220 research outputs found

    Hollins Columns (1953 Feb 26)

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    Table of Contents: Visit the Vets: Work at Veterans Hospital, Both Helpful, Satisfying Roanoke, Salem Artists Give Show Seniors Celebrate Hundredth Night Basketball Season Ends; VMI-W and L, Hollins-Roanoke Play Double-Header for March Elfish Peter Runs Rampant Over Bumple and Company YWCA Recognizes Brotherho\u27d Week; Fr. Hodges Speaks Letter to the Editor Exercise Your Voting Priviledge Student Government Column Joan Shoaf Plays for Local Meeting Hollins Lassies Reveal Qualifications for Mates What You Are Offered in Four College Years? Off They Go For Another Gay Weekend Exchange Column Nellie Nitting Needle Y Corner Sophs Are Tops In B-Ball Games At the Flickshttps://digitalcommons.hollins.edu/newspapers/1548/thumbnail.jp

    Profiles, November 1977

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    This is the magazine of the University of Montana with news about the University for UM alumni as well as current faculty, students, staff, and administrators. This is volume 10, number 1.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/montanan/1057/thumbnail.jp

    Las Vegas Daily Optic, 12-14-1903

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    https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/lvdo_news/1784/thumbnail.jp

    Maine Alumnus, Volume 23, Number 7, April 1942

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    Contents: The University and the War --- Twenty-Fifth Planned by 1917 --- With Maine Alumni in the Service: Maine Graduate [Frank P. Bostrom] Flies McArthur to Australia, Alumnus [Frank W. Fenno] Honored for Distinguished Service --- Coach Allen Enlists in U.S. Naval Reservehttps://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/alumni_magazines/1432/thumbnail.jp

    Using crowdsourced geospatial data to aid in nuclear proliferation monitoring

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    In 2014, a Defense Science Board Task Force was convened in order to assess and explore new technologies that would aid in nuclear proliferation monitoring. One of their recommendations was for the director of National Intelligence to explore ways that crowdsourced geospatial imagery technologies could aid existing governmental efforts. Our research builds directly on this recommendation and provides feedback on some of the most successful examples of crowdsourced geospatial data (CGD). As of 2016, Special Operations Command (SOCOM) has assumed the new role of becoming the primary U.S. agency responsible for counter-proliferation. Historically, this institution has always been reliant upon other organizations for the execution of its myriad of mission sets. SOCOM's unique ability to build relationships makes it particularly suited to the task of harnessing CGD technologies and employing them in the capacity that our research recommends. Furthermore, CGD is a low cost, high impact tool that is already being employed by commercial companies and non-profit groups around the world. By employing CGD, a wider whole-of-government effort can be created that provides a long term, cohesive engagement plan for facilitating a multi-faceted nuclear proliferation monitoring process.http://archive.org/details/usingcrowdsource1094551570Major, United States ArmyMajor, United States ArmyApproved for public release; distribution is unlimited

    The Tri-State Defender, March 4, 1961

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    Brothers in the Great War

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    Drawing on a broad range of personal accounts, this is the first detailed study of siblinghood in wartime. The relative youth of the fighting men of the Great War intensified the emotional salience of sibling relationships. Long separations, trauma and bereavement tested sibling ties forged through shared childhoods, family practices, commitments and interests. We must not equate the absence of a verbal language of love with an absence of profound feelings. Quieter familial values of kindness, tolerance and unity, instilled by parents and reinforced by moral instruction, strengthened bonds between brothers and sisters. Examining the nexus of cultural and familial emotional norms, this study reveals the complex acts of mediation undertaken by siblings striving to reconcile conflicting obligations to society, the army and loved ones in families at home. Brothers enlisted and served together. Siblings witnessed departures and homecomings, shared family responsibilities, confided their anxieties and provided mutual support from a distance via letters and parcels. The strength soldier-brothers drew from each other came at an emotional cost to themselves and their comrades. The seismic casualties of the First World War proved a watershed moment in the culture of mourning and bereavement. Grief narratives reveal distinct patterns of mourning following the death of a loved sibling, suggesting a greater complexity to male grief than is often acknowledged. Surviving siblings acted as memory keepers, circumventing the anonymisation of the dead in public commemorations by restoring the particular war stories of their brothers

    Maine Alumnus, Volume 22, Number 4, January 1941

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    Contents: And Now the Movies Go To School --- Brice Retires --- A Million Carnationshttps://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/alumni_magazines/1491/thumbnail.jp

    Brothers in the Great War

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    Drawing on a broad range of personal accounts, this is the first detailed study of siblinghood in wartime. The relative youth of the fighting men of the Great War intensified the emotional salience of sibling relationships. Long separations, trauma and bereavement tested sibling ties forged through shared childhoods, family practices, commitments and interests. We must not equate the absence of a verbal language of love with an absence of profound feelings. Quieter familial values of kindness, tolerance and unity, instilled by parents and reinforced by moral instruction, strengthened bonds between brothers and sisters. Examining the nexus of cultural and familial emotional norms, this study reveals the complex acts of mediation undertaken by siblings striving to reconcile conflicting obligations to society, the army and loved ones in families at home. Brothers enlisted and served together. Siblings witnessed departures and homecomings, shared family responsibilities, confided their anxieties and provided mutual support from a distance via letters and parcels. The strength soldier-brothers drew from each other came at an emotional cost to themselves and their comrades. The seismic casualties of the First World War proved a watershed moment in the culture of mourning and bereavement. Grief narratives reveal distinct patterns of mourning following the death of a loved sibling, suggesting a greater complexity to male grief than is often acknowledged. Surviving siblings acted as memory keepers, circumventing the anonymisation of the dead in public commemorations by restoring the particular war stories of their brothers
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