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Nebraska And Rural Electrification Through 1940, Roberta K. Barndt
Nebraska And Rural Electrification Through 1940, Roberta K. Barndt
Student Work
Since Nebraska is primarily an agricultural state, the struggle to bring electricity to its rural areas played an important role in the long-standing battle to decrease the disparity between living standards in rural and urban America. During the first two decades of the twentieth century, telephones and automobiles lessened rural isolation while increased utilization of tractors and other technological innovations rendered farm labor less tedious. Nevertheless, without electricity, the one modern innovation that more than any other brought comfort and convenience within the reach of the urban masses, living and working conditions on the farm remained comparatively primitive. Farm families …
American Indian Property Rights: Congress And The Supreme Court, Virginia C. Todd
American Indian Property Rights: Congress And The Supreme Court, Virginia C. Todd
Student Work
Demands for citizens' "civil rights" has been a recurrent theme of contemporary society for nearly twenty years; however, it has not been until the last five that the rights of American indians have been accorded great attention. Perhaps because of the romantic characteristics attributed to them by our fixation on the grand development of the nation, the rights of the Indian have become a challenge to the integrity of the United States. The story of the development of the country is the story of acquisition of Indian lands, and this paper is a discussion of the elements and activities of …
The Second Chinese Banking Consortium: The Open Door And Finance Diplomacy, Pauline Selenke Pesek
The Second Chinese Banking Consortium: The Open Door And Finance Diplomacy, Pauline Selenke Pesek
Student Work
This thesis is an attempt to analyze the events of the Second Chinese Banking Consortium, signed in 1920, and the relationship of this event to America's China policy, generally referred to as the Open Door Policy. The Consortium demostrates how the Open Door Policy developed as a part of American foreign policy, and how the State Department hoped to use American capitial as the right arm or a tool of American diplomacy in China.
The American Military And The Congress, 1775-1789: Civil-Military Relationships, George J. Shuflata
The American Military And The Congress, 1775-1789: Civil-Military Relationships, George J. Shuflata
Student Work
In any discussion of military-state relationships relative to the formation of the first American army and government, one must consider the fact that Americans feared the military due to their pre-revolutionary experience. As colonists they forumlated their own ideas on what the American military should be. The militia concept appeared to fill their needs. Forced into a war for which they were totally unprepared, they gradually formed a government and the military force that would produce a victory. However, the road to that victory was paved with frustrations, both military and governmental.