31,103 research outputs found
The Official Student Newspaper of UAS
UAS Answers: Everybody's got one... -- Finding True North: Selected Readings from Kij Johnson's "At the Mouth of the River of Bees" -- Correction to the article "How to boil a frog?" -- Alaska to Germany: Oktober in Deutschland! -- They seen me rollin' -- The challenge of getting around campus -- Suddenly, College: Plenty of fish on campus -- Balancing a busy schedule with hobbies -- Spoken word poetry at Lemon Creek Correctional Facility -- Bake some delicious finger food this Halloween -- Casino Night at the Housing Lodge -- This is Halloween -- Addressing student concerns with the Mourant Cafeteria -- Campus Calenda
Barbie in Bondage: What Orly Lobel’s Book “You Don’t Own Me: How Mattel v. MGA Entertainment Exposed Barbie’s Dark Side” Tells Us About the Commoditization of the Female Body
Building a Community Among Early Arab Immigrants in Milwaukee, 1890s–1960s
Like other immigrant groups that came to Wisconsin, most of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century Arab immigrants came to the United States for economic betterment, as well as political and religious freedom. From the start, most immigrants intended to work for a few years and then return to their villages and towns after accumulating some wealth, although that original goal evolved over time as many early immigrants found success in their new country. Most of the community originally settled in a tightly knit community located in the Third Ward area. Over time, the settlement pattern of the Arab community changed as subsequent generations were Americanized
Spartan Daily, April 25, 2017
Volume 148, Issue 35https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartan_daily_2017/1033/thumbnail.jp
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