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"Jewkes, J"
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J. DELOS JEWKES, 89; SINGER, MOVIE ACTOR
1984
Mr. [J. DELOS JEWKES] started his singing career in 1925 with traveling opera and light opera companies. He sang in the bass section of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and with the Salt Lake Philharmonic Orchestra.
Newspaper Article
J. DELOS JEWKES
in
Jewkes, J Delos
,
Mille, De
1984
J. Delos Jewkes, a singer and actor who supplied the voice of God for Cecil B. De Mille's ''Ten Commandments,'' died of a heart attack here Tuesday.
Newspaper Article
Design and punishment
2015
[George Osborne]'s policy move came after justice secretary Michael Gove tagged these gloomy old nicks \"ageing and ineffective\", replete with \"bullying, drug-dealing and violence\", and the idea draws from Gove's think-tank Policy Exchange's 2013 report Future Prisons, which proposed a programme of high-tech \"hub\" prisons deploying \"cutting-edge architecture\", each housing up to 3,000 inmates in \"campus-style\" units around centralised services. They'd have \"resettlement\" aspects built in, wider community and share sites [eg, courts] with other parts of the criminal justice system,\" said the report, and the Government's heritage body Historic England isn't, says a spokeswoman, \"opposed to the sale and re-use of historic prison buildings, provided that any new development is done sensitively to the distinctive character and history of the buildings\". On the face of it, it's hard to argue against the decommissioning of Victorian prisons, punitive edifices whose massive walls express the opprobrium of the state, and seem to refer to the castles and dungeons of incarceration's deep history. Their most common design - cells arranged in galleries around a central atrium - does a good job. \"They're often very good at sight lines and security,\" says Juliet Lyon of the Prison Reform Trust (PRT). But they're too much at the punitive end of the spectrum and don't speak of Lyon's two pillars of \"redemption and rehabilitation\". \"Some still have 'slopping out',\" says Lyon. \"They're a health and safety nightmare where people share cells with open toilets, and they incubate resentment.\" Harsh brick walls and stress-inducing slamming doors - those steel-on-brick clangs we all know from prison dramas - don't help. Yvonne Jewkes, professor of criminology at the University of Leicester, thinks that despite such humanising appurtenances, these edifices are more akin to the \"Amazon warehouse\" typology, hardly \"cutting-edge architecture\", more a container model imported from the US: bland and technocratic, with a smell of fear and an assembly-line ethos. In a recent paper, Designing Punishment: Balancing security, creativity and humanity in contemporary correctional systems, Jewkes wrote that \"prisons send a clear message about punishment from the 'carefully scripted' construction of their faades\" and that the new \"bland, corporate-looking\" prisons have no architect engagement with their \"clients\" or if you prefer, end users. It's not about them. Maybe the nine prisons-to-be will be akin to Jewkes' desire for an \"architecture of hope\". But she is not optimistic, and nor is architect Will Alsop of aLL Design. Ten years ago, Alsop made a project with organisation Rideout (Creative Arts for Rehabilitation), a company that promotes the arts within the penal system, and found all manner of spirit-crushing detail: beds just 6ft long, lavatories in cells two feet away from the bed. \"They bang up prisoners in these miserable places,\" he says. \"No wonder they're universities of crime.\" Alsop recommended giving prisoners more agency: their own keys to cells, meaningful jobs, better education and mixed age groups - even allowing prisoners to paint their cells so as to achieve \"a sense of place\" - and his HMP Paterson concept (named after pre-war prison reformer, Alexander Paterson) mooted a landscape surrounded by buildings: library, sports facilities, recording studio.
Newspaper Article
SKY VIEW 68 OGDEN 53
1994
Ogden -- Broadbent 7, B. Moore 16, Wilson 2, Bremser 2, VanDyke 15, Smith 3, M. Moore 1, Benedict 2, Wright 3, Plyer 2. Totals 16 16-30 53. North Sanpete -- Dyches 14, Jensen 2, [Thompson, Kjar] 9, Merley 3, Mower 7, Steadman 10, Thompson 18. Totals 24 11-19 63. North Summit -- Shuman 5, J. Richins 17, T. Richins 21, Winters 3, Chapel 5, C. Richins 14, Porter 2, [J. Peterson] 2, Wright 1, Wild 2. Totals 31 9-20 72.
Newspaper Article
BINGHAM 61 AMERICAN FORK 60
1993
[Jordan] -- Robinson 8, Burgon 4, Pond 10, [Larsen] 2, Pew 3, Stuart 14, Foulks 16, Olsen 8, Callister 2. Totals 21 25-40 67. [Payson] -- Worthen 5, Nelson 2, Lenford 2, Mitchell 3, Moody 15, Ockey 8, Partridge 6, [Davis] 6, Holdaway 9, Nilsson 2, Taylor 15. Totals 24 23-34 73. Uintah -- Murphy 4, Hawkins 9, [Blake Gardner] 9, Jaussi 2, [Brett Deets] 18, Stevenson 7, [Lamb] 8. Totals 23 8-16 57.
Newspaper Article
Obituary: Connie Robertson Hansen
Connie Robertson Hansen 1944 ~ 2006 Connie Robertson Hansen, wife, mother, and proud grandmother, returned to her Heavenly Father July 22, 2006 after a courageous battle with pancreatic cancer. She was born October 18, 1944 in Alameda, California to Mabel Jewkes and Leslie J Robertson. They later moved to Utah where she attended schools in Carbon County and Brigham City. She graduated from Box Elder High School in 1962. Connie married LaVar June Hansen on June 23, 1962 in the Manti LDS Temple. They were married for 44 years. Their union will last for eternity. She was blessed with one daughter, Kathy. Connie was a sports enthusiast. She was an accomplished softball pitcher. She enjoyed coaching in the young women's sports program in her LDS ward.
Newspaper Article