After she graduated from Ottumwa High School, she was hired to teach music in the district.
Her supervisor was Frances Clark, who “learned of my ambition to ‘elevate the stage,’” she wrote in 1925. Clark persuaded Inskeep she didn’t need to go to college at Northwestern since she’d already had so much experience directing choirs and “you get such lovely music” from the children she taught.
From Ottumwa, Inskeep went to Sioux Falls, S.D., where she taught for two years before moving to Cedar Rapids in 1903.
The Sioux Falls newspaper reported Inskeep would be paid $80 a month in her new job, or $15 more than she was earning in Sioux Falls.
They Were Hard Ridden Work Horses
When all of these new findings are interpreted together, the new paper describes the bone and tooth abnormalities as “textbook examples of what happens when horses are ridden heavily,” said Alan Outram, an archaeologist at the
University of Exeter in the United Kingdom who was not involved in the research. The Archaeology News Network article quotes Dr Outram saying “There’s no question that these horses are riding horses,” based on the severe wear and tear observed on the bone samples.
Although new data has been amassed pertaining to how hard, or horribly, horses were treated by people in ancient China , the point of this study was to try and trace the emergence, or ancient origins, of horseback riding and domestication. Furthermore, the scientist set out to better understanding
Barbara Anderson passed away peacefully on Dec. 15, 2020.
She was born on Sept. 3,1926, in Wilmette, Ill., the daughter of Mildred and Stanley Peterson.
She attended Cornell College in Mt. Vernon, Iowa, and then graduated from Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., with a degree in piano and pipe organ. She earned her master’s degree in English in 1977.
After her graduation from Northwestern, she left Illinois to be a missionary teaching at a Presbyterian mission school on the Navajo reservation in northern Arizona.
It was there that she met Lowell Anderson, whom she married in 1950. They were married for 48 years until his death in 1998.
LITTLE ROCK â The Arkansas Arts Council announced the artists for the 2021 Small Works on Paper touring exhibition, which will include the work of three Russellville artists.
Neal Harrington, Tammy Harrington and David Rackley, all of Russellville, were among the 26 artists whose work was chosen for for the exhibition, which will open at the East Arkansas Community College in Forrest City in January.
A virtual grand opening will be held at 7 p.m. on Jan. 15 on the Arkansas Arts Councilâs Facebook page and YouTube channel.
âWe are excited to be able to recognize the wonderful and diverse talent of visual artists throughout Arkansas,â said Stacy Hurst, secretary for the Arkansas Department of Parks, Heritage and Tourism. âSmall Works on Paper showcases artists from every corner of our state and gives art lovers the opportunity to discover emerging artists and experience one-of-a-kind artworks they may otherwise never see.â
Alert Reader writes in:
The CCP program to infiltrate American academia to steal U.S. tax payer funded research results is the Thousand Talents Program.
It aims, under the cover of an “intellectual exchange program,” to steal , U.S. taxpayer funded research, and intellectual property from U.S. universities funded by the DOD, NIH, NSF, and other large federal funders. The CCP is succeeding at a rapid pace that threatens U.S. economic, and military security.
U.S. federally funded research serves 4 main purposes in the best university system in the world: (1) It advances science, and engineering knowledge through cutting-edge research; (2) It educates undergraduate, graduate, and post graduate leaders in those fields who become leaders of industry, and academia who keep America economically competitive; (3) It spins off numerous start up companies in places like Silicon Valley, C.A., Research Triangle Park, N.C., Madison, W.I., Chicago Technology Park, and Northwestern University