12,549 research outputs found
The Journal of Conventional Weapons Destruction, Issue 24.2 (2020)
Editorial: HMA and COVID-19: A Donor\u27s Perspective Editorial: Time To Focus on Real Minefield Data Mine Action Information Management in Iraq and Northeast Syria IMAS 10.60 Update: Investigation and Reporting of Accidents and Incidents The Mine Free Sarajevo Project SALW in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the DRC Gender and Diversity in Mine Action Victim Assistance in Ukraine Landmines in the American Civil War Risk Education in Colombia R&D: The Odyssey2025 Projec
Spartan Daily, February 17, 2000
Volume 114, Issue 15https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/9512/thumbnail.jp
Update - March 2004
In this issue:
-- Christians Contemplating New Developments in Biomedicine-- Editorial-- Christian Principals of Genetic Intervention-- Statement on Ethical Considerations Regarding Human Cloning-- Honoring the Religious Impulse Within the Arena of Genetic Counselinghttps://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/update/1073/thumbnail.jp
Spartan Daily, April 11, 1983
Volume 80, Issue 43https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/7025/thumbnail.jp
Loose Party Times: The Political Crisis of the 1850s in Westchester County, New York
On November 7, 1848 William H. Robertson rose early and rushed to the post office in Bedford, a town in Westchester County, New York. The young lawyer was brimming with excitement because two weeks earlier, the Whigs in the county?s northern section had nominated him as their candidate for the New York State Assembly. Only twenty-four years old and a rising legal star, Robertson hoped that holding political office would launch his nascent career. After casting his ballot at the Bedford Post Office, Robertson paid a visit to Sheriff James M. Bates, his political manager, to await the election results. Robertson?s intelligence, collected a week before Election Day, that “news from every part of the district is favorable,” proved accurate. The Whig attorney heard later that evening that he had defeated his Democratic opponent, with 57% of the vote. To celebrate, Robertson and Bates feasted on “chickens, turkeys, oysters, and Champaign” before retiring around midnight at Philer Betts? Hotel. The following afternoon, they boarded the 3:00 PM train from Bedford to the county seat of White Plains, seventeen miles south. There, the two triumphant Whigs gossiped and caught up with their counterparts from Westchester?s usually Democratic southern section. Hearing of their friends? overwhelming victories surprised Robertson, leading him to exclaim, “The Whigs have carried almost everything!” Indeed, the Whigs had swept every elective office in Westchester County. [excerpt
Preacher\u27s Magazine Volume 46 Number 04
Publication renamed, “The Nazarene Preacher”
Built-in Resources, General Superintendent Young The Secret of Church Growth, Editorial Guarding Our Theological Trust, Editorial The Preacher’s Target, Gordon Chilvers He Used His Head . . . Practical Points Water Baptism, Arthur W. Fisher Bearing Burdens or Casting Stones? Samuel L. Hindman James Bryan, God’s Servant, Charles Ludwig Bottleneck or Channel? Wilson R. Lanpher Geographical Grouping for Outreach, Robert W. Crew The Canaries Teach, Anne P. Root Rock of Ages, Mark F. Smith Gleanings from the Greek, Ralph Earle The “Old Man” of Ephesians 4: 22-24, Ross E. Price The Message of the Cross, Leroy Davis Our Vision for Christian Education, Ross E. Price
DEPARTMENTS Administration Pastor’s Supplement The Preacher’s Wife In the Study Gleanings from the Greek Doctrinal Studies Timely Outlines Idea Sparks Bulletin Barrel Here and There Among Books Preachers’ Exchange Calendar Digest Among Ourselveshttps://digitalcommons.olivet.edu/cotn_pm/1525/thumbnail.jp
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