair of 1904 | The Smith family | 1944 | |
My Fair Lady | Edwardian London | 1900 | |||
New York, New York | 1900 | 1900 | |||
Oklahoma | Richard Rodgers/Oscar Hammerstein Jr. | Oklahoma Territory | Curley McLain, Laurey Williams | 1941 | 1955 |
Oliver | |||||
Pal Joey | 1900 | ||||
Private Lives | Noël Coward | London | 1930 | ||
Phantom of the Opera | Andrew Lloyd Webber | Paris Opera, Paris Sewer | 1941 | 1943 | |
The Sound of Music | Austria | 1900 | 1900 | ||
South Pacific | Richard Rodgers/Oscar Hammerstein Jr. | WWII in Pacific | 1949 | 1958 | |
State Fair | Richard Rodgers/Oscar Hammerstein Jr. | Iowa State Fair | The Frake family | 1996 | 1945 |
West Side Story | Leonard Bernstein | 1900 | 1900 | ||
Wonderful Town | NYC | 1900 | 1900 | ||
Where’s Charley? | 1900 | ||||
The King and I | Siam | 1900 | |||
Guys and Dolls | Broadway | 1900 | |||
London Calling | Noel Coward | London | Willy & George Craft | 1923 | |
Kiss Me Kate | |||||
A Chorus Line | |||||
Hair | |||||
No No Nanette | |||||
Jesus Christ, Superstar | Tom Rice/Andrew Lloyd Webber | ||||
Max and | |||||
Gypsy | Steven Sondheim | 1971 | |||
Rent | |||||
Les Miserables | |||||
No No Nanette | |||||
Porgy and Bess | |||||
Starlight Express | |||||
Follies | |||||
Billy Elliot | |||||
Funny Girl | |||||
On the Town | |||||
42nd Street | |||||
Auntie Mame | |||||
The Wiz | |||||
Sunset Boulevard | |||||
Sweet Charity |
- [[]] [r]: Add brief definition or description
Max and
- Follies [r]: Add brief definition or description
- F [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Sound of Music [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Bye Bye, Birdie [r]: Add brief definition or description
- 1776 [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Cinderella [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Into the Woods [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Wonderful Town [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Applause [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Pajama Game [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Guys and Dolls [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Young Frankenstein [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Scarlet Pimpernel [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Music Man [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Best Little Whorehouse in Texas [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Music Man [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Billy Elliot [r]: Add brief definition or description
- On a Clear Day (You Can See Forever) [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Brigadoon [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Finian's Rainbow [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Aida [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Hello Dolly [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Seesaw [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Ragtime [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Annie Get Your Gun [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Porgy and Bess [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Desert Song [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Show Boat [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Mame [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Mama Mia [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Assassins [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Bells are Ringing [r]: Add brief definition or description
Grey Gardens
- Grand opera [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Operetta [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Alan Furst [r]: Add brief definition or description
Old Timeline
Date | Event |
---|---|
1642-1651 | English Civil War: Scarborough sides with the Royalists |
March 1643 | Castle garrison led by Sir Hugh Cholmley; briefly loses the Castle to his cousin, Captain Browne Bushell |
August 1644 | Parliamentary forces reach Scarborough following Royalist defeat at Marston Moor and the fall of York; Cholmley stalls with surrender negotiations |
18th February 1645 | Capture of Scarborough's port; first siege of the Castle by Parliamentary forces begins |
24th March 1645 | Sir John Meldrum, leader of the Parliamentary forces, badly injured in clifftop fall; allows Royalist surprise attack and delays siege by six weeks |
1st May 1645 | Parliamentarians' Committee of Both Kingdoms orders that the Castle be taken at all costs |
10th May 1645 | Royalist counter-attack leads to Parlimentary retreat after three-day bombardment and collapse of the keep's west wall |
11th May 1645 | Heavy hand-to-hand fighting around the barbican; Parliamentarians take heavier casualties, Meldrum killed |
25th July 1645 | Castle garrison surrenders following five-month siege |
27th July 1648 | New castle garrison goes over to the Royalist side |
19th December 1648 | Second siege brings Castle back under Parliamentary control; later used as a prison |
References
(No workgroup is going to want to claim this!)