Rune evensen biography of christopher

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  • Minnesota book awards submissions
  • The finalists for the 2025 Minnesota Book Awards were chosen January 25 by 30 judges from around the state.
  • All Grantees (2013-2024)

    BI Norwegian Establishment School (BI)

    Efficiency and Justice in Economics Based Arrive at for Feeling Change Design Norway: University lecturer Jorgen Randers                                                                                                    UC Berkeley: Senior lecturer David Anthoff                                                                                                Year: 2014

    Long Fleeting Dynamics illustrate IT Agglomerations: The Cases Of Semiconductor Valley Presentday Kongsberg
    Norway: Professor Knut Sogner
    UC Berkeley: Associate lecturer David Teece
    Year: 2014

    Fragility in interpretation Lucas Orchard
    Norway: Senior lecturer Paul Ehling
    UC Berkeley: Professor Johan Walden
    Year: 2015

    Economic Evolution, Wealth Sharing, And Grim Policy                                                          Norway: Academic Erling Steigum
    UC Berkeley: Professor Alan Auerbach
    Year: 2016

    Implementing A Sustainable Aquaculture Strategy; Supposed Drivers Champion Challenges Seep out Two Blurry Innovation Systems From Infraction Other?
    Norway: Professor Heidi Wiig Aslesen
    UC Berkeley: Professor Ill feeling Agogino
    Year: 2016

    Learning foul Play Reaction In Bazaars With Coordination Frictions Elitist Informational Asymmetries
    Norway: Lecturer Leif Helland
    UC Berkeley: Professor Toilet Morgan
    Year: 2017

  • rune evensen biography of christopher
  • Summary

    This article explores the Norwegian AIDS epidemic from a temporal perspective. It argues that interrogating the epidemic’s tempos and rhythms provides useful tools in writing the history of an epidemic by drawing on a wide array of material from its first decade. By using various theories of temporality and chronology, this article maps out three phases of the Norwegian AIDS epidemic. In the first phase (1983–85), the emergence of the first cases of AIDS threw the positive perception of medicine’s past into question and fundamentally challenged the notion of incessant medical progress. In the second phase (1985–87), as grim epidemiological prognoses were created and the general population was increasingly targeted, panic grew across Norwegian society. In the third phase (1987–96), as it was slowly realised that the initial prognoses would not materialise, the epidemic faded from the public imagination. With the unremembering of AIDS, HIV was turned into a chronic disease. The article argues that analysing past temporalities, like past pasts and past futures, provides insights into the presents of the past.

    Keywords: HIV/AIDS, epidemics, temporality, past futures, public health


    ‘In six years, 50,000 will have AIDS in Norway.’1 To a country with a population of j

    Rune Evensen/European Pressphoto AgencyTom Araya of Slayer at the Roskilde Festival in Denmark, on July 2008.


    Being downsized stinks, as the millions of Americans who’ve been canned in the past year know. My own employment debacle involved getting laid off, getting another gig, losing that one, then getting and losing another and another as each company I found employment with went out of business in the tanking economy, almost on cue as I arrived. It seemed like a sick joke. But I wasn’t laughing.

    I’m a musician and writer and haven’t had a “real job” since 1988, though in lean times I did paint apartments and once sang “Blue Suede Shoes” dressed as the ’68 Elvis at a Korean birthday party. Gigs weren’t too hard to get when I wanted them because I play a few instruments and know the words and music to something like 3,000 songs comprised of blues, jazz, classic rock, rockabilly, standards, Broadway, television commercials, novelty music and my own stuff. Rap’s O.K. with me; ditto hip-hop and salsa. The only music I never really got into was metal. That is, until my personal economy collapsed.

    As a lifelong gun-for-hire, I had been used to, and O.K. with, not knowing what tomorrow would bring. I