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Articles 1051 - 1080 of 7814
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
2003 Scholars And Artists Bibliography, Michael Schwartz Library, Cleveland State University, Friends Of The Michael Schwartz Library
2003 Scholars And Artists Bibliography, Michael Schwartz Library, Cleveland State University, Friends Of The Michael Schwartz Library
Scholars and Artists Bibliographies
This bibliography was created for the annual Friends of the Michael Schwartz Library Scholars and Artists Reception, recognizing scholarly and creative achievements of Cleveland State University faculty, staff and emeriti
Research & Action Report, Fall/Winter 2003, Wellesley Centers For Women, Nancy Marshall
Research & Action Report, Fall/Winter 2003, Wellesley Centers For Women, Nancy Marshall
Research & Action Report
In this issue:
Afterschool Learning for the Heart and the Head
School Interventions, Not Zero Tolerance, Prevent Gender Violence
Battered Mothers Fight to Survive the Family Court System
Conference on Violence Against Women Sparks Worldwide Interest
New Expression: October 2003 (Volume 26, Issue 7), Columbia College Chicago
New Expression: October 2003 (Volume 26, Issue 7), Columbia College Chicago
New Expression
October 2003, Volume 26, Issue 7, edition of New Expression, a news publication researched, contributed, written, and edited by Chicago high school journalists
Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 45 Number 2, Fall 2003, Santa Clara University
Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 45 Number 2, Fall 2003, Santa Clara University
Santa Clara Magazine
12 - 'A FAVORITE ABODE OF SCIENCE' By Elizabeth Kelley Gillogly '93. A new exhibit of Santa Clara University's scientific equipment from 1851-1900 reveals the Jesuits' early dedication to scientific inquiry, and the ways in which the University contributed to the history of science.
14 - COMING HOME By Mitch Finley '73. More than 60 million Americans are Catholic, but millions of them are estranged from the Church. More often than you might think, however, "lapsed Catholics" decide to come home to the Church. Why did they leave? And what brings them back?
18 - STUDENTS TO THE RESCUE By …
The Joint Archives Quarterly, Volume 13.03: Fall 2003, Matthew P. Nickel, Geoffrey D. Reynolds
The Joint Archives Quarterly, Volume 13.03: Fall 2003, Matthew P. Nickel, Geoffrey D. Reynolds
The Joint Archives Quarterly
No abstract provided.
The Anchor, Volume 117.07: October 1, 2003, Hope College
The Anchor, Volume 117.07: October 1, 2003, Hope College
The Anchor: 2003
The Anchor began in 1887 and was first issued weekly in 1914. Covering national and campus news alike, Hope College’s student-run newspaper has grown over the years to encompass over two-dozen editors, reporters, and staff. For much of The Anchor's history, the latest issue was distributed across campus each Wednesday throughout the academic school year (with few exceptions). As of Fall 2019 The Anchor has moved to monthly print issues and a more frequently updated website. Occasionally, the volume and/or issue numbering is irregular.
Communicator Vol. 2, No. 1, School Of Communication
Communicator Vol. 2, No. 1, School Of Communication
Communicator: School of Communication Newsletter
Research Partnership Model Instituted; Notes from the Chair; In Memory: Charles T. Brown 1912-2003; Undergrad Programs Attract Top Students to Communication Department; Historical Overview of Department of Communication; New Faculty/ Faculty Announcements/Faculty Honors/Faculty In Print; Grant Activities; Students in the News/Student Awards; Communication Day a Success
Review Of Fort Robinson And The American Century, 1900- 1948 By Thomas R. Buecker, Paul H. Carlson
Review Of Fort Robinson And The American Century, 1900- 1948 By Thomas R. Buecker, Paul H. Carlson
Great Plains Quarterly
Fort Robinson, located along the upper reaches of the White River in far northwest Nebraska, enjoyed a long and eventful history. Founded in 1874 and not closed as a military base until 1948, the post played vital roles in the last wars with the Plains Indians: the so-called Sioux war of 1876-77 and the Ghost Dance "outbreak" of 1890-91. In the twentieth century it was a quartermaster remount depot for a time, and during World War II it served as a K-9 training base and a prisoner of war camp.
After 1948 the United States Department of Agriculture used the …
Review Of Breaking Clean By Judy Blunt, Linda Karell
Review Of Breaking Clean By Judy Blunt, Linda Karell
Great Plains Quarterly
"Few shared my place of origin or the events of my life, but many, it seems, shared my experience." In Breaking Clean, Judy Blunt's memoir of her life as a Montana rancher's daughter, and eventually as a Montana rancher's wife, she reminds us that storytelling mines the minute and the particular in order to unearth larger truths. In this memoir, those truths are about the cramped inarticulateness of women's lives and the paucity of real, vibrant choices, as well as the ranching community's support for its members during the inevitable crises that occur on the windswept Montana Plains.
Now …
Review Of Chasing The Glitter: Black Hills Milling, 1874- 1959 By Richmond L. Clow, Chris H. Lewis
Review Of Chasing The Glitter: Black Hills Milling, 1874- 1959 By Richmond L. Clow, Chris H. Lewis
Great Plains Quarterly
In the 1800s, the American Gold Rush shifted from California and Nevada to Colorado, and then to South Dakota. The search for gold, and the wealth and profits it brought, helped develop the American West. Richard Clow's Chasing the Glitter: Blacks Hills Milling, 1874-1959 tells the story of Black Hills gold mining in South Dakota. Drawn from successful mining ventures in California, Nevada, and Colorado, gold miners and investors hoped to strike it rich again in the Black Hills. But only by milling and extracting the gold trapped in tons of hard-rock ore could these companies and their investors make …
Review Of Red Matters : Native American Studies By Arnold Krupat, James H. Cox
Review Of Red Matters : Native American Studies By Arnold Krupat, James H. Cox
Great Plains Quarterly
A reviewer of Red Matters might reasonably expect a work with the post-colon title Native American Studies to foreground Native intellectual voices or the voices of Native and nonnative scholars who work in the field and publish in the field's journals and to privilege indigenous critical perspectives. The reviewer might have some apprehension, however, that Krupat would say he or she was provincial or a "back to the blanket" scholar. The title, nevertheless, is part of a broad deception, for though red matters in Red Matters, non-indigenous critical perspectives and Western and non-Native intellectual, cultural, and historical traditions matter …
Review Of The Indian Frontier, 1763-1846 By R. Douglas Hurt, Victoria Smith
Review Of The Indian Frontier, 1763-1846 By R. Douglas Hurt, Victoria Smith
Great Plains Quarterly
Frontiers have dominated American historiography ever since Frederick Jackson Turner placed the term into the academic lexicon in the early twentieth century. Historians such as Bolton and Webb built entire careers around the ideology of the American western frontier, and the concept has grown exponentially since the mid-twentieth century.
Today's scholar can choose from a host of publications focused on geographical frontiers. The American South, the Appalachians, Spanish Borderlands, colonial America, Canada, even Alaska and Hawaii, have all been dissected under the frontier scalpel. But surprisingly few scholars have focused on Native American frontiers.
Dale Van Every broke ground in …
Review Of The Light Crust Doughboys Are On The Air: Celebrating Seventy Years Of Texas Music By John Mark Dempsey, Joe W. Specht
Review Of The Light Crust Doughboys Are On The Air: Celebrating Seventy Years Of Texas Music By John Mark Dempsey, Joe W. Specht
Great Plains Quarterly
During the 1930s and 1940s radio played a huge role in the development and dissemination of American popular music, especially country music. Regular live exposure on the radio was often more important for a country music performer's career than were recording opportunities. And there is no better example of how the interaction of radio with recordings and public appearances helped to sustain a career than that of the Light Crust Doughboys. Of course it helps if you have a longtime sponsor, too.
The Light Crust Doughboys were formed in 1930 by the Burrus Mill and Elevator Company of Fort Worth, …
Review Of When Montana And I Were Young: A Frontier Childhood By Margaret Bell, Randi Tanglen
Review Of When Montana And I Were Young: A Frontier Childhood By Margaret Bell, Randi Tanglen
Great Plains Quarterly
"I might not have gone to school, but I had to solve more problems than most children," asserts Margaret Bell in When Montana and I Were Young: A Frontier Childhood. As the oldest child in a family of four girls with no mother and a shiftless stepfather, Bell relates that she was often responsible for tasks not usually relegated to women-and especially not to children. In her childhood memoir, she describes pulling a yearling calf out of an iced-over spring by herself, developing an intricate system for managing ranch chores while her stepfather was away, and spending her days …
Notes And News- Fall 2003
Great Plains Quarterly
Notes And News
Call For Papers
20th National Cowboy Poetry Gathering
Visiting Scholars Program
Willa Cather Literary A Ward 2004
Map Correction
Review Of The Jesus Road: Kiowas, Christianity, And Indian Hymns By Luke Eric Lassiter, Clyde Ellis, And Ralph Kotay, Benjamin R. Kracht
Review Of The Jesus Road: Kiowas, Christianity, And Indian Hymns By Luke Eric Lassiter, Clyde Ellis, And Ralph Kotay, Benjamin R. Kracht
Great Plains Quarterly
Christianity, metaphorically referred to as the "Jesus road," came to the Kiowas of southwestern Oklahoma towards the end of the nineteenth century. Today, most Kiowas are at least nominally Christian, and, like other Oklahoma Indians, render prayers and hymns in their Native tongue in services that are otherwise Baptist, Methodist, or Pentecostal. In explaining why the Kiowas accepted Christianity and how Kiowa hymns still play a vital part in Kiowa community life, The Jesus Road contributes to a growing body of literature about Native American Christians who have not abandoned their personal and cultural identity. Anthropologist Luke Eric Lassiter, historian …
Review Of Montana Legacy: Essays On History, People, And Place Edited By Harry W. Fritz, Mary Murphy, And Robert R. Swartout Jr., Don Spritzer
Great Plains Quarterly
Montana Legacy is a sequel to the well-received 1992 anthology, The Montana Heritage. Like its predecessor, this new collection offers sixteen republished essays arranged in roughly chronological order. And much like the articles in Montana Heritage, these new pieces either explore a little-studied aspect of Montana's past or offer a revised slant on a more familiar topic.
The two best revisionist essays are Colin G. Calloway's "Army Allies or Tribal Survival?" and David Emmons's "The Orange and Green in Montana." Calloway's reinterpretation of the 1876 military campaign leading to the Battle of the Little Big Horn examines the …
Review Of When I Was A Young Man: A Memoir By Bob Kerrey, Marilyn B. Young
Review Of When I Was A Young Man: A Memoir By Bob Kerrey, Marilyn B. Young
Great Plains Quarterly
Bob Kerrey's memoir begins with a promise to his dying father to find out what happened to the father's brother, lost in the Philippines during WWII. This Kerrey did, but instead of writing his uncle's story, he wrote his own, of growing up in the 1950s in Lincoln, Nebraska, one of seven children in a solid, church-going, middle-class family. "We biked everywhere," Kerrey writes. "The edge of the universe lay at the ends of the dirt roads leading to those places where the wild and wooly frontier began." The fearful things in this safe place were either abstract (Soviet and …
Invasion Dynamics And Biological Control Prospects For Sericea Lespedeza In Kansas, Thomas Eddy, Jeff Davidson, Brian Obermeyer
Invasion Dynamics And Biological Control Prospects For Sericea Lespedeza In Kansas, Thomas Eddy, Jeff Davidson, Brian Obermeyer
Great Plains Research: A Journal of Natural and Social Sciences
Sericea lespedeza [Lespedeza cuneata (Dum.-Cours.) G. Don], an exotic, drought-hardy perennial legume was first introduced into the United States from Japan. It was planted from the 1930s through the 1950s as a forage crop, for healing erosion scars on farmlands, establishing cover on mine spoils, and as cover for wildlife. The species range was unintentionally increased in the 1980s when seeds harvested from infested rangelands were planted on Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) acres. Sericea lespedeza has spread to extensive areas of native prairie and other lands not under cultivation in the more humid regions of the Great Plains in …
Review Of An Action Plan For Outcomes Assessment In Your Library, By Peter Hernon And Robert E. Dugan, Fred W. Jenkins
Review Of An Action Plan For Outcomes Assessment In Your Library, By Peter Hernon And Robert E. Dugan, Fred W. Jenkins
Roesch Library Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Elaboration Versus Fragmentation: Distinguishing Between Self-Complexity And Self-Concept Differentiation, Catherine Lutz, Scott R. Ross
Elaboration Versus Fragmentation: Distinguishing Between Self-Complexity And Self-Concept Differentiation, Catherine Lutz, Scott R. Ross
Psychology Faculty Publications
While theorists have argued that self-concept differentiation (SCD) (i.e., the lack of interrelatedness of roles) is an important precursor to mental health problems (Donahue et al., 1993), self-complexity (i.e., having more self-aspects and maintaining greater distinction among self-aspects) is seen as a cognitive buffer against the deleterious effects of stress (Linville, 1985, 1987). Using a sample of 260 college students, the current study was designed to empirically validate the distinction between these seemingly similar constructs. As predicted, SCD and self-complexity demonstrated opposite relationships with indices of psychological distress. Whereas SCD was positively related to depression, loneliness, and dissociation, and negatively …
Evaluation Report On Echo Funded Humanitarian Mine Action Pilot Projects In North-West Of Cambodia, Marcel Durocher, Agim Hoti, Mok Tonh, Keo Vut
Evaluation Report On Echo Funded Humanitarian Mine Action Pilot Projects In North-West Of Cambodia, Marcel Durocher, Agim Hoti, Mok Tonh, Keo Vut
Global CWD Repository
The European Commission Humanitarian Aid Office (ECHO) has been actively involved in mine action programs in Cambodia since 1996. ECHO recognized that there was a clear and urgent need to develop new approaches to address the needs of the most at risk communities. In mid 2002 it decided to fund three pilot initiatives with the objective of reducing mine/UXO risks and casualties in North Western Cambodia while taking into account the needs of local communities. This is an area, which recently witnessed a large influx of families from other parts of Cambodia. Many of these newcomers opted to take the …
Olininfo, October 2003, Olin Library
Olininfo, October 2003, Olin Library
OlinInfo
Newsletter of the Franklin W. Olin Library at Rollins College
A Comment On 'Does The Aggregate Demand Curve Suffer From The Fallacy Of Composition', Ben L. Kyer, Gary E. Maggs
A Comment On 'Does The Aggregate Demand Curve Suffer From The Fallacy Of Composition', Ben L. Kyer, Gary E. Maggs
Economics Faculty/Staff Publications
Commentary on "Does the Aggregate Demand Curve Suffer From the Fallacy of Composition," by Ira Saltz, Pat Cantrell, and Joseph Horton, is provided.
Analysis Of Carefirst's Performance As A Charitable Not-For-Profit Health Insurance Company In The National Capital Area, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Brian Kamoie, Charlotte Collins, Ann Zuvekas, Judy Feder, Gary Claxton
Analysis Of Carefirst's Performance As A Charitable Not-For-Profit Health Insurance Company In The National Capital Area, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Brian Kamoie, Charlotte Collins, Ann Zuvekas, Judy Feder, Gary Claxton
Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications
The George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services ("GWU") and the Georgetown University Institute for Health Care Research and Policy ("GU")conducted this analysis on behalf of the DC Appleseed Center for Law and Justice in order to examine whether, in its operations and business practices, CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield ("CareFirst") appears to be fulfilling its chartered mission for the National Capital Area. The study began as an analysis of the coverage and access implications for the region of a proposal made by CareFirst and WellPoint Health Networks, Inc. ("WellPoint") to convert CareFirst to for-profit status and permit its …
Public Health Communicable Disease Reporting Laws: Managed Care Organizations' Laboratory Contracting Practices And Their Implications For State Surveillance And Reporting Statutes, D. Richard Mauery, Brian Kamoie, Sarah C. Blake, Jeffrey Levi
Public Health Communicable Disease Reporting Laws: Managed Care Organizations' Laboratory Contracting Practices And Their Implications For State Surveillance And Reporting Statutes, D. Richard Mauery, Brian Kamoie, Sarah C. Blake, Jeffrey Levi
Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications
This report, prepared for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention by the GWU Center for Health Services Research & Policy (CHSRP), presents findings from analyses of contractual specifications related to public sector managed care contractors' duties and activities related to public health surveillance and education activities for communicable disease control, specifically HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted diseases, and tuberculosis.
Bulletin Of The Massachusetts Archaeological Society, Vol. 64, No. 2, Massachusetts Archaeological Society
Bulletin Of The Massachusetts Archaeological Society, Vol. 64, No. 2, Massachusetts Archaeological Society
Bulletin of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society
- Editor's Note (James W. Bradley)
- Forest Management in the Ancient Northeast: Evidence from Stockbridge, MA (Eric S. Johnson)
- Evidence of Red Ocher as a Processed Commodity from Millbury and Charlton, MA (Alan Leveillee)
- The Oak Knoll Site; An Orient Campsite in Lincoln, MA (Christopher L. Donta)
- Some Observations on Caddy Park (Mary E. Gage)
- A Reply to Gage (Thomas Mahlstedt and Margo Muhl Dams)
- Aboriginal Soapstone Workshops at the Skug River II Site, Essex County, MA (Suzanne Wall)
Damnit!, Joseph G. Reish
Damnit!, Joseph G. Reish
Gatherings: Friends of the University Libraries Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Warming Winters And New Hampshire’S Lost Ski Areas: An Integrated Case Study, Lawrence C. Hamilton, David E. Rohall, Gregg F. Hayward, Barry D. Keim
Warming Winters And New Hampshire’S Lost Ski Areas: An Integrated Case Study, Lawrence C. Hamilton, David E. Rohall, Gregg F. Hayward, Barry D. Keim
Sociology
New Hampshire’s mountains and winter climate support a ski industry that contributes substantially to the state economy. Through more than 70 years of history, this industry has adapted and changed with its host society. The climate itself has changed during this period too, in ways that influenced the ski industry’s development. During the 20th century, New Hampshire’s mean winter temperature warmed about 2.1° C (3.8° F). Much of that change occurred since 1970. The mult‐decadal variations in New Hampshire winters follow global temperature trends. Snowfall exhibits a downward trend, strongest in southern New Hampshire, and also correlates with the North …
Accountability And Ethics: Reconsidering The Relationships, Melvin J. Dubnick
Accountability And Ethics: Reconsidering The Relationships, Melvin J. Dubnick
Political Science
ABSTRACT
While a relationship between accountability and ethics has long been assumed and debated in Public Administration, the nature of that relationship has not been examined or clearly articulated. This article makes such an effort by positing four major forms of accountability (answerability, blameworthiness, liability and attributability) and focusing on the ethical strategies developed in response to each of these forms.