71 research outputs found

    Herald of Holiness Volume 78 Number 16 (1989)

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    Cover Photo Credit: Wesley Tracy Page 7 Photo Credit: Jim Hubbard Pages 17, 18, 19, and 20 Photo Credit: Tom Standford Pages 29, 30, and 31 Photo Credit: James Healy Pages 24 and 25 Photo Credit: Ted Ferguson FEATURE ARTICLES 6 Life on the Boundary with Lois Smith, Albert Truesdale 16 Julie Gaylord Talks about Television and the Christian Life, Wesley Tracy 21 Television and the Disappearance of Childhood, Lillith Hofstedder 22 She’s Married, with Children, Bonnie Perry 23 A Preacher Who Is Making a Difference, Mark Graham 24 Ten Commandments for Television, Tim White 27 Test Pattern 29 Latchkey Love, Mark Graham CONTINUING COLUMNS 8 In a Woman’s Voice, Rebecca Laird 10 Into the Word, Reuben Welch 12 When You Pray, E. Dee Freeborn 13 General Superintendent’s Viewpoint, John A. Knight 14 Family Matters, Dorothy Tarrant 45 Rhythms of the Spirit, Morris A. Weigelt 46 Observer at Large, William E. McCumber DEPARTMENTS 2 Editor’s Choice, Wesley Tracy 4 The Readers Write 34 News, Mark Graham 41 The Question Box 44 Nazarene Roots, Stan Ingersol 48 Late News, Mark Grahamhttps://digitalcommons.olivet.edu/cotn_hoh/1123/thumbnail.jp

    Herald of Holiness Volume 78 Number 16 (1989)

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    Cover Photo Credit: Wesley Tracy Page 7 Photo Credit: Jim Hubbard Pages 17, 18, 19, and 20 Photo Credit: Tom Standford Pages 29, 30, and 31 Photo Credit: James Healy Pages 24 and 25 Photo Credit: Ted Ferguson FEATURE ARTICLES 6 Life on the Boundary with Lois Smith, Albert Truesdale 16 Julie Gaylord Talks about Television and the Christian Life, Wesley Tracy 21 Television and the Disappearance of Childhood, Lillith Hofstedder 22 She’s Married, with Children, Bonnie Perry 23 A Preacher Who Is Making a Difference, Mark Graham 24 Ten Commandments for Television, Tim White 27 Test Pattern 29 Latchkey Love, Mark Graham CONTINUING COLUMNS 8 In a Woman’s Voice, Rebecca Laird 10 Into the Word, Reuben Welch 12 When You Pray, E. Dee Freeborn 13 General Superintendent’s Viewpoint, John A. Knight 14 Family Matters, Dorothy Tarrant 45 Rhythms of the Spirit, Morris A. Weigelt 46 Observer at Large, William E. McCumber DEPARTMENTS 2 Editor’s Choice, Wesley Tracy 4 The Readers Write 34 News, Mark Graham 41 The Question Box 44 Nazarene Roots, Stan Ingersol 48 Late News, Mark Grahamhttps://digitalcommons.olivet.edu/cotn_hoh/1123/thumbnail.jp

    The Ledger & Times, August 4, 1938

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    Mustang Daily, November 22, 2004

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    Student newspaper of California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, CA.https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/studentnewspaper/7228/thumbnail.jp

    January 15, 1963, Ohio University Board of Trustees Meeting Minutes

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    Meeting minutes document the activities of Ohio University\u27s Board of Trustees

    The Commonwealth of Nations at the United Nations

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    Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University.This study of the Cornnonwealth of Nations at the United Nations is based primarily on the documentary record of the United Nations: the verbatim and summary records of the sessions of the General Assembly, the Security Council, and other branches of the organization. The material on the Commonwealth is taken from Commonwealth legislation, from information supplied by various governments and embassies, and from secondary sources. The "New York Times" was of great use, especially for its reporting of press conferences and the coverage of wars and revolutions. In organization the two international groups are dissimilar. The United Nations has a fixed table of organization and of function. It has a permanent executive and a large bureaucracy. The Commonwealth lacks any such fixed structure, being an expandable, and also contractable, association of states. In the Commonwealth, unlike the United Nations, decisions are not necessarily reached, and each Commonwealth nation acts as it sees fit [TRUNCATED

    Kelowna Courier

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    Eudemonic intellectual property: patents and related rights as engines of happiness, peace, and sustainability

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    The predominant justification for most intellectual property rights is the incentive theory or utilitarian rationale. Behind this justification lies the Western idea of progress and its derivatives: liberalism, capitalism, and consumerism. After having shown that the predominant justification for intellectual property rights is the incentive theory, which rests on the idea of progress, this Article traces back the history of the idea and shows its parochialism in both time and space. The Article next shows that the progress ideology rests on assumptions that are either wrong or impossible to prove and therefore propounds that it must be abandoned, or if not, at least deeply rethought or reformed. This Article proposes the values of happiness, peace, necessity, and sustainability as an alternative basis for patents and related rights. These universal values give a legitimate and solid foundation to patents and related rights. The Article suggests ways to integrate the new justification in the substantive law, and counters the arguments against the new justification. In order to answer the question this Article addresses, it is necessary to take both a historical and philosophical perspective. As intellectual property rights are Western in origin, this Article takes a Western perspective by reviewing the two most representative Western legal systems, the European Union and the United States. The philosophical and economic history of the West is compared with that of the Muslim world and some Asian countries, namely China and Japan, because they also represent a very large part of the world

    The Snapshot, Volume V, Number 17, March 5, 1948

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