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1998

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Articles 31 - 60 of 1489

Full-Text Articles in History

Fall Commencement Program, December 13, 1998, Coastal Carolina University Dec 1998

Fall Commencement Program, December 13, 1998, Coastal Carolina University

Commencement Programs

Program of Commencement Exercises at Coastal Carolina University.


Fall 1998 Commencement - The University Of Texas Of The Permian Basin, The University Of Texas Permian Basin Dec 1998

Fall 1998 Commencement - The University Of Texas Of The Permian Basin, The University Of Texas Permian Basin

UTPB Commencement Programs

Fall 1998 Commencement - December 12, 1998


Leon Bentley Sr. Dec 1998

Leon Bentley Sr.

African American Funeral Programs, Willow Hill Heritage & Renaissance Center, Bulloch County, Georgia

No abstract provided.


Ben Parrish Dec 1998

Ben Parrish

African American Funeral Programs, Willow Hill Heritage & Renaissance Center, Bulloch County, Georgia

No abstract provided.


1998-12-11; Pamphlets; Celebration Of Life For James M Hamilton, Lincoln Memorial United Methodist Church Dec 1998

1998-12-11; Pamphlets; Celebration Of Life For James M Hamilton, Lincoln Memorial United Methodist Church

Pamphlets and Commemoration Material

No abstract provided.


James Otis Holloway Dec 1998

James Otis Holloway

African American Funeral Programs, Willow Hill Heritage & Renaissance Center, Bulloch County, Georgia

James Otis Holloway had two funerals. The Second Funeral took place on December 16, 1998.


Lanthorn, Vol. 33, No. 15, December 10, 1998, Grand Valley State University Dec 1998

Lanthorn, Vol. 33, No. 15, December 10, 1998, Grand Valley State University

Volume 33, August 27, 1996 - April 22, 1999

Lanthorn is Grand Valley State's student newspaper, published from 1968 to the present.


The Bcs, Fairness, And The Money, Richard C. Crepeau Dec 1998

The Bcs, Fairness, And The Money, Richard C. Crepeau

On Sport and Society

Everyone now knows what the "BS" in the "BCS" stands for but there seems to be some doubt remaining about the "C." Some suggest "computer," some say "compound," some say it is a redundant statement of the "S." Whatever it is, several other things are now clear.


Elder George Mccray Dec 1998

Elder George Mccray

African American Funeral Programs, Willow Hill Heritage & Renaissance Center, Bulloch County, Georgia

No abstract provided.


The Grizzly, December 8, 1998, Joe Pope, Richard Barrett, Matt Klinger, Nicole Erdosy, Pete Corsey, Kim Inglot, James Rossiter, Keith D'Oria, Jeff Church, Lou Nemphos, Jimmy Reilly, Danielle Milewski, Stephanie Restine, Michael Bauer Dec 1998

The Grizzly, December 8, 1998, Joe Pope, Richard Barrett, Matt Klinger, Nicole Erdosy, Pete Corsey, Kim Inglot, James Rossiter, Keith D'Oria, Jeff Church, Lou Nemphos, Jimmy Reilly, Danielle Milewski, Stephanie Restine, Michael Bauer

Ursinus College Grizzly Newspaper, 1978 to Present

Actual Implications of Student Evaluations • Students Debate Greek Life on Campus • Opinion: Letter to the Editor; Greek Life Controversy; Who's Recycling? • Final Exam Schedule • Baseball Coach Discusses Return to Vietnam • New Law Helps College Students Manage Debt • WVOU Benefit a Success • High-Tech Cheating, For a Price • Panelists Square Off on Global Warming • Women's Basketball Setting Their Mark • Men's Basketball Opens League Play With Win • UC Swimming in Full Swing


Grand Valley Forum, Volume 023, Number 19, December 7, 1998, Grand Valley State University Dec 1998

Grand Valley Forum, Volume 023, Number 19, December 7, 1998, Grand Valley State University

1998-1999, Volume 23

Grand Valley Forum is Grand Valley State's faculty and staff newsletter, published from 1976 to the present.


Hollins Columns (1998 Dec 7), Hollins College Dec 1998

Hollins Columns (1998 Dec 7), Hollins College

Hollins Student Newspapers

Table of Contents:

  • Hollins welcomes Wolf: General Speakers Fund wraps up their lecture series
  • In Memory of Gerry Griffith
  • On the weather outside is frightful...
  • Remembering a young life
  • First year students take on service projects
  • The stress that hangs over all of our heads
  • Hollins University's First Short Term
  • Spotlight on Nicole Janowski
  • American History X presents a disturbing look at Neo-Nazism
  • Benedict brings experience to Hollins
  • From the streets of Nashville, to the halls of Hollins
  • Basketball team prepared for season
  • Volleyball team wins trip to ODACS
  • 'Tis the season to be nutty


Lanthorn, Vol. 33, No. 14, December 3, 1998, Grand Valley State University Dec 1998

Lanthorn, Vol. 33, No. 14, December 3, 1998, Grand Valley State University

Volume 33, August 27, 1996 - April 22, 1999

Lanthorn is Grand Valley State's student newspaper, published from 1968 to the present.


Trail Blazer - Volume 71, Number 14, Morehead State University. Trail Blazer. Dec 1998

Trail Blazer - Volume 71, Number 14, Morehead State University. Trail Blazer.

Morehead State Trail Blazer Archive

Morehead State Trail Blazer published on December 2, 1998.


The Chanticleer, 1998-12-02, Coastal Carolina University Dec 1998

The Chanticleer, 1998-12-02, Coastal Carolina University

The Chanticleer Student Newspaper

The editorially independent student produced weekly newspaper of Coastal Carolina University.


A Forgotten Enemy: Omaha Encounters The 1918 Influenza Pandemic, Gary Gernhart Dec 1998

A Forgotten Enemy: Omaha Encounters The 1918 Influenza Pandemic, Gary Gernhart

Student Work

Influenza, or the flu as it is commonly called, is considered nothing more than a mild physical nuisance that requires little more than bed rest and aspirin. In 1918, however, this acute respiratory ailment elicited a greatly different response from the ordinary citizen. A deadly and highly contagious strain of the influenza virus emerged in 1918 that encompassed the globe in a matter of months. Although the 1918 influenza pandemic killed over twenty-two million people world-wide, of which over seven-hundred thousand were Americans, the deadly pandemic is rarely acknowledged as a catastrophic event. This study investigates Omaha, Nebraska's response to …


Rebel Salvation: The Story Of Confederate Pardons, Kathleen Rosa Zebley Dec 1998

Rebel Salvation: The Story Of Confederate Pardons, Kathleen Rosa Zebley

Doctoral Dissertations

No abstract provided.


The John Muir Newsletter, Winter 1998/99, The John Muir Center For Regional Studies Dec 1998

The John Muir Newsletter, Winter 1998/99, The John Muir Center For Regional Studies

Muir Center Newsletters, 1981-2015

NEWSLETTER Winter 1998-99 The Importance of John Muir's First Public Lecture, Sacramento, 1876 by Steve Pauly, Pleasant Hill, CA INTRODUCTION his article focuses on Muir's first public lecture and its importance as one of several turning points in his evolution as a public figure. The venue was the Congregational Church in Sacramento on January 25, 1876. The lecture was the fifth in a series sponsored by the Sacramento Literary Institute. Muir approached this task with fear, began poorly and with apology, finally recalled his topic, enthralled the large audience with his discussion and illustration of the current and ancient glaciers …


Frank Speck’S Office, Edmund S. Carpenter Dec 1998

Frank Speck’S Office, Edmund S. Carpenter

Maine History

Edmund S. Carpenter studied anthropology under Frank Speck at the University of Pennsylvania and taught at the University of Toronto, the University of California at Santa Cruz, the New School for Social Research, and other institutions. An internationally recognized expert on tribal art, his numerous publications include Oh, What A Blow That Phantom Gave Me!, Eskimo Realities, They Became What They Beheld, and the 12-volume Materials For The Study Of Social Symbolism In Ancient And Tribal Art. He remembers Frank Siebert at Penn with the regulars in Frank Speck ’5 office.


A Penobscot Assessment Of Frank Siebert, Eunice Baumann-Nelson Dec 1998

A Penobscot Assessment Of Frank Siebert, Eunice Baumann-Nelson

Maine History

Dr. Eunice Baumann-Nelson is the author of The Wabanaki: An Annotated Bibliography. She was bom on Indian Island, and she became the first Penobscot to get a B.A., and later got an M.A. in Child Psychology and a Ph.D. in Human Relations at N. Y. U. Later still she received an honorary doctorate of Humane Letters from the University of Maine. She served in the Peace Corps in Peru and Bolivia, was the head of the Vassar art library and head librarian at The Museum of the American Indian in New York City. She has long been a student …


Frank Siebert -- Then, And More Than "Forty Years On”, Richard B. Singer M.D. Dec 1998

Frank Siebert -- Then, And More Than "Forty Years On”, Richard B. Singer M.D.

Maine History

Richard B. Singer; M.D., is a consultant in medical risk appraisal and lives in Falmouth, Maine. He and Frank Siebert went to school together in the late 1920s. At a class reunion in 1980, they rediscovered each other and have corresponded since. In what follows, Singer describes their encounters over the past seven decades.


Some Memories Of Frank Siebert, Dean F. Snow Dec 1998

Some Memories Of Frank Siebert, Dean F. Snow

Maine History

Dean R. Snow, a professor of anthropology at Pennsylvania State University and author of numerous books and articles on the archaeology and ethnohistory of Native Northeastern America, was once on the faculty of the University of Maine at Orono and was a frequent visitor at Indian Island. He has known Frank Siebert for almost thirty years and has this to say about Frank as colleague and as field worker.


Journal Cover, Toc, And Preface, Maine Historical Society, Willard Walker, Harald E. L. Prins Dec 1998

Journal Cover, Toc, And Preface, Maine Historical Society, Willard Walker, Harald E. L. Prins

Maine History

Cover, Editors and Editorial Board and Table of Contents with authors names. Also Preface.


Encounters With Frank Siebert, Ives Goddard Dec 1998

Encounters With Frank Siebert, Ives Goddard

Maine History

Ives Goddard, Curator of the Department of Anthropology of the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, is the author of “Eastern Algonquian Languages," in The Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 15. He co-authored, with Kathleen f. Bragdon, Native Writings n Massachusetts and more recently edited The Handbook Of North American Indians, Vol. 17, Languages.


Siebert As Algonquianist, Karl Van Duyn Teeter Dec 1998

Siebert As Algonquianist, Karl Van Duyn Teeter

Maine History

Karl V. (van Duyn) Teeter learned Japanese as a U.S. Army draftee during the Korean War. Upon his discharge from the military in 1954 he went to Berkeley, majoring in Oriental Languages. He entered Berkeley ’s linguistics program and did fieldwork with the last speaker of Wiyot, a language indigenous to northern California that has since been demonstrated to be genetically related to all the Algonquian languages. After coming to Harvard in 1959 he studied Maliseet-Passamaquoddy and, for several years, chaired Harvard’s linguistics department. He is now Professor of Linguistics, Emeritus at Harvard. What follows is his assessment of Frank …


My Relationship With Frank Siebert, Richard Garrett Dec 1998

My Relationship With Frank Siebert, Richard Garrett

Maine History

The next essay was written by Richard Garrett, who created the Penobscot Primer Project, a continuing exhibit at the Hudson Museum, University of Maine. Garrett lives in Wellington, Maine and, since 1995, has been the Principal Investigator and Project Director of the Siebert Project, funded by the National Science Foundation.


Siebert And His Correspondence, Paul Proulx Dec 1998

Siebert And His Correspondence, Paul Proulx

Maine History

Paul Proulx is certainly one of the most insightful and prolific of the many scholars who share Frank Siebert's fascination with the Algonquian languages, their histories, and their implications for the reconstruction of the social and cultural histories and prehistories of the Algonquian peoples and their precursors. His description of some encounters with Frank Siebert follows.


Chronicles Of Dr. Frank T. Siebert Jr ., Martha Young Dec 1998

Chronicles Of Dr. Frank T. Siebert Jr ., Martha Young

Maine History

Martha Young, who has written twenty-two grant applications in the last ten years for educational, research, and community projects, lives in Wellington, Maine, with her husband, Richard Garrett, and, since 1995, has been Frank Siebert’s research assistant. She wrote the following account of Frank and her relationship with him. This is followed by a Siebert bibliography that she and Frank compiled together.


Bibliography Of Frank T. Siebert, Frank Siebert, Martha Young Dec 1998

Bibliography Of Frank T. Siebert, Frank Siebert, Martha Young

Maine History

Bibliography of Frank T. Siebert as appended to Chronicles of Dr. Frank T. Siebert


Chief Big Thunder (1827-1906): The Life History Of A Penobscot Trickster, Harold E.L. Prins Dec 1998

Chief Big Thunder (1827-1906): The Life History Of A Penobscot Trickster, Harold E.L. Prins

Maine History

Harald E.L. Prins is a native of the Netherlands, where he was trained in anthropology and history. Currently a professor of cultural anthropology at Kansas State University, he taught previously at Bowdoin, Colby, and the University of Nijmegen (Netherlands). From 1981 until 1991 he served the Aroostook Band of Indians as staff anthropologist in its successful bid for federal recognition and land claims settlement. In addition to writing The Mi’kmaq: Resistance, Accommodation; And Cultural Survival, he has produced a documentary film on Mi ’kmaq basketmakers ( “Our Lives in Our Hands, ” 1986), co-edited a book on the …