50 research outputs found
Tawahsi Yearbook 1957
https://digitalcommons.spu.edu/archives_yearbooks/1034/thumbnail.jp
Developing a staffing formula for the Willow Creek School Division
vii, 177 leaves ; 29 cm.This project is an attempt to devise a staffing formula for the Willow Creek School
Division. Firstly, a review of the literature on the topic was undertaken. Then, with the
cooperation of the senior administrators of several comparable school systems in Alberta
who provided pertinent documents for examination, an investigation into their staffing
policies and practices was initiated. Thirdly, meetings were conducted with the
Superintendent of Schools for Willow Creek School Division for the purpose of combining
what has been learned with the needs of each of its unique situations. Finally,
simulations were conducted to test the two formula proposals developed using three
schools in Willow Creek as testing grounds.
This document will provide a foundation for the process of devising staffing policy
for the Willow Creek School Division; it will be passed along to a formal committee of
school administrators charged with the responsibility of finalizing a staffing system
Herald of Holiness Volume 02, Number 51 (1914)
01 Editorial 01 Death of Mrs. H. C. Morrison 03 Editor\u27s Survey 03 The Shared Burden —Elizabeth Thompson Ordway
05 The Elements of Repentance Written by Rev. J. W. Waltz 05 It Falls the Same Today - D. Rand Pierce 06 The Call of the Cross Written by E. J. Marvin 07 Origin of the Pentecostal Church in Great Britain Written by E. F. Walker 07 Personal Work Written by C. A. Mu ni si r 08 There’s Nobody Else 08 “Sunny Bobbie” 08 Fuzzy the Newsboy 08 God’s Little Girl 09 How Bettie Did 09 Clean Hands09 Some Sacred Memories II (cont. from page twelve) The Work and the Workers
10 Announcements 10 District News 11 General Superintendents’ Fund 11 General Church News 12 Some Sacred Memories II- E. F. Walker 13 A Call to the Church for Prayer 14 Help for the Publishing House H. D. BROWN 16 General Missionary Secretary Reynolds in Chinahttps://digitalcommons.olivet.edu/cotn_hoh/2923/thumbnail.jp
The field of play : military and sport in Southern Alberta communities during the Second World War
ix, 184 leaves ; 29 cmPrior to the beginning of the Second World War discussions of air force training
between Britain and Canada, were ongoing, but never agreed upon. The declarations of war
on Germany from Britain and Canada forced these discussions to a resolution as the air force
was a crucial component of military operations. On December 17, 1939 the agreement known
as the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan (BCATP) was signed. The agreement
intended that Canada would train all of the Allied air force throughout the war. The
repercussions of the agreement meant that communities across the country became home to
training schools and air force personnel. This study employs geographic and relational
aspects of community theory in the investigation of the role of sport in the relationship
building process between military and civilian communities in Southern Alberta. Sport
provided common ties and opportunities for social interaction in the relationship-building
process between BCATP schools and Southern Alberta communities. Towns were losing
many of the men and women who were playing sport as they joined the services and air force
personnel were replacing them; thereby keeping sport at all levels from completely shutting
down during the war. This study highlights the changes in the sporting landscape as military
sport transitioned from a spectacle to becoming indispensable to local communities. Specific
case studies of basketball and lacrosse in Macleod, hockey in Claresholm and Lethbridge,
soccer in Medicine Hat and sporting charity events indicate the depth to which schools
integrated into towns through sport. Situated within pertinent secondary sources from history,
sociology and sport studies this study draws on six Southern Alberta newspapers, town
council meeting minutes and archival data from the Nanton Bomber Museum, The
Claresholm Museum, The Galt Museum and Archives and the Esplanade Heritage Centre
Holland City News, Volume 44, Number 37: September 16, 1915
Newspaper published in Holland, Michigan, from 1872-1977, to serve the English-speaking people in Holland, Michigan. Purchased by local Dutch language newspaper, De Grondwet, owner in 1888.https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/hcn_1915/1036/thumbnail.jp
Mimosa 1984
The JSU Yearbook Collection spans the years from 1926 to the present. The publication began in 1926 as the Teacola (some volumes spelled Teacoala ) and continued under this title through 1933. The yearbook appears to have ceased printing after that year; the student newspaper took the name Teacola (later changed to the Collegian and finally the Chanticleer) and began publication in 1934. The yearbook started up again in 1947 under the name Mimosa, first biennially, then annually. The Library holds all volume years that were printed: 1926-1933, 1947-1948, 1950, 1952-present.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib-ac-yearbook/1042/thumbnail.jp