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1993

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Articles 3871 - 3900 of 4531

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Public Relations Internships: Considerations For A Successful Program, H. W. Fulmer Jan 1993

Public Relations Internships: Considerations For A Successful Program, H. W. Fulmer

Journal of the Association for Communication Administration

This article explores the pre-graduation internship as a vital link between public relations classes and the public relations profession. Internship is a vital and necessary part of the public relations degree program. It has three major areas: academic preparation, academic structure and administrative procedures. The timing for an internship is important. A student without some basic classroom knowledge of public relations is not likely to receive the fullest benefits from his or her internship. The prospective intern should have completed a substantial part of two related areas of study prior to the internship. The success of an internship program is …


The Right To Be Politically "Incorrect", Linn Ann Huntington Jan 1993

The Right To Be Politically "Incorrect", Linn Ann Huntington

Journal of the Association for Communication Administration

Reflects on the role of university professors as advocates of political correctness. Promotion of diversity in higher education; Appreciation of diversity in an atmosphere where freedom of speech and thought should always be politically correct; Conflict in the promotion of diversity and political correctness in universities.


Book Reviews, Denise Lajoie, Philippe Gross Jan 1993

Book Reviews, Denise Lajoie, Philippe Gross

International Journal of Transpersonal Studies

No abstract provided.


Fifth Amendment--Substantial Exculpatory Evidence, Prosecutorial Misconduct And Grand Jury Proceedings: A Broadening Of Prosecutorial Discretion, Gregory W. Bowman Jan 1993

Fifth Amendment--Substantial Exculpatory Evidence, Prosecutorial Misconduct And Grand Jury Proceedings: A Broadening Of Prosecutorial Discretion, Gregory W. Bowman

Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology

No abstract provided.


Fifth Amendment--Prosecutorial Discretion Not Absolute: Constitutional Limits On Decision Not To File Susbstantial Assistance Motions, David Fisher Jan 1993

Fifth Amendment--Prosecutorial Discretion Not Absolute: Constitutional Limits On Decision Not To File Susbstantial Assistance Motions, David Fisher

Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology

No abstract provided.


The American Social Gospel And Korean Minjung Theology Look At Labor: A Comparison, Kee Hyang Ro Jan 1993

The American Social Gospel And Korean Minjung Theology Look At Labor: A Comparison, Kee Hyang Ro

Theses and Dissertations (Comprehensive)

Today, current global economic crises are forcing us to examine what the capitalist, industrial economy has done to workers and to explore alternatives to the prevailing concept of labor. For Koreans, who are involved with the Korean Labor Movement, their American counterpart that played a significant and an important role fighting the capitalists for the rights of laborers has taught them many lessons.

The Social Gospel Movement in America was started to fight "the real powers of darkness"—the economic corruption in high places and grinding poverty among lower sectors—both arising from industrialization and urbanization. Seeing that the labor movement coalesced …


Ua12/8 Chief News, Wku Police Jan 1993

Ua12/8 Chief News, Wku Police

WKU Archives Records

WKU Police departmental newsletters for 1993.


The Magnitude And Nature Of 'Noise' In World Sea-Level Records, Edward A. Bryant Jan 1993

The Magnitude And Nature Of 'Noise' In World Sea-Level Records, Edward A. Bryant

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

While average world sea-level is rising at a uniform rate of 1-1.5 mm yr-1, regional rates can vary by an order of magnitude. Over time scales of several years these rates can be 10-100 times greater because sea-level is affected at this scale by highly changeable meteorological and oceanographic variables. The inherent "noise" level in world sea-level records is 35 mm. Much of this is expressed as fluctuations on the order of 20-100 mm with a frequency of 3-5 years. This latter "noise" is highly coherent at tide gauges around the globe and appears unrelated to resonance or wave excitation …


Deaf Community Center News, January 28, 1993 Jan 1993

Deaf Community Center News, January 28, 1993

Deaf Community Center News

A newsletter published for Deaf Catholics in Framingham, MA


Love's Constancy, Mike W. Martin Jan 1993

Love's Constancy, Mike W. Martin

Philosophy Faculty Articles and Research

This article focuses on commitments between married couples.


Women Engineers: A Study Of Educational Preparation And Professional Success, Debra A.G. Robinson, Barbara Ann Reilly Jan 1993

Women Engineers: A Study Of Educational Preparation And Professional Success, Debra A.G. Robinson, Barbara Ann Reilly

Psychological Science Faculty Research & Creative Works

In an effort to better understand the educational experiences and professional issues facing women in these fields, a survey of women alumnae was conducted. Respondents seemed fairly pleased with the education they received and were heavily influenced by personal aspects of the campus. Relationships with faculty members were described as their most beneficial and detrimental experiences. They particularly liked opportunities to apply their technical knowledge but did not believe there were enough opportunities for application. The need for more female role models and importance of involvement in student organizations were cited by many of the respondents. Self‐confidence and good communication …


Affect And The Perception Of Injustice, Steven J. Scher, David R. Heise Jan 1993

Affect And The Perception Of Injustice, Steven J. Scher, David R. Heise

Faculty Research and Creative Activity

Traditional approaches to distributive justice have seen the determination of whether or not a distribution of rewards is fair as a cognitive process, with emotion entering the process only as an outcome of a decision that the distribution was unjust. In this paper, we propose a modification of this view. Namely, we propose that justice is not calculated unless the actor feels a justice-related emotion (anger or guilt). These emotions, which arise in the course of social interaction, lead to the instigation of justice deliberations. Using Affect Control Theory, we explain how the justice-related emotions could arise in situations that …


Reader's Advisory Services For Persons With Disabilities, Ann E. Brownson Jan 1993

Reader's Advisory Services For Persons With Disabilities, Ann E. Brownson

Faculty Research & Creative Activity

No abstract provided.


Reader's Advisory Services For Persons With Disabilities, Ann Brownson Jan 1993

Reader's Advisory Services For Persons With Disabilities, Ann Brownson

Faculty Research & Creative Activity

No abstract provided.


Chicago Arts And Communication, 1993, Columbia College Chicago Jan 1993

Chicago Arts And Communication, 1993, Columbia College Chicago

Echo

Student-produced magazine entitled Chicago Arts and Communication, later changed to Echo magazine. Cover Articles: Gwendolyn Brooks; The Future of the 10 O'Clock News; Confessions of a Female Rock Singer; Pilsen; Learning to be Funny at Second City; Drawing Blood: Jack Higgins; Cahnnel 11 Fights On; Saturday Night with a Jazz Legend; Sports Radio; Jewelry as Art; Inside an Underground Comic Strip; Balley Chicago; and more... Editor-In-Chief: Carrie Miller. 92 pages.


Contact, January-February 1993 Jan 1993

Contact, January-February 1993

Contact

A newsletter published for Deaf Catholics in Dublin, Ireland

Contact Finding Aid


The Psychological Types Of Physical Therapy Administrators, Heather Despres, Kelly Myers, Sue Woods Jan 1993

The Psychological Types Of Physical Therapy Administrators, Heather Despres, Kelly Myers, Sue Woods

Masters Theses

The purpose of this study was to describe the distribution of psychological types among physical therapy administrators. Our random sample was taken from the membership roster of the Section on Administration of the American Physical Therapy Association. We used the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator to assess psychological types and a demographic questionnaire to collect data on the administrators.; The most common psychological types among the participants (n = 45) were found to be ISFJ, ESFJ, ISTJ, INTJ, and ENTJ, respectively. Although no explicitly predominant type was found, a clear preference toward judging (J) was noted.


Unplighted Troths: Causes For Divorce In A Frontier Town Toward The End Of The Nineteenth Century, C. Robert Haywood Jan 1993

Unplighted Troths: Causes For Divorce In A Frontier Town Toward The End Of The Nineteenth Century, C. Robert Haywood

Great Plains Quarterly

"W elcome to Dodge City, the biggest, wildest, wickedest little city on the continent," was the exuberant greeting given out-of-town visitors to Dodge's Fourth ofJuly celebration in 1883. The assessment projected was a selfcongratulatory one shared and frequently envied by the rest of the United States. Dodge was enjoying the peak of its cattle-town fame and prosperity as the quintessential frontier boom town, unrestrained by convention, the "very embodiment of waywardness and wantonness." Few communities seemed more at odds with the national social values and mores that later generations would label Victorian. As a mecca for free-spending cowboys it was …


Lands, Laws, And Women: Decisions Of The General Land Office, 1881~ 1920 A Preliminary Report, Nancy J. Taniguchi Jan 1993

Lands, Laws, And Women: Decisions Of The General Land Office, 1881~ 1920 A Preliminary Report, Nancy J. Taniguchi

Great Plains Quarterly

"S ettlement" of the West-by common understanding-has meant the taking up of the public domain, especially homesteads and preemptions, under federal law. Obviously, "settlement" in this sense has little to do with actual occupation, or the property rights of Native Americans and long-resident Hispanics would not have been so long ignored. The specific process of settling involved three steps: filing a claim, proving up and/or making payment, and obtaining title or ownership. Each of these steps had its pitfalls, which, when they occurred, were usually resolved by the General Land Office (GLO), a division of the Department of the Interior …


Index To Vol.13 No.4 Jan 1993

Index To Vol.13 No.4

Great Plains Quarterly

No abstract provided.


Notes And News For Vol.13 No.4 Jan 1993

Notes And News For Vol.13 No.4

Great Plains Quarterly

No abstract provided.


Great Plains Quarterly: Table Of Contents Fall 1993 Vol. 13 No. 4 Jan 1993

Great Plains Quarterly: Table Of Contents Fall 1993 Vol. 13 No. 4

Great Plains Quarterly

No abstract provided.


Review Of The Changing Image Of The City: Planning For Downtown Omaha, 1945-1973, Harl A. Dalstrom Jan 1993

Review Of The Changing Image Of The City: Planning For Downtown Omaha, 1945-1973, Harl A. Dalstrom

Great Plains Quarterly

The title of this book is a fine indicator of its essential theme, for this is the story of how the prevailing images of Omaha determined the objectives of city planning. From 1945 to 1973, Omaha's economy changed fundamentally, and this reality eventually changed how local decision- makers perceived their community. These new perceptions finally brought a new orientation in planning for the heart of the city


Review Of Aboriginal Water Rights In Canada: A Study Of Aboriginal Title To Water And Indian Rights, Theron Josephson Jan 1993

Review Of Aboriginal Water Rights In Canada: A Study Of Aboriginal Title To Water And Indian Rights, Theron Josephson

Great Plains Quarterly

This study is one of a series sponsored by the Canadian Institute for Natural Resource Law. Written by Richard Bartlett of the College of Law at the University of Saskatchewan, it is first and foremost a discourse on the current legal status of water rights of Canada's aboriginal peoples.


Review Of Groundwater Exploitation In The High Plains And Henry A. Wallace's Irrigation Frontier: On The Trail Of The Corn Belt Farmer, 1909, Sam Kepfield Jan 1993

Review Of Groundwater Exploitation In The High Plains And Henry A. Wallace's Irrigation Frontier: On The Trail Of The Corn Belt Farmer, 1909, Sam Kepfield

Great Plains Quarterly

David Kromm and Stephen White, both professors of geography at Kansas State University and experts on water use in the West, have gathered pieces by water experts. The result, Groundwater Exploitation in the High Plains, is a first-rate exploration of the methods and problems of groundwater utilization in the Ogallala Aquifer and the states overlying it-Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Oklahoma, Texas, and New Mexico.


Review Of Nebraska Moments: Glimpses Of Nebraska's Past, Micheal W. Schuyler Jan 1993

Review Of Nebraska Moments: Glimpses Of Nebraska's Past, Micheal W. Schuyler

Great Plains Quarterly

Nebraska Moments, by Donald Hickey, professor of history at Wayne State College in Nebraska, is a collection of thirty-nine essays about the state's past. The essays, which range in length from six to twelve pages, discuss personalities, institutions, places, and events that have shaped the state's history. Biographical sketches of such political figures as David Butler (Nebraska's first Governor), J. Sterling Morton, William Jennings Bryan, and George W. Norris; western and military heroes such as Buffalo Bill Cody and John J. Pershing; Native Americans such as Red Cloud and Standing Bear; and intellectual figures such as Louise Pound, Willa …


An American Heart Of Darkness: The 1913 Expedition For American Indian Citizenship, Russel Lawrence Barsh Jan 1993

An American Heart Of Darkness: The 1913 Expedition For American Indian Citizenship, Russel Lawrence Barsh

Great Plains Quarterly

In his pungent essay on Conrad's Heart of Darkness, Chinua Achebe explores Europeans' literary use of African stereotypes to work out their own psycho-social dilemmas.1 The journey into Africa was in reality a journey inside the confused souls of explorers and missionaries who sometimes found salvation there but never saw, heard, or found the Africans. The Africans they imagined were only a dark reflection of themselves.


How Far West Am I?: The Almanac As An Explorer's Yardstick, Arlen J. Large Jan 1993

How Far West Am I?: The Almanac As An Explorer's Yardstick, Arlen J. Large

Great Plains Quarterly

On 14 September 1494, three ships from Spain lay anchored at the southeastern tip of Hispaniola. Their admiral, Christopher Columbus, looked up at a full moon expecting something to happen, and it did.


Exploring The Great Plains: An Introduction, Gary E. Moulton Jan 1993

Exploring The Great Plains: An Introduction, Gary E. Moulton

Great Plains Quarterly

The essays presented in this issue of the Great Plains Quarterly were originally delivered at the sixteenth annual symposium of the Center for Great Plains Studies, at the University of Nebraska- Lincoln, in April 1992, under the title, "American Encounters: Exploring the Great Plains." Other essays from the conference will appear in future issues of the Quarterly and in Great Plains Research.


Exploring The Explorers: Great Plains Peoples And The Lewis And Clark Expedition, James P. Ronda Jan 1993

Exploring The Explorers: Great Plains Peoples And The Lewis And Clark Expedition, James P. Ronda

Great Plains Quarterly

There are few stories that seem more commonplace than the narrative of the exploration of the American West. It is the stock-in-trade of countless textbooks, classroom lectures, and popular novels. In the traditional telling, European and American adventurers are the actors at center stage while Native Americans stand silently in the wings or have bit parts.